Affirming.
On November 23, 1941, Robert Surgener, an employee of the Black Star Coal Company, was injured in an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. He suffered a compound fracture of the tibia or large bone of his left leg, and a large artery two or three inches below the knee was severed. He was taken to a hospital in Pineville, given an anesthetic, and the fracture was reduced. Pins were put in the bone and his leg was placed in a plaster cast. The bone failed to unite properly, and the result was what the physicians describe as a fibrous union. Surgener returned to work for the Black Star Coal Company July 23, 1942, picking slate, work which he could perform while sitting, but after two or three weeks quit and went to Detroit, Michigan, where he obtained employment in a defense plant at wages equal to or exceeding the wages he received as a miner prior to his injury. In Detroit he operated a welding machine which he manipulated with his hands. His work did not require him to stand on his feet. On October 12, 1942, he filed with the Workmen's Compensation Board an application for adjustment of his claim. The taking of proof was completed February 8, 1943, and on February 25, 1943, the company moved that the applicant be required to submit to an operation to repair the imperfect union, and that pending the operation the case be held in abeyance. The motion was overruled, and the referee before whom the hearing was held found that the applicant had a total permanent disability to the body as a whole because of the injury to his leg kind awarded compensation at the rate of $15 a week during the period of total disability but not longer than ten years from the date of the accident and not to exceed the sum of $7,500. In a full board review the board concurred in the findings of the referee that the applicant was totally disabled to perform heavy manual labor in a coal mine, but modified the award by providing, in conformity with the rule announced in Consolidation Coal Company v. Ditty,
Appellant poses these three questions for determination by this court:
"First, should the appellee be required to submit to operation to correct the slight physical infirmity due to lack of union of the small bone in the lower limb;
"Second, should the award be to the member alone or to the body as a whole;
"Third, should this man, who is earning $66.00 per week, who left the employment of appellant voluntarily where he was earning a sum in excess of the maximum compensation allowed, be paid any compensation at all."
Appellant is in error in stating that appellee's physical infirmity is slight and that the small bone in his leg was fractured. Its own medical witnesses, Dr. Edward Wilson and Dr. W.R. Parks, testified that the large bone or tibia was fractured, and Dr. J.G. Foley, introduced by appellee, testified that because of the imperfect union appellee is unable to bear his weight on his left leg and is totally disabled to perform any labor which requires him to stand. Dr. Wilson, who treated appellee for several months, testified: "Surgener had what you call a compound fracture of the tibia bone in the left leg. He was given an anesthetic and the stamen pins were put into the leg and fixed in the plaster cast and the open wound was given usual attention for that type of injury. He got by pretty well considering he had a compound fracture. He had very little infection of the wound. He did not seem to develop infection of the bone. I examined him from time to time in the course of 2 or 3 months and it became apparent he was not going to get the bone to give him proper bone union, which would result as a nonunion or fibrous union instead of proper union. I advised him to have an open operation performed that is after he did not have infection. He repeatedly declined any operation." He said that in order to get a substantial bony union it would be necessary to make an *Page 656
incision in the leg, take the bone apart and cut and remove the fibrous matter. When Dr. Wilson advised appellee to have an orthopedic surgeon perform the operation, appellee said he was afraid of blood poison and the hot weather. Appellant based its motion to require appellee to submit to an operation on KRS
The rule deducible from these cases is that an in jured employee's refusal to submit to an operation is unreasonable if it appears that an operation of a simple character, not involving serious suffering or danger, will result in substantial physical improvement, but where there is a difference of expert opinion as to the danger or result of such an operation the injured employee's refusal to submit thereto is not unreasonable. Before the question can be considered by the Workmen's Compensation Board a bona fide offer to bear the expense of an operation must have been made by the employer, and the employee must have had an opportunity to consult physicians or surgeons of his own selection in order to test for himself the advisability of the proposed operation. Here there is no proof that appellant at any time offered to bear the expense of an operation or requested appellee to submit to an operation. Dr. Wilson testified that he advised appellee to have an operation performed, but there is no proof that he was acting for appellant nor does it appear that appellee had any notice that appellant intended to invoke the statute now relied upon and that his compensation would be endangered by his refusal to submit to an operation, until the motion was filed with the board. This was after all the proof had been taken and the case had been submitted. Under the circumstances, the board properly overruled the motion. It does not follow that the question may not be raised at any time in the future if appellant makes a *Page 657 proper offer and appellee is given an opportunity to consult physicians of his own selection.
Appellant next insists that appellee, if entitled to compensation at all, is entitled only to compensation for the loss of a leg, fixed by the specific schedule in KRS
"Q. Doctor, did you take hold of this man's limb and move and twist it? A. Yes sir.
"Q. Got a movement, didn't you? A. Yes sir."
The facts in the present case are similar to those in Consolidation Coal Company's Receivers v. Patrick,
It is finally insisted that appellee is not entitled to compensation while he is receiving from another employer wages equal to or in excess of the wages earned by him as a miner. A similar contention was made in Fulton Ice Company v. Meacham,
"The evidence shows that appellee is unable to do manual labor, the only kind of work he is fitted to perform, and the fortuitous circumstance that he was able to obtain employment as a watchman, probably temporarily, should not defeat his claim."
It was a fortuitous circumstance that appellee was able to obtain temporary employment in a defense plant at a time when any sort of labor was in demand. Appellant's own witness, Dr. W.R. Parks, said: "As soon as the war is over these jobs such as he is on will be over and when he enters the labor market he will find himself being rejected."
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 659