214 A.D. 356 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925
On March 26, 1921, claimant slipped from a lumber pile and fell to the ground while working for his employer as a box maker. The Board has found that claimant sustained injuries in the nature of a concussion of the brain as well as fracture of the right clavicle, which with their resultant effects caused disability from that date to December 29, 1924, the date of expiration of the last award. Various disability awards were at first made and paid. He returned to work for his former employer on December 1, 1922, at reduced wages because of inability to do more than light work. The following year he was given a schedule award for forty per cent loss of use of the right arm, which was paid in full, paying him to August 16, 1923. Thereafter an additional award was sought, based on head disability, such as dizziness, ringing sound in the ears and deafness in the right ear. There was proof that he bled from the right ear and nose when he was injured and that he was taken to the hospital where he was unconscious for two days. In the employer’s first report it was stated that the claimant fractured Ms skull. On October 17, 1923, the carrier sent him to a hospital the records of which showed “ impaired hearing' and tinnitus ” (ringing sound in the ears). The State Industrial Board, has now made an award based on decreased earning capacity for the period covering August 16, 1923 (the date of the expiration of the schedule award for forty per cent loss of use of the arm) to June 13, 1924, and another award based on decreased earning capacity for the period covering June 13, 1924, to December 29, 1924. The appeal is from these two awards.
The fatal defect in the awards so made is the failure of the proof to sustain the finding of a disability during the period of the
The awards should be reversed and the matter remitted, with costs against the State Industrial Board to abide the event.
All concur.
Awards reversed and matter remitted, with costs against the State Industrial Board to abide the event.