193 A.D. 564 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
The work of the claimant was to assemble and test motor dictographs which were manufactured by his employer. The testing was done by speaking into a transmitter and receiving the sound from an ear piece. The Commission finds that the claimant’s ears “ were subjected to an extra hazard caused by the strong vibratory sound waves continuously striking his ear drum,” and that “ on January 24, 1920, while engaged in the regular course of his employment he felt a snap in his left ear after which there immediately issued therefrom blood
In Matter of Woodruff v. Howes Construction Company (228 N. Y. 276) the claimant, who was a carpenter, had a frog felon on his hand which it was claimed was developed by the constant use of a screwdriver bruising the palm of the hand. In that case as in this the claimant testified to his belief that the injury came from the work in which he was engaged and that the pain had existed several days. It was held that the testimony was insufficient to establish an accident and an award in favor of the claimant was reversed.
No causal relation has been established between the work performed by the claimant and his injury. It may have resulted from natural causes entirely independent of his work. The hiatus between cause and effect has not been bridged. In the absence of all proof on. the subject the Commission was not justified in finding that the disease of the ears was the result of vibrations caused by the dictographs. No effort
The award should be reversed and the matter remitted to the Commission.
All concur.
Award reversed and matter remitted to the Commission.