29 P.2d 852 | Cal. | 1934
This is the second review in this matter. A petition for a review of the respondent commission's first order was granted by the District Court of Appeal. The order of the commission denying any compensation to the widow and dependents of the deceased employee was annulled by that court and the application was remanded for further proceedings and findings. (Nielsen v.Industrial Acc. Com.,
[1] The first contention is that after the decision of the District Court of Appeal on the former review and the annulment of the commission's previous similar order, the commission's jurisdiction was limited to an inquiry into the amount of compensation to be awarded based on the proportion of the disability due to the employment. This question is settled adversely to the contention, and to the effect that the commission, after such an annulment, may investigate further the facts bearing on the issue of the cause of the injury, and if the entire record as then presented supports its finding its order must be affirmed. (Winthrop v. Industrial Acc. Com., ante, p. 114 [
It therefore becomes necessary to determine whether the record as now presented contains the additional proof necessary to sustain the commission's finding and order denying compensation.
The facts on the former record are stated in the opinion on the former review. (Nielsen v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra.) The present order of the commission is based on the testimony given by Dr. DuBray on the second hearing. Dr. DuBray submitted evidence on the first hearing. Of that evidence the District Court of Appeal in the former case stated at page 212: "Dr. DuBray, without any examination of the deceased and without a full knowledge of the facts found at the autopsy, gave his opinion that death was caused by coronary occlusion and was not caused by the exertion of the employment." Dr. DuBray's opinion given on the second hearing was based on a written statement of the facts presented to him and on the other reports and the testimony in the record. He was also subjected to a rigid cross-examination. His conclusion was the same as on the first hearing, viz., that death was not due to an acute dilatation of the aorta which is produced by unusual exertion, but was due to coronary occlusion not necessarily due to any physical strain or exertion, but which in the present case was due entirely to the pre-existing heart condition, and that the decedent's labors preceding his death did not contribute to the condition which was the cause of death.
The applicants urge that the record on this review is not substantially different, and that the decision on the former review (Nielsen v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra), and the case of Winthrop v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
In Nielsen v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra, the case ofWinthrop v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
[2] By section 67 (c) of the act (Stats. 1917, supra), the findings and conclusions of the commission on questions of fact are made conclusive and final and are not subject to review. The power vested in the court on review by subdivision 1 of the same section, to determine whether the commission has acted without or in excess of its powers, has not been construed to mean that the court may not determine that the commission has exceeded its powers when it has made a finding contrary to the evidence or in the absence of any evidence to support it. (Pruitt v.Industrial Acc. Com.,
The record now before us presents conflicting views as to whether or not the exertion of the decedent an hour or so prior to his death contributed to his disability. The views on each side of this question are based on all of the facts relating to the employee's condition at the time of his death, and on the history of the facts and circumstances leading up to and attendant upon the last work that was done by him. The record in this state gives the probative value to the witness' testimony which was lacking on the former hearing and supports the commission's present conclusion. (Brandon v. Industrial Acc.Com.,
The order is affirmed.
Thompson, J., Preston, J., Langdon, J., Curtis, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred. *124