138 A. 139 | Conn. | 1927
The claimant was employed in a factory operated by the respondent company. She worked near a window which certain other employees in the factory were accustomed to open for a few minutes two or three times a day, a practice which was continued despite complaints she made to the foreman in charge of the work and to other representatives of the respondent company. In February, 1926, she was ill with a cold for a week. On March 20th, 1926, she became ill with grippe, which was followed by pneumonia and empyema, resulting in a lengthy incapacity *362 and necessitating considerable expenditures of money. The commissioner found that the claimant's power of resistance was greatly lowered by the exposure to which she was subjected in the factory and as a result of this exposure she developed the grippe, followed by the pneumonia and empyema. This finding the respondents attack, bringing all the evidence before us for that purpose.
The chain of causation upon which the claimant's right to compensation depends necessarily involves the facts that her power of resistance was weakened by the condition of her employment and that as a result she suffered the attack of grippe. The trial court, at the claimant's request, added a finding to the effect that the claimant came to work at seven-thirty o'clock in the morning and that the factory was generally cold until eleven o'clock each day. The action of the court is supported by the testimony of the claimant specifically stating these facts, and by the testimony of another woman employee who stated that she wore a sweater while at work because the factory was cold. As the respondents' attorney pertinently suggests, however, the statement that the factory was cold gives little definite idea as to its temperature, and that the cold was not extreme is indicated by the testimony of another employee who said that he wore a vest and apron while working and that the other men employed there wore neither vests nor coats. The only direct testimony that claimant's power of resistance was lowered was given by the physician who treated her for the grippe and who gave it as his opinion that her lowered resistance from the fact that she had had a cold in February, plus the exposure in the cold factory, with open windows, was a factor in bringing on the grippe; but this physician did not see the claimant until after she had become ill with the grippe, *363 and his testimony was based wholly on the history which she gave to him. He also stated that grippe is due to many types of organisms, that it is contagious, and communicable, and that exposure is frequently a contributing factor. The physician called by the respondents emphasized the necessity of infection to cause an attack of grippe, stated that the period of incubation was three to five days, and, while admitting that weakened resistance might make a person more susceptible to an attack of grippe, said that, in case of infection, the controlling circumstance was the resistance of the individual to the particular organism causing it, that one person may be immune though run down, while another may become ill though in the pink of condition.
It will be noticed, first, that the physicians agree that grippe is due to infection; second, that there is no claim that the infection in this case was in any way due to the conditions of employment; and, finally, that the most that can be claimed from the testimony is that those conditions were a factor in producing it. To what extent they contributed is in no way indicated and the evidence suggests that it might well have been in only a very minor way.
That a disease causing incapacity is due to infection not in itself traceable to the conditions of employment will not necessarily preclude compensation for incapacity resulting from it. De la Pena v. Jackson StoneCo.,
In Madore v. New Departure Mfg. Co.,
In the instant case, the evidence in its aspect most favorable to the claimant could not reasonably support a conclusion that the conditions of employment were a material proximate cause in bringing on the attack of grippe. Cishowski v. Clayton Mfg. Co.,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded with direction to sustain the appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.