158 N.Y.S. 970 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The award should be affirmed. There is not such a deficiency in the medical proof connecting the injury with the death of the injured employee as to warrant this court in disturbing the determination made by the State Industrial Commission.
Michael Sullivan, whose dependents are the present claimants, was admittedly a time-worker in the employ of the Industrial Engineering Company. On July 25, 1915, he died in the Harlem Hospital, to which he had been admitted five days before. During his illness at the hospital the injured worker was delirious much of the time, and was probably suffering from delirium tremens. The immediate cause of death was certified and testified by the attending physicians from the hospital to be “ lobar pneumonia, alcoholic poisoning.”
The “ employer’s first report of injury,” dated three days before the death, described “ how the accident occurred ” as follows: “ While pulling centers a piece of 3x8 fell on shoulder. According to report of fellow-workman.” The timekeeper’s report added that “this information was received from H. Couton. The injured did not report any injury. According to H. Couton accident occurred several days before he (Couton) reported it to us.”
The uncontradicted testimony of Hypolite Couton and Frank Hicks, fellow-employees, before the Commission, showed clearly
The decedent’s wife testified that he came home Friday evening and complained of pain, saying that he had been struck by a plank that day. Home remedies and treatment were administered. The next morning he returned to work, despite his wife’s entreaties. At two o’clock he came home and went to bed. That night, Sunday and Monday, he was in bed, and continued to complain of pains in the arm, shoulder and side. Monday morning a homeopathic physician was called, who gave him some unidentified pills. On Tuesday the patient was evidently suffering also from some sort of delirium or alcoholism. The deceased had been in the habit of drinking moderately of beer, but just prior to the accident he does not seem to have been indulging in liquor to any appreciable extent. As his condition grew worse his wife despaired of her ability to keep him in doors, although his arm hung limply at his side. She enlisted the aid of a policeman in obtaining an ambulance, and he was taken to the Harlem Hospital.
Dr. Stile, the homeopath, who prescribed pills on July nineteenth, was not called to the stand by either side. Dr. Eafsky was cross-examined as to the adequacy of the accident as a producing cause of the conditions found when the patient was admitted to the hospital. For example, the following testimony was given by Dr. Eafsky on cross-examination: “ Q. Supposing I told you that on the 16th of July a plank 3 by 8 fell on this man’s shoulder,— somewhat heavy. That could cause a neuritis with a real paralysis of that arm if it fell on the proper place. Supposing it did and caused a paralysis of the nerve, would that cause that condition ? A. Yes, it might. Q. And it would be more probable than an alcoholic hemiplegia or a monaplegia ? A. Yes. Q. I am supposing that it did occur % A. Yes. Q. And you overlooked it even though it didn’t show any ecchymosis, and you would never think of it ? A. Yes, the man would lay in that condition and not complain and I wouldn’t know about it. * * * Q. What was the lobar pneumonia due to ? A. Lowered resistance. "x" * * Q. * * * Assuming the man had sustained an injury resulting in the condition described here, would that have caused this man’s death or contribute to it ? A. The injury alone wouldn’t, it may contribute. ”
The proof submitted in behalf of the dependent claimants at bar seems fairly to authorize and sustain the award made. The testimony on medical phases leaves something to be desired, but cannot he regarded as insufficient in a substantial sense. Taken in connection with the statutory presumptions arising under, section 21 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 67; Laws of 1914, chap. 41), the validity and propriety of the award, as against judicial interference, is clear. There is here involved none of the evidentiary questions passed upon in Matter of Carroll v. Knickerbocker Ice Co. (169 App. Div. 450), upon which I retain the views expressed in the dissenting opinion in that case. The canons of proof and presumption laid down in Matter of Collins v. Brooklyn Union Gas Co. (171 App. Div. 381) have here been fully met. That the deceased was in the employ of the insured employer is admitted. That he received serious injury arising “ out of and in the course of ” that employment (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 10) is shown by the testimony of two eye-witnesses, is not contradicted, and is confirmed by the employer’s own report. That this injury and its effects led on directly and in causal relation to the conditions which brought about death is shown by the testimony of the ambulance surgeon, the hospital physician, and the widow, as witnesses to the facts, and by the admissions of the hospital physician, testifying as an expert on cross-examination, after he had been called in behalf
The award should be affirmed.
Award unanimously affirmed.