149 N.E. 334 | NY | 1925
The State Industrial Board made findings herein as follows: On the morning of June 2, 1923, Maurice Lerner was working for his employer in his employer's plant, and while showing fruit and vegetables to a customer of his employer in the refrigerator of said employer's plant, and because of the sudden transition from the super-heated atmosphere on the outside of said refrigerating plant to the chilly atmosphere in the interior thereof, and as his duties necessitated his remaining in said refrigerator for ten minutes, he received a chill that naturally and unavoidably caused a cold to develop which lowered his disease-resisting power, and as a result, pulmonary edema and cerebral embolism and septic endocarditis developed and caused his death on November 22, 1923; the proximate cause of death being the injury that he received in the refrigerator of his employer's plant on June 2, 1923. An award made on these findings has been affirmed by the Appellate Division.
The question is whether, on the facts found, the conclusion could be reached that Lerner's death was due to an accidental injury which arose out of his employment within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation *155
Law. Death was due to disease. The disease was not an occupational disease, the natural and unavoidable result of the employment. A distinction exists between accidental injury and disease, but disease may be an accidental injury. The exception arises out of abnormal conditions which must be established to sustain an award. Two concurrent limitations have been placed on the right to recover an award when a disease, not the natural and unavoidable result of the employment, is developed during the course of the employment, although it does not follow that compensation should be awarded in all cases coming literally within these limitations. First, the inception of the disease must be assignable to a determinate or single act, identified in space or time. (Matter of Jeffreyes v. Sager Co.,
While it may be difficult to make nice and exact discriminations between disease as an accidental injury and disease which is neither accidental nor an injury in the common acceptance of the terms, it is not difficult to distinguish a case of ordinary exposure resulting in a cold from a case of emergent, prolonged exposure. The definite event here is the change from a hot room to a cold one, as if one should step out of a hot room into the cold in the winter time without adequate protection. To call the sequent cold an accidental injury would be to distort the fair meaning of the statute and the underlying principle of compensation cases.
The order should be reversed, award of State Industrial Board vacated and the claim dismissed, with costs in this court and Appellate Division against State Industrial Board.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *157