Jackson v. Industrial Accident Commission
Before: Langdon
Synopsis
APPLICATION for a Writ of Certiorari to review an order of the Industrial Accident Commission discharging an insurance carrier from further payments. Writ denied.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
LANGDON, P. J.
The petition for a writ of
certiorari
is denied. It appears that the order releasing and discharging the insurance carrier from further payments to petitioner, which is sought to be reviewed here, was made upon a finding that the injury forming the basis of this proceeding had resulted in a permanent disability, consisting of the loss of the fourth toe of the right foot at the proximal joint, with a chronic discharging sinus; that the disability, in view of the age and occupation of petitioner, is nineteen and three-fourths per cent of total disability, and that the insurance carrier has paid to applicant as indemnity under a previous temporary disability order of the commission a sum in excess of the total sum due as compensation for a permanent disability of nineteen and three-fourths per cent of total disability.
It also appears that the petitioner himself contends here, and also maintained before the commission, that his disability was permanent. The finding on this point, is, therefore, in conformity with his contention. His position, however, is that he is unable to compete in the open labor market or to earn anything at all, and therefore his disability is-total, under the inténdment of the Compensation Act (Stats. 1917, p. 831.)
Respondents have stated the evidence to be that petitioner is sixty-six years of age and is suffering from syphilis, hardening of the arteries, and heart disease, all of which necessarily enter to some extent into his inability to compete in the open labor market.
[1]
Further objection of petitioner to the order sought to be reviewed is based upon the fact that a prior order of the commission made at the time temporary disability compensation was allowed was based upon a finding “that the applicant is of the age of sixty-six years and upward, and by reason of his advanced age and other systemic condition previous to said injury, was afflicted with hardening of the arteries, which materially interfered with a sufficient blood supply to the injured member, and caused gangrene to set
[651]
in and greatly retarded a normal recovery from said injury, but that the disability resulting, combined with the said previous physical condition, was the legitimate and proximate result of the injury, and is compensable as such.” It is contended that this finding is contradictory of and opposed to the present position of the commission that the disability resulting from the loss of the toe is nineteen and three-fourths per cent of a total disability as defined by the act, and that any further disability suffered by petitioner is due to his age and systematic condition. We do not think there is any conflict in these findings. The commission found that the condition of the toe at the time of the first order, although it was contributed to by the systemic condition of the patient, was, nevertheless, proximately caused by the injury. This condition of the toe has become permanent, and full allowance is made for the loss of the toe, which has been amputated. The commission made no deduction for the result of the systemic disturbances upon the injured member. The original injury was slight, and it is conceded that in a younger and healthier subject it would have healed readily and completely. That the entire toe was lost was a result obviously contributed to by the systemic condition of the patient, and no deduction has been made on this account by the commission, but full compensation has been allowed for the total loss of a toe, although the condition making the amputation necessary was indisputably contributed to by pre-existing systemic ailments.
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