266 Mass. 67 | Mass. | 1929
This is an appeal from a decree affirming a decision by the Industrial Accident Board and ordering the insurer to pay the employee compensation under the workmen’s compensation act.
The case was first heard by a board member who was unable to find that the employee received an injury arising out of and in the course of the employment, and dismissed the
The employee testified that he was employed as a helper on a truck; that on May 6, 1927, he was carrying two cases of beer into a store, and was about to put them down when he was told to carry them into the back room; that at that time .he held the cases about three inches from the floor, and then raised them ‘ ‘ with a quick j erk, and felt something snap in his chest; he walked about three feet and fell down .... He was not rendered unconscious.” He further testified, and there was other evidence to the same effect, that since the time above referred to he has had fainting spells and has fallen down but has not become unconscious; that he has at these times a peculiar feeling around his chest; that he cannot go about by himself because he falls; that he has not done any work since the tenth of May following the accident. There was evidence that while at the Massachusetts General Hospital for examination, and also on two other occasions when being examined by different physicians, he had these attacks.
The only evidence before the board member which tended to show that the employee’s condition was due to what occurred when he delivered the cases of beer was the testimony of Dr. Lane. At the first hearing it was shown by his report that he saw the employee in one of these seizures, and that “He appears to be dominated by fear of losing his balance and he is in constant fear of attacks”; that the employee states he is not unconscious during the attacks, and he did
Upon the entire evidence and the reasonable inferences which might be drawn therefrom we cannot say as matter of law that the employee since the injury has not suffered from psychasthenia or that a causal relation between the injury and the employee’s subsequent condition has not been proved. Sinclair’s Case, 248 Mass. 414. See Diaz’s Case, 217 Mass. 36.
The case at bar is distinguishable from Daniels v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 183 Mass. 393, Sponatski’s Case, 220 Mass. 526, Upham’s Case, 245 Mass. 31, and other cases cited by the insurer.
Decree affirmed.