Certiorari to the Industrial Commission to review its action in denying an award for permanent total disability resulting from an accident sustained in the course of employment. Applicant was injured July 15, 1925, in a fall when some timbers gave way in the Godiva Mine at Eureka, Utah. He sustained a fracture of the neck of the right femur and injuries to the hip and elbow. After approximately three months under the doctor's care and in a hospital he was sent home. Not until December 26, 1925, was it discovered that he had a fracture. In January, 1926, he was taken to a hospital and subjected to a surgical operation. A bone peg was taken from the left tibia or shin bone and inserted in the neck *Page 34 of the right femur and the head in an effort to secure a bony union. Following this operation and as a result thereof applicant developed a thrombophlebitis in both legs, being especially acute and severe in the deep veins of the left leg. Four months were spent in the hospital, two subsequent returns thereto for periods of time were made, and one further operation was had. The phlebitis subsided in the right leg, but in the left leg the deep inner veins were so affected that all valves were destroyed, resulting in sclerosis of the veins. The operation failed to effect a bony union and the right leg atrophied, wasted away, and shortened until it became totally lost industrially; that is, as far as service is concerned equivalent to an amputation. Whenever applicant attempts to walk or stand for any length of time, his left leg, due to the impeded veinous circulation resulting from the thrombophlebitis, becomes extremely painful, swells badly, and breaks out in varicose ulcers, necessitating medical treatment and long periods in bed. One such occasion lasted for eighteen months; another for four months; and others for shorter periods of time. Due to this impaired circulation, the left leg failed to effect a good healing where the bone peg was taken from the tibia. There are evidences of osteomyelitis in the bone, and the place where the incision was made tends to ulcerate. Applicant has made a number of efforts to work, but in each instance after an hour or two, due to the pressure and pain in the left leg, he collapses and then ulcers develop on the leg. He then tried such jobs as sorting apples, where the worker could sit down, but due to the conditions of the right hip and leg resulting from the fracture he must sit in a sidewise and semireclining position which soon becomes exceedingly painful.
In addition to the medical and hospital services he was paid disability compensation for the full period of six years, the maximum allowable under the law unless his disability is total and permanent. When such payments stopped, applicant applied to the commission for an award of compensa-as for permanent total disability. The commission, by a 2 *Page 35 to 1 decision, denied the award; Commissioner Knerr dissenting. And so the cause comes here on certiorari presenting the single question: Was the applicant under the facts shown in this record totally and permanently disabled as a matter of law?
At the hearing before the commission, and there is no dispute in the evidence, the following conditions appeared: The right leg is a total loss industrially. One doctor said it were better amputated. The applicant cannot sit at a table to work, because he must sit sidewise and in a semireclining position. Even such position after a few minutes becomes very painful. The left leg, due to the thrombophlebitis, does not permit standing for any length of time or walking any distance. As soon as the leg is used in standing or walking, for even an hour, it swells abnormally and becomes so painful that the applicant becomes ill and sometimes collapses. Ulcers then break out on it which completely and totally incapacitate him and confine him to his bed for long periods of time. There is evidence of osteomyelitis in the shin bone, and it is extremely doubtful if anything can be done to relieve his condition. Any such effort would require at least eighteen months of hospitalization, and chances are against improvement. His condition will become progressively worse. From the waist up his physical condition is good, but in intellectual training he did not complete the grade school. His labor experience has been limited to ranching, cattle, and mining, neither of which he can do now. He has tried to work at cleaning up around the mine, shoveling dirt, sorting apples, etc., and canvassing, but because of his legs he can do none of these. There is no evidence that he could do any kind of work. He cannot knit or crochet, lacks the imagination to write novels, or the mentality to write other books or treatises, and about the only thing open to him is to "lie supinely on his back and hug the delusive phantom of hope." In a report to the commission signed by Dr. D.K. Allen and Dr. Martin C. Lindem, it is said: *Page 36
"It is our opinion that at this time the man cannot do manual or other physical labor because of the recurrent thrombophlebitis. He should have * * * obliteration by sclerosing injections of the varicose sinuses of both legs. It would be our recommendation that temporary total disability be extended for one year or eighteen months for this treatment * * * and at the end of that time the question of whether he is permanently disabled should be settled."
