Johnson v. Bennett Lumber Co.

Decision Date02 September 1988
Docket NumberNo. 16523,16523
Citation115 Idaho 241,766 P.2d 711
PartiesJoann Lynn JOHNSON, Claimant-appellant, v. BENNETT LUMBER COMPANY, Employer, and Workmen's Compensation Exchange, Surety, Defendant-respondents.
CourtIdaho Supreme Court

Aherin, Rice & Brown, Lewiston, for claimant-appellant. Darrel W. Aherin argued.

Clements, Brown & McNichols, Lewiston, for defendants-respondents. John R. Stegner argued.

Moffatt, Thomas, Barrett & Blanton, Boise, for amicus curiae. John W. Barrett argued and filed a brief.

BAKES, Justice.

Claimant Johnson appeals from an Industrial Commission order denying her worker's compensation benefits because the commission found that her low back problems were not caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with Bennett Lumber Company. Because there is substantial competent evidence to sustain the commission's findings, we affirm.

I

Johnson's notice of injury and claim for benefits, filed with the Industrial Commission, alleged that she sustained an industrial accident and injury on February 20, 1985. At the hearing before the commission the evidence disclosed that in September of 1982, claimant Johnson went to work for defendant Bennett Lumber Company at Bennett's Lumber Mill in Elk City, Idaho. Claimant's job entailed cleaning up the mill after it had ceased operations for the day. Her duties consisted of sweeping up sawdust with brooms and shovels, picking up slabs or boards (weighing up to 100 pounds) that could not be used as lumber, and throwing it all into the floor chains which took the debris to the burner. Claimant and another woman (Kathy Lovell) worked together at the cleanup job.

The record shows that claimant had been enduring mechanical low back pain for some time prior to February 20, 1985, the date of the alleged accident. For instance, beginning March 29, 1982, claimant had received four chiropractic treatments for her back pain and had her low back X-rayed. These treatments were not for injuries received while employed by Bennett Lumber Company. The first treatment preceded her employment with Bennett. Next, approximately the first part of February, 1985, claimant began to experience severe pain in her low back. She had not injured her back while working, and she thought it might be her kidneys because she had experienced kidney problems as a child. Claimant did not work the weekend before February 11, 1985. On Monday, February 11, 1985, claimant had low back pain of such severity that she missed work, and the next day she went to see her local physician, Dr. Franks. She described the pain to him as a "sharp pain like a knife stabbing me in the back." The doctor's diagnosis was low back strain and, on his advice, claimant took the rest of the week off. Claimant asked her husband to advise the plant manager that she would not be able to go to work. He reported to the employer on February 11, 1985, and again on February 13, that claimant's inability to return to work was not related to an on-the-job injury. Further, the medical bills incurred when claimant went to see Dr. Franks were referred to the company handling the medical insurance for the company (MSB), not the worker's compensation carrier.

Claimant continued to suffer from low back pain over the next weekend, but she nevertheless went back to work on Monday, February 18. Claimant worked February 18, 19, and 20, but her co-worker, Kathy, had to do most of the work. On February 21, claimant did not report to work, but went to see Dr. Cleto who admitted her to the local hospital and took X-rays of her back. Because there was no immediate improvement in her condition, claimant was referred to another doctor and admitted to the hospital in Clarkston, Washington, where a CT scan and other tests were performed. The CT scan showed no evidence of a herniated disc, and the hospital records disclose no pain radiating down claimant's legs. Claimant was given several medications, including a local cortisone injection. Although there was evidence of an apparent congenital bony protrusion from the sacrum impinging on the thecal sac, claimant rapidly became virtually asymptomatic. No further intervention was deemed necessary and claimant was discharged with a diagnosis of mechanical low back pain.

On March 7, 1985, claimant requested worker's compensation forms from her employer. When asked why she wished to have worker's compensation forms, claimant replied that the company's medical insurance would not pay for her prescription medicine, but that worker's compensation would. However, she made no statement to her employer at this time that she had suffered an accident and injury on the job. On March 15, 1985, claimant filed a notice of injury and claim for benefits with the Industrial Commission, alleging for the first time that she suffered an industrial accident on February 20, 1985, while working at her cleanup job.

On May 29, 1985, claimant went to Spokane, Washington, to be examined by Dr. Adams. Claimant told Dr. Adams that her problems centered around an injury on February 20, 1985, and that it was her first low back injury. The history claimant provided Dr. Adams was the basis for his testimony that claimant's low back condition resulted from an incident on February 20, 1985. Dr. Adams' ultimate diagnosis was mechanical low back pain, the same diagnosis the Clarkston hospital rendered.

