delivered the opinion of the court.
This is а proceeding on writ of error to review the judgment of the district court of Denver vacating and setting aside an award of the Industrial Commission in an action arising under the Wоrkmen’s Compensation Act.
The claimant while shoveling coal into a furnace got a small piece of coal or other substance in his right eye. He rubbed the eye and “worked” it in an endeavor to dislodge the object. .There was discomfort for about twenty minutes, but he continued working. He noticed impaired vision, and on the fourth day following the incident above related, he consulted eye specialists who operated on the eye two days later, in an effort to correct an extensive detachment of the retina which was apparent upon the examination. ■
The doctor testified that the interior of the claimant’s eye disclosed evidence of an “old long-standing deteriorative condition that was certainly the primary predisposing factor to the development of the detachment, and it would seem probable that in the absence of any injury that ultimately he may have developed a detachment.” In the’testimony offered by the doctor who pеrformed the operation,, the following appears: “Q. Are you able to state that foreign body, which Mr. Armstead states that he got in his eye sometime on Decembеr 16, 1948— are you able to state whether that foreign body caused the detachment of the retina? A. No, I am not. The fact that his visual symptoms' occurred, I think, within eighteen hours аfter that incident certainly led us originally to feel that there was a causal relationship, but as far as proving it one wáy or the other, I don’t think we can do it. Q. With this old conditiоn that he had in his *212 eye, was the torn retina consistent with that condition? A. Yes, With any detachment ■ you will find some old, previously-existing disease process. Q. Where you have a disеased process in an eye, such as you have described, that was in Mr. Armstead’s eye for a long period of time, could you get a torn retina just from natural causes or from rubbing the eyes, or rolling the eyes? A. Yes, I think so, especially violent rolling. Q. From what you now know, you say originally you thought there might have been some causal relatiоn, and do you now think there was a causal relation in all probability, as distinguished from a possible causal relation? A. I don’t know. I think the relationship is definitely possible. Whethеr it is probable, I don’t know. Again I think it is almost impossible to positively determine the relationship. Often times we do see detachments following a trivial injury, when we know that the eyе was originally predisposed to the development of the detachment.
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“Q. Dr. Long, if a person had a pre-existing inflammatory process in the eye such as this man had, and he got some foreign particle in his eye and he rubbed his eye in an attempt to get that foreign particle out, rubbed his eye for ten or twenty minutes, and testified that thе eye bothered him the rest of the day, in fact, bothered him until he finally did seek some attention, would it be possible or probable that rubbing an eye with an inflammatory process, such as he had here, would cause a detachment? A. Yes, I think so. Q. Would rubbing the eye be more apt to cause the detachment than the presence of thе foreign body? A. Very much more so. I don’t think the foreign body, per se, would produce the detachment. Q. As far as the time element is concerned, would you expect the detachment to become apparent sooner or later than it did, or about when it did in this case? A. He had a large tear because he had an extensivе area of chorditis, and I think the time element is *213 consistent with the causal relationship. It would have come on rather soon after any mild trauma.
“The Referee: That is all.”
The Industrial Commission made an award of compensation to claimant. This award was set aside by the district court. The commission and claimant seek reversal. There is but one question presented for determination: Was there any substantial evidence before the commission showing that claimant’s condition, to wit, a retina detachment, was proximately caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment?
If this question is answered in the affirmative, the judgment of the district court must be reversed, and the awаrd of the commission upheld. On behalf of defendant in error it is argued that the claimant failed to establish any causal connection between the accident аnd the condition of which he complains, and that the evidence at best is to the effect that there is a mere possibility that the accident caused the disability. Thе finding of the commission was that the “retinal" detachment was a direct and proximal result of his attempt to dislodge the foreign body.” We have held that where findings of the Industrial Cоmmission are based wholly upon conjecture and possibilities, an award based thereon cannot properly be sustained.
United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Industrial Cоmmission,
The case of
Royal Indemnity Co. v. Industrial Commission,
In that case we said further: “Such evidence amply sustains the finding of the commission relative to the cause of the loss of vision of the left eye.”
We think the evidence in the case at bar relating to the cause of injury is stronger in support of the commission’s finding, than that which was held to be sufficient in the Royal Indemnity case, supra.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to reinstate the award of the commission.
