202 N.W. 30 | Minn. | 1925
Lead Opinion
1. In the forenoon of June 20, 1923, Klika was working on the defendant's grounds. He was pushing a wheelbarrow, heavily loaded, in sticky gumbo. The wheel "went in a hole," "got locked full of dirt, and I pushed him with all my strength, then I felt a kind of pain in my side right away." The pain was "just like somebody pushed there with finger or something like that and something tear right on the side here." He worked for two or three days, but his work was lighter. He saw a doctor on June 27, 1923. He was then ruptured. He says he had not been ruptured before. An operation disclosed an inguinal hernia. The attending surgeons say it was of recent origin. They accept Klika's version as to the cause of it. One of them says he himself sustained a hernia "in just that way" through an abdominal strain, when pushing his auto. The testimony of the physician called by the school district, while favoring the doctrine that hernia is of a gradual development, is not particularly opposed to the claim that the strain was the legal cause. Questioned as to the probability of a hernia being produced by the relator's exertion at the time, he says:
"My opinion is that an extra exertion at a time like that, of course, may be the exciting cause but indications are that there has been some previous condition that would bring it about."
And it is enough that the extra exertion is the exciting cause. So in Zappala v. Industrial Ins. Com.
"The sustaining of an injury while using extreme muscular effort in pushing a heavily loaded truck is as much within the meaning of a fortuitous event as though the injury were the result of a fall or the breaking of the truck. To hold * * * that if a machine breaks, any resulting injury to a workman is within the act, but if *463 the man breaks, and resulting injury is not within the act, is too refined to come within the policy of the act. * * * The machine and the man are within the same class as producing causes, and any injury resulting from the sudden giving way of the one, while used as a part of any industry within the act, is as much within the contemplation of the act as the other."
That the relator may have been predisposed to hernia, that there was, using the language of respondent's witness, "some previous condition that would bring it about," does not prevent compensation. Babich v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.
Conceding that it is the accepted medical or scientific view that hernia is a disease, the law has no quarrel with it. The law is concerned with the ascertainment of the legal cause. If the result comes by accident within the meaning of the statute it is compensable. G.S. 1923, § 4326; L. 1921, p. 90, c. 82, § 66. It is then unimportant whether from a medical standpoint it is a disease or a malformation or is otherwise designated.
If an accidental injury results in a hernia, or aneurism, or paralysis, the result, whatever the proper medical or scientific term applicable to it, is compensable. Babich v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.
Finally, though the employe is predisposed to what is commonly called a rupture, though there is a lack of physical integrity of the parts so that a rupture is likely to result some time, though he has a congenital or acquired condition favorable to its development, if an unusual strain or overexertion attendant upon the work induces its development, that is the legal cause and the result is compensable.
2. The finding of the commission, if there is evidence reasonably tending to sustain it, is binding upon the court. State v. Industrial Com.
3. But if there is a misapprehension or misapplication of the law there may be a remand for a rehearing. Hogan v. Twin City Am. Tr. Estate
The evidence points forcefully to a strain, or more than usual exertion, as the cause of the employe's rupture. Unless he was suffering from a rupture at the time, and he says that he was not and there is no evidence that he was, or unless it came as a natural development independently of the strain or exertion, which his evidence *465 negatives, the situation is similar to that disclosed in the cases cited where the usual finding of the tribunal trying the fact was that accidental injury was the immediate or exciting cause and within the compensation act the legal cause. Throughout the case the theory that hernia is a disease was stressed. Medical treatises were quoted. This view was taken by the referee. His conclusion was that the work in which the relator was engaged "was the means of discovery of a rupture and not the cause." The commission adopted the referee's holding. It reached the conclusion that the relator had a slowly developing hernia with which he had been afflicted for some time and that the strain was not the legal cause of the condition from which he was suffering.
We do not hold that a finding adverse to the relator may not be sustained. That question we do not meet now. Our view is that the claimed medical understanding that hernia is a disease, its development hardly to be ascribed to a strain as its legal cause, was so emphasized and so permeated the case that the search for the legal cause was obscured, and that there should be a rehearing. An attorney's fee of $50 in this court is allowed.
Remanded for rehearing.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent because there is evidence sustaining the decision of the Industrial Commission. *466