102 Ga. App. 326 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1960
Where upon the trial of a workmen’s compensation case it was admitted by the employer that the claimant suffered an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment when he was struck on the head by a shovel which fell from a truck he was loading, or unloading, at the time; that a gash requiring four stitches was inflicted on the top of his head near the hairline; and, where the evidence showed that thereafter the claimant worked for the employer about two weeks when he was discharged and where the claimant testified at the time of the hearing that he was not able to work and had not been able to work since the time of his discharge, that he has weak, nervous shaky spells and his eyesight goes blurry and he can’t see a thing in the world when he gets hot or anything, and that this condition must have been caused by the blow on his head, because he didn’t have it before and had never had any trouble in his life before that time; and, where the expert medical evidence in the form of written reports by two doctors admitted
Judgment affirmed.