194 S.W.2d 643 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Affirming.
It is declared in our Workmen's Compensation statute, KRS
"(a) There was an injury resulting in hernia; *602
"(b) The hernia appeared suddenly and immediately following the injury; and
"(c) The hernia did not exist in any degree prior to the injury for which compensation is claimed."
In the present case it was proved that W.L. Leslie, while at work for the American Rolling Mill Company on July 23, 1944, fell and struck the lower part of his abdomen on the edge of a step. He suffered great pain at that point for perhaps two hours but continued his day's work. The pain recurred intermittently for a few days and his doctor found that he had a hernia. He was sent to Dr. Rice, chief surgeon for the company, who made the same diagnosis and advised an operation. Leslie was operated on by Dr. Marting, another company surgeon. The Board made an appropriate award for lost time and expenses. The circuit court confirmed it. These facts are not disputed nor is the amount considered erroneous; but it is claimed by the appellant that the injury is not compensable because the employee did not establish freedom from a pre-existing degree of hernia in accordance with the requirement of clause (c) quoted above.
Dr. Rice testified that his profession recognizes a "primary inguinal hernia," or what he calls "open rings," as a weakness in the lower abdominal wall. That condition may progress to complete hernia, in which there is a break-through and protrusion, such as this employee suffered following the accident. A "primary hernia" is a degree of hernia that rarely becomes complete through violence and a majority of these cases progress naturally and become complete without trauma or injury. The existence of the incipient condition is usually not known to the individual, for there is no exterior evidence of it, and so long as that condition remains undeveloped it gives no pain.
Leslie had been employed by this company for seventeen years, except one year in the earlier part of the period when he worked elsewhere. He had never experienced any pain indicative of physical disorder. Indeed, he had always been a healthy man and had lost no time on account of ill health or infirmity. But Dr. Rice testified that Leslie had been sent to him for an examination by the superintendent on August 2, 1940, and that he had made a record that Leslie had a primary *603 inguinal hernia at that time. In response to a question as to whether he then told Leslie of his "condition, Dr. Rice related that he had made a routine exterior examination; and further, "I expect I put my finger up in the channel, possibly two inches," which would be how he determined the classification. He was confident that he had told Leslie of his condition, "because when the boys have that condition present I always tell them; from three to six thousand times a year do I make that examination." However, Leslie was emphatic that the doctor had not made any such character of examination and had not advised him of any such condition. Dr. Marting, who performed the operation, testified that he found no indication of a previous rupture and that an incomplete hernia can apparently heal. He expressed the opinion that without any history or exterior signs, except a bulge, it is impossible to tell whether or not there is or has been a primary hernia which had healed and recurred.
In the absence of further professional definitions or descriptions of hernia, the Referee, for his opinion, resorted to both a general and a medical dictionary which defined a hernia, in brief, to be a protrusion. The appellant complains of this and quotes from two recent medical authorities describing the advancement in knowledge of such condition, and the conclusion, "that practically all hernias are of congenital origin, due to this open pouch or peritoneum, which has existed since birth."
We are quite sure that it was never intended that clause (c) of KRS
The statutes of several states prescribe as a condition of recovery of compensation for a hernia that it must be shown that the hernia did not exist prior to the time of the injury for which compensation is claimed. The classification "in any degree" seems to be rare. In construing such statutes it has been said several times by the courts that it would be assumed the legislature had in mind the customary definition of hernia in terms of a protrusion. Lewis v. American Surety Company,
In Dixon v. Norfolk Shipbuilding Dry Dock Corporation,
In the present case we have a man who had been performing manual labor throughout the four years intervening since the doctor stated he found a "primary hernia" or "open rings," until he suffered violence at the point where a protrusion the size of a walnut developed. Dr. Rice relied upon a record and apparently had no definite memory of the examination. The patient denied that he made such an examination. The operating surgeon found no indication of any degree of hernia other than that for which he operated. He told the Board that a person may have an incipient or primary degree of hernia and then have it healed. Certainly, the court cannot say as a matter of law that the claimant failed to prove to the satisfaction of the Board that the hernia caused by this accident did not exist in any degree prior to this injury. Hay v. Swiss Oil Company,
The judgment is affirmed.