149 P.2d 333 | Okla. | 1944
On April 3, 1941, Harold S. Capshaw, hereinafter called claimant, filed his first notice of injury and claim for compensation stating that on December 9, 1940, he sustained an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment with James Lawson and Tena Lawson, doing business as Shawnee Bedding Company, hereinafter called respondent, when he fell from a truck. The respondent denied the accident and denied that there was any disability as the result of the accidental injury, and after a complete hearing before a single commissioner, the commissioner, on January 9, 1943, entered an award. On appeal the State Industrial Commission en banc entered the following order:
"Now on this 17th day of May, 1943, the State Industrial Commission being regularly in session, this cause on for consideration pursuant to appeal from the order of Chairman Lawrence E. Beattie, Trial Commissioner, to the Commission en banc as provided by title 85, Section 77, Session Laws 1941, and it appearing that said appeal was duly and regularly presented and heard and oral argument had by all the interested parties before Chairman Vancil K. Greer, Commissioner H.H. Cook and Commissioner Weldon Ferris, sitting as the Commission en banc, and the Commission, after a full review and consideration of the order made and entered in this cause by Chairman Lawrence E. Beattie, on January 9th, 1943, together with all records on file in this cause and after presentation of said cause by oral argument, finds:
"Said order should be and hereby is reversed, vacated and set aside and that compensation in this cause be and is hereby denied."
The evidence discloses that the respondent was engaged in the manufacture of bedding material. The evidence of the claimant discloses that on the 19th day of December, 1940, he fell from a truck in which cotton was being hauled and sustained an accidental injury and that this injury lighted up a prior epileptic condition. The evidence of respondent tends to deny that there was any accidental injury on the 19th day of December, 1940, and the medical testimony offered by respondent tends reasonably to disclose that any disability that claimant has is a result of a confirmed pre-existing epileptic condition.
It is first claimed that the evidence is undisputed that claimant sustained an accidental injury. The uncontradicted *238
evidence tends to establish that there was an accident. The question, then, is whether there is a disability as a result of the accident, and that question is one of fact to be determined by the State Industrial Commission. Accidental injury in its broadest sense under the Workmen's Compensation Law (85 O. S. 1941 § 1 et seq.) means the disability resulting from an accidental injury for which compensation should be paid. Souder v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation,
The final argument presented by the claimant is that the order made by the State Industrial Commission sitting en banc is improper, and that it should have included a specific finding of fact as to whether there was an accidental injury, or as to whether there was any disability resulting from the accidental injury. In Banning v. Peru-Laclede Syndicate,
The order denying the award is sustained.
CORN, C.J., GIBSON, V.C.J., and RILEY, BAYLESS, HURST, and ARNOLD, JJ., concur.