327 Mich. 572 | Mich. | 1950
June 16, 1948, plaintiff filed with the workmen’s compensation commission an application for hearing and adjustment of a claim for compensation for “recurrent bilateral hernia,” giving
“That the injury or disablement occurred at Detroit, Wayne county, Michigan and in the following maimer: Strain caused by heavy work (operated on for hernia, March, 1945. Operated on for recurrent hernia, April, 1946); Last day worked, April 9, 1948; daily wage at time of injury or disablement, $10.48; weekly earnings, $52.40.”
Testimony showed that the plaintiff started to work for the defendant in 1942, that plaintiff sustained a bilateral hernia in 1944, while working for the defendant, which was operated and compensation paid; that he went back to work for the defendant, that in 1946 he had a recurrence of the hernia, was again paid compensation, operated upon, and went back to work for the defendant at his usual heavy work. Within a week or two thereafter plaintiff began to have pains in the region of the hernia, and from that time on plaintiff felt such pain and wore a truss. Plaintiff had a recurrent hernia in 1948, went into a hospital in January, refused to submit to another operation, went back and worked for defendant until April 9th, was disabled from April 9th to June 23d, returned to work for the defendant at a lighter job from June 24th to August 23d, and has been laid off ever since that date. He attempted to find work at several places elsewhere but was unsuccessful because he wore a truss. Medical examination in October, 1948, established that plaintiff had a bilateral hernia “below the scar,” that he was a very poor surgical risk because the tissues were not so elastic on account of plaintiff’s age and a third operation might not hold.
The deputy awarded plaintiff compensation for total disability from September 9,1948, to November 19, 1948, and for partial disability thereafter at the
The question is not raised or necessarily suggested in appellant’s statement of questions involved, on this appeal, that plaintiff’s disablement was not clearly recent in origin, promptly reported to the employer, within the meaning of section 1, pt 7, of the workmen’s compensation law;
The basis on which appellant claims that the commission affirmed the award, quoting from its opinion, was as follows:
“He could continue to do this type of work until such time as the work might cause a strangulation. It is, however, inadvisable for him to do so because of such possibility of strangulation. He should not return to any work except light work. We do not believe that the plaintiff should be obliged to return to work which is hazardous to his life and health merely because he has been fortunate in ‘getting by’ with hazardous employment in the past.”
Defendant seeks to have the award set aside on the ground that the granting of compensation cannot be based upon “speculation as to what ‘might possibly happen in the future,’ ” (i.e., strangulation of hernia). Obviously, the quoted language in the
Defendant relies on Leach v. Fisher Body Division of General Motors Corp., 281 Mich 626, where the plaintiff continued at the same work for 3 years after he sustained a hernia. There was no showing that the cabinet work, in which the plaintiff was engaged, required heavy manual labor. The Court held that the injury was not compensable since plaintiff had failed to show a disablement from earning full wages at the work in which he was engaged at the time the hernia occurred. In the instant case, there was ample testimony to support the finding of the commission to the contrary.
There is testimony to support the conclusion that plaintiff’s hernia disables him from performing the work in which he had been engaged. The commission so found, and by its order affirmed the award of the deputy, which was for total disability for about 10. weeks and then for partial disability until the further order of the commission. The amount of the award — $21 per week — is not in dispute. Hernia “is compensable if and when it wholly or partially incapacitates the employee from work.” Paridee v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 278 Mich 191. Our decision in the instant case is in harmony with
Affirmed.
PA 1912 (1st Ex Sess), No 10, pt 7, § 1, as added by PA 1937, No 61, and amended by PA 1943, No 245 (CL 1948, § 417.1 [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 17.220]).