Based on all of the evidence in the record, the commission made its finding of fact that claimant's back condition was not caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment with Bennett Lumber Company.

II

The only issue before the Court is whether, construing the record most favorably to the party who prevailed below, the respondent-employer, Blackwell v. Omark Ind., 114 Idaho 10, 752 P.2d 612 (1988), there is any substantial competent evidence to support the commission's factual finding. Idaho Const. art. 5, § 9; I.C. § 72-732(1); Lopez v. Amalgamated Sugar Co., 107 Idaho 590, 691 P.2d 1205 (1984). As the transcript and exhibits from the Industrial Commission hearing demonstrate, there is ample substantial competent evidence upon which the commission could have based its findings.

Claimant admitted that her low back problem existed well before the date of the alleged accident on February 20, 1985. She had seen a chiropractor for X-rays and treatment for back pain on four earlier dates--two of those dates being in 1983 and the other two dates being in 1982, one even being prior to her employment with Bennett Lumber Company. None of the back problems involved in those four visits were work related.

During the three-week period prior to the alleged February 20, 1985, "accident," claimant's low back problems were so severe that she was under heavy medication and missed one week's work because of the pain. Claimant herself testified that more than one week before the alleged accident on February 20, 1985, Dr. Franks had given her a memo to deliver to her production supervisor, Mr. Wilsey, justifying her being off work because of her low back pain. Claimant testified that it was a common practice when she was ill and could not come to work to have her husband, Lanny, report to Mr. Wilsey and have her excused. Mr. Wilsey testified that during his February 13, 1985, conversation with Lanny, Lanny reported that Johnson's back was hurting, but that it was not job related. Although Lanny testified during the hearing that what he told Mr. Wilsey was that he did not know what was wrong with Johnson's back, there was conflicting evidence on this point, and questions of conflicting evidence are for the arbiter and weigher of evidence, the Industrial Commission, not for this Court. Blackwell v. Omark Ind., supra. The commission is entitled to believe or disbelieve each witness's testimony, depending on its determination of the witness's credibility. Here, the commission obviously lent more credence to Wilsey's testimony than to Lanny's; with this we cannot dispute. The commission's determination of the weight and credibility to be accorded to particular evidence will not be overturned unless it is clearly erroneous. Houser v. So. Idaho Pipe & Steel, Inc., 103 Idaho 441, 649 P.2d 1197 (1982), reh'g denied 1982.

Supplementing Wilsey's testimony was the testimony of Mr. Kolar, mill manager. Kolar testified that Wilsey had relayed to him Lanny's report that claimant's back problem was not job related. Kolar also testified that claimant had personally told him on March 7, 1985, that she had been off work for a week before the alleged accident because of her back problems, and that she had charged the accompanying medical bills to the employer's medical insurance carrier, not the worker's compensation carrier. The reason claimant gave Kolar for wanting to change her claim from an MSB claim to a worker's compensation claim was not because she was claiming that she had had an accident, but because worker's compensation would pay the prescription bills, and MSB would not. No mention was made that she had been injured in an industrial accident.

The commission's finding of no industrial "accident" on February 20, 1985, is also supported by the testimony of Kathy Lovell. Claimant admitted that the problem existed well before February 20, 1985, having told Dr. Franks on February 12, 1985, that "it felt like there was a knife, a sharp pain like a knife stabbing me in the back." She also described the pain to Kathy Lovell, her co-worker, on February 18, 1985, two days before the alleged accident, "She said that her [claimant's] back hurt and it felt like there was a knife stabbing her in the back about right here, somewhere in here, lower part." In addition, both claimant and Lovell testified that claimant worked less and less on February 18 and February 19, the days immediately preceding the alleged "accident," and that on February 20th nothing unusual...

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  • Davaz v. Priest River Glass Co., Inc.
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    ...the party who prevailed below. Vernon v. Omark Indus., 115 Idaho 486, 488, 767 P.2d 1261, 1263 (1989) (citing Johnson v. Bennett Lumber Co., 115 Idaho 241, 766 P.2d 711 (1988); and Blackwell v. Omark Indus., 114 Idaho 10, 15, 752 P.2d 612, 617 (1988)). However, this Court exercises free rev......
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