49 A.2d 243 | N.J. | 1946
Lead Opinion
This is a workmen's compensation matter in which the employee was awarded compensation in the Bureau and, on appeal, in the Court of Common Pleas. The evidence was that DiMaria on June 21st, 1943, commenced to operate a roller-sanding gun which vibrated his hand. On July 2d he felt his hands becoming stiff and reported the condition to the first-aid department. There was medical testimony to support a finding of "traumatic chronic progressive adhesive teno-synovitis of the flexor tendons of both hands."
The sole question presented by this writ of certiorari is whether or not the employee sustained an accident within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act. We find no evidence of an accident.
In Liondale Bleach Works v. Riker,
The opinion of the Common Pleas discusses the fact that the employee's system was peculiarly susceptible to vibration. Assuming such to be the case, that merely goes to the extent of the injury sustained and has no bearing upon whether an accident within the meaning of the act was sustained.
The case of Capuano v. Wright Aeronautical Corp.,
The judgment under appeal is reversed, but without costs. *526
Dissenting Opinion
It cannot be doubted that the workman suffered a partially disabling injury which arose out of and in the course of the master's service. The question is whether the injury had its genesis in an accident within the intendment of the statute. I think it had.
There was no pathology. It is conceded that the disability is the consequence of a "traumatic, chronic, adhesive, teno-synovitis" of the flexor tendons of both hands due, in turn, to the vibration incident to the workman's operation of a compressed air roller sander over a period of a little more than a week after the service began; and this condition the employer considers an occupational disease. It introduced medical opinion that it is "a rare condition" which "may be due to repeated trauma in which fibrotic changes are set up, following small pin-point hemorrhages" — such as may ensue from manual use of a vibrating machine — but that it is not the result of a "particular injury" or a "single occurrence," and is "rather in the nature of an occupational disease." Thus, the opinion evidence involves mixed conclusions of law and fact, in part beyond the province of medical science, and is to be assessed accordingly.
The medical opinion is one on the proposition that the injury was traumatic and not idiopathic in origin. It does not take the category of an occupational disease, for the "pin-point hemorrhages" and the attendant disabling fibrotic changes were the consequents of "repeated trauma," rather than causes incident to the nature of the work, and so a disease which naturally and customarily attends its performance. Is not this employee's incapacity the cumulative effect of a succession of particular occurrences in their nature accidental? It would seem to be axiomatic that the disability derivable from a series of traumatic injuries is no less compensable than the consequence of one. The expressed design of the statute is the provision of compensation for personal injuries or death "by accident arising out of and in the course" of the employment. R.S. 34:15-7. There was personal injury to the employee here, and it was unquestionably suffered by accident; and this is not the less so because the *527 ultimate injury and incapacity were the cumulation of a succession of accidents of like nature.
Such is the rationale of the English case of Selvage v.Charles Burrell and Sons, Ltd., (1921) 1 K.B. 355; affirmed,sub nom. Charles Burrell and Sons, Ltd., v. Selvage, 90L.J.K.B. 1340, where the servant, while using a machine, suffered occasional scratches of the hands over a period of several months and osteo-arthritis as the result of a gradual septic absorption through the abrasions. In upholding an award of compensation, Lord Buckmaster for the House of Lords said that the workman sustained personal injury by accident, and that "the accident is no less accidental because it occurred on a series of occasions instead of on one." Lord Wrenbury, concurring, pointed out that "the compensation is paid not for the accident, but for the personal injury caused by the accident," and that where the contraction of disease is the injury for which compensation is to be given, "it cannot be material that the disease was contracted by reason of a succession of scratches suffered over a period of some four months. Not the scratches, but the disease resulting from the scratches, formed the injury here for which compensation was given by the act." The principle was applied by the House of Lords in Innes (or Grant) v. G. G. Kynoch, (1919) A.C. 765.
I do not read the case of Liondale Bleach, Dye and PaintWorks v. Riker,
In the case at hand, the injury is directly traceable to specific occurrences accidental in nature, within a comparatively brief period of time, all referable to the employment; and thus the statutory requirement of proof of a causal relationship between the accidental occurrences and the injury is satisfied. The time of the happening of the accidental injury is fixed with as much certainty as its nature permits. There was "injury by accident" in the legislative sense.
And it goes without saying that the particular workman's peculiar susceptibility to injury of this character is not preclusive of the right to compensation.
I would affirm the judgment. *529