The Industrial Accident Board found that in the course of his employment as a stonecutter the employee received an injury, arising out of his employment, through the continual inhalation of particles of stone dust, which resulted in the condition called pneumonoconiosis, popularly called stonecutters’ disease. This is a “personal injury” within the workmen’s compensation act, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 26. Sullivan’s Case,
An insurer under the workmen’s compensation act must take an employee as he m.ay happen to be during the term of the policy. It is immaterial that the employee is unusually susceptible to personal injury, or to serious consequences in the event of personal injury, or that personal injury is impending because of the cumulative effect of years of exposure to the hazards of the trade. Madden’s Case,
An expert physician testified that “it would be perfectly possible” for the amount of dust inhaled between January 15, 1932, and February 11, 1932, to “upset his [the employee’s] equilibrium,” which may be interpreted as meaning to make definite his incapacity for work. Another testified that the dust inhaled during that period “would be detrimental” with “the load he was already carrying in his lungs.” This opinion was expressed in answer to a hypothetical question assuming a medical history which could be found true upon the testimony of other witnesses. Commonwealth v. Russ,
In the present case, the employee was found to be incapacitated for work on February 11, 1932. The amount of dust inhaled during the four weeks immediately preceding was, in the opinion of experts, sufficient to be “detrimental,” and a “perfectly possible” cause of his incapacity. Since the condition from which he was suffering was' cumulative, the dust inhaled during the last period of labor before incapacity became manifest was most likely to be decisive. We think that the finding of the board, in effect that it was the last straw which broke down the employee’s capacity for work, cannot be pronounced unsupported by evidence.
Decree affirmed.