They find, as does all the medical testimony, that he now is totally disabled, and unless the treatment suggested helps him when applied for over a year or eighteen months, his total disability would be permanent. As to the chances of such treatment improving his condition, Dr. Root, an experienced and very reputable physician, testified that the deep veins of applicant's leg were sclerotic; that the treatment suggested might help on superficial veins, but cannot be used on the deep veins. Even Drs. Allen and Lindem were not optimistic about results of the proposed treatment, but suggested it be tried as an experiment. Dr. Root further testified that there was no contrivance or apparatus known that would enable applicant to maintain a sitting posture over any considerable period of time. There is no conflict in the evidence. It is all to the same effect.
The rule is well settled, both by statute and decisions of this court, that we will not disturb the finding of the commission, unless arbitrary, if there is any competent evidence to support it. In this case we must, however, set aside the finding of the commission because there is not one 1-3 scintilla of evidence to support such finding. It is arbitrary and founded upon a misapplication of the law. The ruling of the commission, by two members, against applicant recognizes the fact that his disability is such that he is totally disabled. In finding No. V, they say:
"At the present time applicant has a permanent disability in his right leg and hip to such an extent as to make such leg practically useless from an industrial standpoint. * * * Also as a result of said accidental injury the applicant's left leg is partially disabled because of a condition of thrombophlebitis. * * * this condition causes the *Page 37 left leg to become temporarily totally disabled after a short period of use and exertion from manual labor."
The record shows that after a period of use of from two hours to one-half day, the period of total disability is from four months to eighteen months. And in finding VI, they say:
"Applicant is in need of medical treatment at this time tolessen the frequency and reduce the severity of the acute attacks of thrombophlebitis, which attacks render him temporarily totally disabled when they occur. [From four to eighteen months after from 2 hours to one-half day of use.] Such treatment is also required to prevent a possible condition of permanent total disability from developing." (Italics added.)
The treatment suggested would practically hospitalize the applicant for twelve to eighteen months, and the doctors expressed grave doubt that it would in any way improve conditions. If it did not, then the finding indicates that the condition of permanent total disability was certain.
The record is conclusive and uncontradicted that his disability is permanent. Is it, as a matter of law, total? Total disability does not mean a state of absolute helplessness. InCaillet v. Industrial Comm., 90 Utah 8, 58 P.2d 760, Mr. Justice Wolfe in his dissenting opinion defined "total disability" as follows (page 763):
"It does not mean total loss of bodily function. If so, a man would have to be hopelessly paralyzed. It does not mean such disability which would prevent any person from doing any work. If that were so, it would mean loss of mind. * * * It means disablement of the particular applicant to earn wages in the type of work * * * he was trained for or any other type of work which a person of his mentality and attainments could do."
And, as held by Mr. Chief Justice Hansen in the same case, that the nature of the injury sustained by applicant is such as to make him permanently and totally disabled from doing any work requiring him to walk, to stand, or to sit, cannot reasonably be doubted. Not only does his physical *Page 38 condition demand such a finding, but the expert testimony is all to that effect. And, in the words of the Chief Justice (page 762),
"The evidence in this case having conclusively shown that the plaintiff is permanently and totally disabled from either securing or performing work of the general character" (which his mentality and training would permit him to perform) "he by such evidence established a prima facie case, and in the absence of any showing that he is able to secure and perform work of a special nature, * * * he is, as a matter of law, entitled to an award as and for permanent total disability."
No evidence was offered or received by the commission which showed or tended to show that there is any work which applicant can do lying upon his back; the only position in which he can work at all. The evidence is all to the contrary. The record shows the condition of applicant to be as helpless and about as hopeless as Caillet (Caillet v. Industrial Comm., supra); as Mijat (Standard Coal Co. v. Industrial Comm., 91 Utah 549,65 P.2d 640); as Pappas, (Carbon Fuel Co. v. Industrial Comm.,92 Utah 410, 68 P.2d 894); and in two of which it was held by the commission, and in the others by this court, that the employee was totally and permanently disabled.
The order of the commission denying an award is vacated and set aside, and the cause remanded to the commission to take further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed. Costs to plaintiff.
HANSON and MOFFAT, JJ., concur.