221 N.W. 905 | Minn. | 1928
The employe, about the end of the work day, carried a bundle of shingles up a ladder and in attempting to place the bundle on the scaffold upon which the shinglers were to stand was forced to twist or wrench his body in order to get it thereon. He claims he felt a stinging pain in the groin. However he kept on shingling for some 15 minutes but quit a little before quitting time. When he tried to eat supper he felt nauseated. He had intermittent pains during the night. In the morning he discovered that hernia had developed. He felt sick, could not eat breakfast, and went back to bed. In the afternoon he was taken to the hospital and was operated upon for *554 hernia the next morning. The employe was 67 years old and a carpenter. About 35 years previous to this occurrence he discovered rupture in the same groin and thereupon wore a truss for seven years, after which the hernia disappeared, and thereafter he did his work without any inconvenience or indication of any symptoms of recurring trouble in that groin. The operation disclosed a fibrous growth which had closed the sac of the old femoral hernia except a little opening the size of a pencil, the upper part of which had been twisted so as to shut off the circulation of the blood, causing gangrene to set in. The surgeon said it might have existed as long as four days previous to the operation. But he expressed the opinion that the twist of the body in the effort to place the bundle of shingles upon the platform doubled up or twisted the little sac. The defendant insurance company had procured an affidavit from the employe soon after the operation, containing these statements among others:
"When I got out of bed and went to dress on the morning of August 30, 1927, in the Hotel Planter at 6 a. m., I felt something hurting me in my right groin. * * * I could not say anything unusual happened that I know of. I did not fall or slip or strike myself in any way that I can remember of during the time I was working for this church. I don't remember having any trouble with my groin prior to August 30, 1927. * * * I would blame the occurrence of this hernia to carrying the shingles up the ladder on the evening of August 29, 1927. I would think this is what brought it on, but I don't remember that anything unusual happened."
The industrial commission found that the hernial condition revealed on the first of September, 1927, when the employe was operated upon, "was not caused or aggravated by any accident, act, or circumstance arising out of and in the course of the said employment, but was the result of the natural recurring development of an existing hernial condition." Unless it can be said that this finding is unsupported or manifestly contrary to the evidence, it must stand and is decisive against the employe. This is so, even though we should be of the opinion that the weight of the evidence calls for *555
a contrary finding. Walker v. Minnesota Steel Co.
The decision is affirmed.