The answer to the questions propounded calls *394 for a decision as to what was meant by the use of the word “accident” in that part of our workmen’s compensation act relating to hernia, now codified as section 114-412 of the Code.
The word occurs several times in the act. Indeed the entire legislation now comprising title 114 of the Code is built around “injury by accident.” In
Covington
v.
Berkeley Granite Corporation, 182 Ga.
235, 237 (
While not dealing with a hernia ease, this court, in
Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co.
v.
Griggs,
190
Ga.
277 (
It has generally, though not universally, been held that a hernia sustained as a result of a strain by an employee while performing his work is an accident, or an accidental injury within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation acts, although there was no unexpected, unusual, or fortuitous happening, other than such injury. Such is the statement made by the editor in a foreword to an elaborate note on this question, appended to the report of the case of Giguere
v.
E. B. & A. C. Whiting Co.,
It is said, however, that in this State the rule is different by virtue of that portion of our law in the Code, § 114-412, so much of which as is pertinent reads as follows: “In all claims for compensation for hernia resulting from injury by accident arising out of and in the course of the employee’s employment it must be definitely proved to the satisfaction of the Department of Industrial Relations: first, that there was an injury resulting in hernia; second, that the hernia appeared suddenly; third, that it was accom *396 panied by pain; fourth, that the hernia immediately followed an accident; fifth, that the hernia did not exist prior to the accident for which compensation is claimed.” There is no express statement that the word “accident” as there used, or the phrase “injury by accident,” shall be construed differently in hernia cases from their meaning in other portions of the same act. It would have been easy so to declare had the lawmakers intended that the injury by accident there referred to should be sustained in some extraordinary occurrence in and about the work engaged in. They did in some respects put a greater burden on claimants in this class of cases than in most others. It is required by the section just quoted in part that, among other things, it be shown that the hernia appeared suddenly, that it was accompanied by pain, and that it immediately followed an accident. It appears to us as rather significant that the act, while containing a special section on the subject of hernia, and in the particulars pointed out, wrote into the law certain limitations on the right to claim compensation for hernia resulting from injury by accident, omitted the requirement that the injury must be one sustained in an extraordinary occurrence.
In Central Surety & Insurance Corporation
v.
Industrial Commission of Colorado,
The Alabama statute contains a section similar in language to ours, as to when there may be compensation for hernia resulting from injury by accident. The requirements of the Alabama workmen’s compensation law are, that there was an injury resulting in hernia; that it was accompanied by pain; that the hernia immediately followed an accident, and did not exist before the accident. Woodward Iron Co.
v.
Vines,
When that which causes it was an accident as generally defined, then the hernia follows an accident; and if the claimant, under the applicable section of our Code, is otherwise entitled to compensation, it is not to be denied him merely because the injury was sustained in an act of his which was done in the usual and expected manner in the ordinary performance of his duties.
The first question is answered in the affirmative; the second in the negative.
