114 P.2d 173 | Okla. | 1941
This is an original proceeding in this court brought by Armour Company, hereinafter referred to as petitioner, to obtain a review of an award which was made by a trial commissioner of the State Industrial Commission in favor of Vernon H. Worden, hereinafter referred to as respondent.
The award was for eight weeks' compensation on account of temporary total disability and for an operation to correct a hernia condition. Said award was based upon a finding by the trial commissioner that the respondent while in the employ of the petitioner on September 6, 1940, had sustained an accidental personal injury which consisted of a strain and which had resulted in a right inguinal hernia.
The petitioner contends that the finding of a strain and that the hernia resulted from an accidental injury is wholly unsupported by any competent evidence shown in the record. The contentions so made are correct and must be sustained. Neither the respondent nor anyone in his behalf testified to any incident which would sustain the finding that the respondent had suffered a strain or any other type of injury accidental or otherwise, but at most merely established the fact that respondent while engaged in his ordinary duties became tired, fatigued, and sick. The testimony of the respondent himself in this connection, to use his own language, being, "I just got awfully tired, just like a strain working a little too much or too hard"; and likewise there is an absence of any medical testimony to connect the hernia, which respondent admittedly has, with any accidental injury sustained by the respondent at any time, and much less any evidence to show that the hernia was attributable to the incident testified to by the respondent when he became tired and fatigued.
Under the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act (O. S. 1931, § 13348 et seq., as amended, 85 Okla. St. Ann. § 1 et seq.) compensation is payable only in case of disability which results from a compensable accidental injury, and the term "accidental injury" is not to be given a narrow, restricted meaning, but is to receive a broad and liberal interpretation. Terminal Mill Co. v. Younger,
The disability which the medical witnesses on both sides found to exist was of such character as to require a determination of its nature, cause, and extent by skilled and professional persons, and therefore had to be proved by the testimony of such persons. St. Louis Mining Smelting Co. v. State Industrial Commission,
There being no competent evidence in the record to support either the finding of an accidental injury or that the disability was the result of any accidental injury, it becomes our duty to vacate the award as a matter of law.
Award vacated.
WELCH, C. J., and RILEY, OSBORN, GIBSON, and DAVISON, JJ., concur.