176 S.W.2d 883 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1943
Affirming.
Virgil Litteral, who had been in the regular and continuous employment of appellant, James C. Ellis, received an injury on June 11, 1940, arising out of and in the course of his employment. Both employer and employee had accepted the provisions of the Kentucky Workmen's Compensation Act, KRS
The sole contention on this appeal is that death did not result from the accident, and that testimony to the contrary was not sufficient to sustain the Board's finding. The opinions of this court in A. C. Lawrence Leather Co. v. Barnhill,
Objection is made to this testimony, because the hypothetical question contained a supposition that a head injury was received, which was testified to by two witnesses, and the further supposition, which was stated in the hypothetical question, that it was not present previous to the accident complained of, which was not supported by the evidence. Since it was not shown by the evidence that the depression in the head was not absent previous to the accident, the Board erred in permitting Dr. Rash to testify to the question presupposing this fact. But we think it was not prejudicial in this case, since the Board made its finding exclusively eliminating the testimony of Dr. Rash and the testimony as to the presence of a head injury. The Board's finding in this respect is in the following words: "Without accepting the 'sink place' theory advanced by the plaintiff, and without basing our findings upon the opinion of Dr. Rash, we reached the conclusion on the ultimate facts already reached by the referee."
Dr. C.M. Rice, who was Litteral's family physician, stated that he first attended the patient after the accident, but that he retired from the case when appellant employed Dr. Connor to take over the treatment. That he examined the X-rays, and agreed with the other doctors concerning the fractured vertebrae, and that he helped place the patient in a cast. He stated that after the patient left the hospital, the latter called at his office two or three times, and that on each of those occasions *292 he complained of pain in his back. That he advised Litteral to go home and remain in bed, instead of coming to his office, and that this advice was given because the doctor was of the opinion that "he was out too early with a broken back." That he did not think the patient physically able to make the trip to Salyersville, and that the fracture at that time would not be sufficiently united to become solid enough to be up and about. In answer to a competent hypothetical question (and about which no question is made), he replied: "Now, the exercise, I don't see hardly how he could have exercised himself in the walk of that distance to be overcome by the heat of the sun unless he made an unusual trip or went very rapidly to his place of destination. Inasmuch as he had been complaining continuously all of the time with his back from the time that I saw him, and from what I heard about his death later on it occurs to me that his death would be from the injury."
He further testified that Litteral was an able-bodied man before the injury. He stated that he did not know that Litteral was going to make the trip, and therefore did not advise him in respect to it.
Where the burden of proof is on plaintiff to prove the probable cause of death, such burden does not cast upon him the necessity of disproving every other suggested cause. 71. C. J. Sec. 879, pp. 1069-1070. And where death follows soon after the injury of an able-bodied man, a presumption arises that the death was caused by the injury in the absence of other than conjectural testimony to the contrary. 71 C. J. Sec. 863, p. 1061. The evidence clearly shows the deceased to have been an unusually able-bodied man for thirteen years previous to his injury, and that the symptoms he complained of from the time of his injury up to the very moment of his death were continuous, and gradually grew worse. The only doctor who testified that in his opinion death was caused by heat stroke was the doctor who advised him that it was all right to make the trip to Salyersville, and one of the ever present symptoms of sunstroke was definitely established not to have been present following his walk from his father's house to the Church. That being true, and excluding, as did the Board, the answer of Dr. Rash to the hypothetical question and the evidence concerning the head injury, we are of the opinion that there was ample medical evidence to support the finding of the *293 Board, and that the uncontradicted evidence of the sequence of events following the injury up to the moment of death strongly corroborated the testimony of the doctors for appellee.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.
Whole Court sitting.