17 A.D.2d 76 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1962
Lead Opinion
The employer and its carrier appeal from a decision and award of the Workmen’s Compensation Board for disability due to upper respiratory disease resulting from claimant’s exposure to cold in the course of his 15 years’ employment by appellant employer as a butcher.
Claimant’s medical expert diagnosed chronic lung disease, the “specific type” being “that of pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary emphysema, cystic lung disease ”, with chronic bronchitis and bronchospasm, resulting in permanent total disability due to pulmonary insufficiency; the doctor finding causal relation in that claimant’s “ repeated exposures to the refrigerated air of the icebox, as well as to the cold air of the packing room, produced a state of more or less chronic bronchospasm ”; which condition, in turn, produced infections, episodes of bronchopneumonia, of bronchitis and of lobar pneumonia; the infectious process, with its concomitants, then resulting in the pulmonary crippling which the doctor found. Causal relation was further emphasized by this physician’s testiihony that some seven months before his complete disablement, claimant, after two hours in the icebox, sustained a “ typical ” bronchospastic episode “ clearly attributable ” to his work in the icebox, this being followed by ‘ ‘ similar recurrent attacks ’ ’ compelling him to leave his work for intervals of a few days or a week, and “ the long-term cumulative effect ” being “ his present status ” of disablement. The board was, of course, entitled to accept this opinion of causation and to reject such of the testimony of appellants’ medical witnesses as was at variance with it. Although the physician who examined for appellants denied causal relation, some support for claimant’s theory of causation may be found in the testimony of the other experts called by appellants. Thus,' an impartial specialist, testifying as appellants’ witness, after discussing the general or popular contention that exposure to chill may precipitate a respiratory illness, said that “ the clinical impression is that it may be so, but we have no scientific proof”; that “we are willing to say that it is possible that it may have had an effect ”; which he would, however, consider of “ minor degree ”. Another expert, called by appellants, said that ‘1 infection plays a very strong etiologic role here * * * I think to a large extent these patients suffer from repeated infections and that is the cause of their disease”; and, significantly, that one “can get an infection from exposure to cold such as going into the icebox ”,
The regular exposure to temperature extremes was certainly a “ distinctive feature of the claimant’s job, common to all jobs of that sort ” and the medical evidence made abundantly clear the “ recognizable link ” between it and the disease (Matter of Harman v. Republic Aviation Corp., 298 N. Y. 285, 288); and the board could find upon equally strong evidence and inference therefrom that the “ conditions ” of claimant’s long, regular and frequent exposures, while at work in the icebox and packing room, where those “to which all employees of [his] class are subject, and which produce the disease as a natural incident of a particular occupation, and attach to that occupation a hazard which distinguishes it from the usual run of occupations and is in excess of the hazard attending employment in general.” (Matter of Goldberg v. 954 Marcy Corp., 276 N. Y. 313, 319.) These rules, as enunciated in Goldberg and in Harman, were restated in Matter of Detenbeck v. General Motors Corp. (309 N. Y. 558, 560-561), which otherwise seems to us not in point, being, like Ashley (supra), an aggravation case, in which the court found that the “ condition in claimant’s case was due to a congenital defect of the spine ” (p. 506) ; that “ the work in which he was engaged simply amounted to the ordinary wear and tear of life impinging on the infirmity with which [he] had been born ” (p. 561); and that the test of occupational
Pulmonary tuberculosis caused by repeated exposure to cold in a meat market was held to be an occupational disease in Matter of Bishop v. Comer & Pollock (251 App. Div. 492) which involved direct causation and thus is not necessarily bereft of authority as predating the Betenbeck case (309 N. Y. 558, supra), dealing with aggravation. Further, interestingly
The medical testimony in this case brings it within the purview of very recent decisions as well, in that claimant’s medical expert equated the insult of the refrigerated air to that of other bronchial irritants encountered in industry. In one such case, involving emphysema, we considered it “ almost obvious that the inhalation of acid fumes is an occupational hazard” and, having previously noted that the case seemed more nearly analogous to the allergy cases than to those of pre-existing disease or congenital defect, said: “The fact that one employee might be less affected than another does not destroy this conception.” (Matter of Ciampa v. Tripp Plating Co., 3 A D 2d 621, 622; see, also, Matter of Zecca v. Levinsohn & Co., 12 A D 2d 676, motion for leave to appeal denied 9 N Y 2d 610; Matter of Muench v. Schoenfeld Co., 12 A D 2d 847.)
The rejDeated insults of refrigerated air, as here shown, seem comparable, also, to the repetitive action and additive effect upon intervertebral discs of a particular form of physical exertion necessary to a particular work operation, such bodily movements having been found causative of disc herniation, and that condition, in turn, held to constitute occupational disease, apparently because the essential link was so clearly recognizable ; and this without proof of the prevalence of the condition among other workmen in the particular occupation and despite the fact that all active persons, in and out of industry, are exposed, in greater or less degree, to the hazard of disc lesion. (See Platter of Mullarkey v. New York Hosp., 13 A D 2d 584, affd. 11 N Y 2d 898; Matter of Wehling v. Ford Motor Co., 7 A D 2d 175, motion for leave to appeal denied 6 N Y 2d 705.)
In sum, the appeal presents proof of a disease which rational medical evidence linked and directly associated with repeated and protracted exposure to refrigerated air. Such, obviously, was a markedly “ distinctive feature of the claimant’s job, common to all jobs of that sort”, and thus met the primary test imposed in Harman (298 N. Y. 285, 288, supra), and reiter
Appellants’ additional contentions and procedural objections do not disclose substantial merit.
The decision and award should be affirmed, with costs to the Workmen’s Compensation Board.
Dissenting Opinion
It is undisputed that claimant was completely disabled in April, 1956 and that the cause of disablement was pulmonary emphysema. For the 15-year period prior to April, 1956 during which claimant had been employed by appellant employer he had worked in various meat departments where he was almost continuously exposed to cold damp working conditions. Claimant testified that in 1950 he first noticed shortness of breath and that it gradually became worse until by 1955 he could no longer breathe when in a refrigerator. In 1956, while home in bed, claimant had a severe attack of shortness of breath and was thereafter unable to return to work. The board has found the disease, contracted or aggravated, was an occupational disease. Appellants contend that there is no substantial evidence to establish the requisite causal relationship. While the record is not clear whether the board considered that the disease was contracted in employment or that there was a nonindustrial contraction aggravated by employment, we find claimant’s expert did provide .substantial evidence upon which the board could properly have found the latter. The full board of chest consultants found minor aggravation, by the intermittent exposures to cold, of bronchitis and emphysema, mentioning the background of chronic infection, heavy smoking and pre-existing lung disease. Claimant’s doctor found that “ Mr. Roettinger was suffering down through the years from episodes of broncho spasm which, according to the history and according to the findings, were made worse by exposure to cold air ’ ’ and again ‘1 In this particular case where we note the well documented acute exacerbations following exposure to cold, I feel without much doubt that the more serious accelerating factor is this exposure to cold and in the course of his employment ”. Indeed claimant’s counsel, in a hearing on March 20, 1961 before the board in a colloquy with Mr. Schwartz, a board member, agreed that his case was predicated upon an aggravation. So there seems little doubt that there is no substantial evidence of anything but an aggravation herein. Unlike the
Bergan, P. J., and Herlihy, J., concur with Gibson, J.; Reynolds and Taylor, JJ., dissent and vote to reverse and remit in opinion by Reynolds, J.
Decision and award affirmed, with costs to the Workmen’s Compensation Board.