Docket No. 21, Calendar No. 42,583. | Mich. | Oct 11, 1944
Lead Opinion
For a statement of the facts leading up to the instant case, see Fidelity Casualty Company of New York v. Vantaggi,
In the opinion of the department on hearing on review, it is stated:
"Prior to the accident, plaintiff had no difficulty whatsoever with his back and was able to do any and all types of manual labor. Following the accident he has not only been constantly troubled with his back but has also been bothered with a hydrocele and an enlarged left testicle, both of which conditions developed shortly after the accident. To find that *637 there is no causal connection between the accident and these conditions which are disabling would be to ignore entirely the practical aspect of the situation and to ignore the medical testimony which in the main fairly discloses that the accident could have been the cause of plaintiff's disability."
Many questions are raised by plaintiff as appellant. The doctors who testified for plaintiff did not see Laska until several years after the accident. Much confusion arose as to just when the hydrocele developed. One doctor stated that not having seen plaintiff at the time of the accident, he could not tell when it developed, that it might have been congenital. However, the confusion was not brought about by defendant. Plaintiff's attorney, when questioning the doctor on direct examination, brought out the following testimony:
"Q. How long after in your opinion might a hydrocele develop?
"A. Well, as to the length of time that may be hard to say or to set a time definitely, but hydroceles may form in a matter of hours to probably days and weeks, as well as months and years. That would all depend upon the size of the hydrocele."
It can readily be seen that the doctors, in testifying, were giving their independent judgment on the question as to when the hydrocele developed. At the time they examined Laska, it had grown to the size of an orange.
Further confusion was thrown into the case by the showing that Laska was able to do part-time work for a period of over two years after the accident. Many of plaintiff's questions may be grouped under the single question as to whether the lower court erred in accepting the testimony of the doctors instead of the opinion of the department that the *638
hydrocele developed shortly after the accident. We believe that plaintiff was largely responsible for injecting the question into the case by the testimony hereinbefore quoted and, therefore, cannot complain of any error. The testimony in regard to back injuries was excluded correctly. The finding of the department was res judicata as between the insurer and the employer.Fidelity Casualty Company of New York v. Vantaggi, supra;Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Co. v. Bissell,
We do not believe that the errors complained of call for a new trial. Not only was plaintiff partly at fault, but the alleged errors operated against defendant, not against plaintiff. Had the hydrocele been congenital, and plaintiff was not notified immediately, plaintiff would have been the sufferer thereby. Had plaintiff had timely notice, it could have ascertained that the hydrocele was not caused by the accident. Having ascertained it, plaintiff could have readily defended Laska's claim before the department. The failure to give notice deprived the insurance company of the opportunity of ascertaining whether or not the cause of the hydrocele was congenital or brought about by causes other than the accident. For this reason it could not carry on a successful defense before the department and was, therefore, damaged to that extent. The error, if there was one, strengthened plaintiff's case. Moreover, the testimony was not entirely certain. It was shown without any question that had plaintiff learned of the hydrocele a simple operation could have cured Laska in a very few weeks. However, it is noted that the doctors testified in the main in a guarded manner as to what could have been done. When the insurance company, instead of offering *639 this so-called operation to Laska, after learning all of the facts, and thus curing him within a very short time at a minimum of expense, as they claimed they could have done, nevertheless proceeded to agree to a lump-sum settlement, uncertainty was created in the mind of the jury. The inference was proper and very convincing to a jury that the plaintiff would not have consented to a $1,600 lump-sum settlement had it in any way been convinced of the efficacy of an operation at a minimum of expense. The insurance company's action would tend to show that Laska's case was not one in which it was believed that the operation was advisable. It gave the jury a sound basis for coming to the conclusion that plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Appellant further claims that the court erred in rejecting testimony to show that Laska worked four days after the injuries. Objection was made by the attorney for the defendant on the grounds that the record also showed that at a still later date Laska worked for a protracted period, and that this fact should also have been included in the question. The purpose of this line of questioning was to show that the injury, originally minor, was aggravated by working and by lack of immediate proper care. The court held that counsel for plaintiff should include all pertinent facts so as to enable the physician to come to his conclusion since he did not see Laska until over two years after the accident. The court did not exclude the question but required that a firm foundation be laid. Evidently the question was abandoned by plaintiff for his attorney did not pursue the subject any further. This was not reversible error.
The charge of the court was fair and the issue was squarely presented to the jury. No fault is found *640 with this charge. In the light of the above determination, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed, with costs to defendant.
STARR, WIEST, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, BOYLES, and REID, JJ., concurred with BUTZEL, J.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. None of the rulings of which appellant complained were prejudicial.