delivered the opinion of the court:
McLean Trucking Company (hereafter McLean) appealed directly to this court under Rule 302(a) (58 111. 2d R. 302(a)) from a judgment of the circuit court of Cook County confirming the Industrial Commission’s award of compensation to the claimant, Mozelle French, for her husband’s death while he was in McLean’s employ.
The decedent, Henry French, had been employed by McLean as an over-the-road trucker for approximately three years prior to his death. On September 23, 1974, he had breakfast at home before leaving for work and appeared, his wife testified, to be in good health. According to his log book, the decedent then drove a McLean’s semitrailer truck from Chicago to St. Paul, Minnesota. The truck was equipped with power brakes, but did not have power steering. He arrived in St. Paul after a 9-hour drive, and laid over for 21 hours. At 8 p.m. on September 24, the decedent began his return trip to Chicago. He drove through the night, stopping once in Milwaukee, where he stayed from 3 a.m. to 4 a.m. He arrived at McLean’s dispatch office in Chicago at approximately 6 a.m. There he talked with a supervisor for 15 to 20 minutes while having a cup of coffee. The supervisor testified that the decedent appeared to be in good spirits at that time.
The decedent drove his own car home, arriving at 7 a.m. He spoke briefly with his wife, who testified that he looked very drawn and tired. He went to an upstairs bathroom, but minutes later he came downstairs, exclaimed “Call the rescue squad,” and collapsed. He was at once taken to a hospital, and he died shortly thereafter. His son testified that he telephoned McLean and informed a supervisor that his father had passed away that morning at the hospital. No autopsy was performed.
Several issues are raised by the respondent. The first is whether McLean was given notice of the accident as required by section 6(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 48, par. 138.6(c)). McLean contends that the son’s phoning McLean and simply advising of his father’s death did not constitute notice, and that the holdings in Fenix-Scisson Construction Co. v. Industrial Com. (1963),
Section 6(c)(3) of the Act provides in part that “[n] o defect or inaccuracy of such notice shall be a bar to the maintenance of proceedings on arbitration or otherwise by the employee unless the employer proves that he is unduly prejudiced in such proceedings by such defect or inaccuracy.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 48, par. 138.6(c)(3).) The provision has been liberally construed, but of course only to an extent consistent with protecting the employer against unjust or fraudulent claims. (Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. v. Industrial Com. (1977),
The notice given here was as specific as it could be under the circumstances. The notice requirement cannot be unreasonably construed so as to compel the impossible —to require a claimant to give notice of what he does not know. This court has consistently upheld the adequacy of incomplete notices where the defect consisted of a failure to inform the employer of facts unknown at the time to the claimant. (Andronaco v. Industrial Com. (1972),
We do not consider that the action of the arbitrator in admitting the death certificate of the decedent into evidence at the hearing constituted reversible error. Because the fact and date of the decedent’s death were stipulated, McLean contends that it was error to admit the certificate, relying on People v. Fiddler (1970),
The last question raised is whether the finding of the Industrial Commission that the decedent died as the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. A study of the record persuades us that it was not.
Responding to a hypothetical question, the claimant’s medical expert, Dr. Nathaniel Greenberg, gave his opinion that “the work activities resulting from the long round trip resulted in an acute myocardial infarction, which produced this man’s death.” He said on cross-examination that the concentration and maneuvering required in driving a heavy truck over a long period of time was “unequivocal evidence of physical and mental stress.” He stated that the degree of stress is markedly higher under those circumstances than under the circumstances involved in driving a small car for a short period of time. When asked to pinpoint the time when the infarction occurred, Dr. Greenberg testified that “[o] ne would be reasonably secure in stating that it occurred within a number of hours of the time of death.” He testified that in the vast majority of cases of nontraumatic sudden death, death is caused by acute myocardial infarction or heart attack, and that there may be no clinical signs whatsoever to signal its onset.
An internist for McLean, Dr. William Buckingham, testified before the arbitrator that in his opinion the decedent’s death was not related to his employment. At the hearing on review before the Commission, Dr. Harold Steinberg, an internist, testified for McLean that he assumed the decedent had probably sustained a myocardial infaction, but did not believe the death to have been work-related.
A claimant need not negate every other possible cause of death to establish death by heart attack as a legitimate inference from the evidence. (Beloit Foundry v. Industrial Com. (1976),
The claimant’s recovery here should not be defeated by the circumstances that the myocardial infarction manifested itself after the decedent had left the terminal. “If a strain occurs during employment hours which produces no symptoms, and claimant suffers a heart attack as a result some time after working hours, the injury is compensable.” (1 A. Larson, Workmen’s Compensation sec. 29.22 (1978).) In numerous instances awards have been upheld where the actual heart attacks occurred after the employees had left their places of work and gone home. See County of Cook v. Industrial Com. (1977),
The evidence here was that the decedent just prior to his fatal attack had completed the final leg of a round trip between Chicago and St. Paul. The trip was made in a large tractor-trailer not equipped with power steering, and under nighttime driving conditions. The decedent stopped only once, for an hour, during the 10-hour trip. He appeared to his wife to be very drawn and tired when he arrived home. He collapsed and died almost at once.
It was for the Commission to draw reasonable inferences from the evidence, both direct and circumstantial, and a court will not disregard such inferences simply because others might also have been drawn. (County of Cook v. Industrial Com. (1977),
Judgment affirmed.
