223 Mass. 546 | Mass. | 1916
The employee was injured Saturday, October 31, 1914, between half past eleven and twelve o’clock. As usual on Saturday, the mill closed at noon. In the afternoon, the pain from the injury became intense and he consulted Dr. Cregg, who advised an operation. Monday the employee made an attempt to notify his foreman of the injury, and, failing in this, he left word by telephone with one of the office employees. Wednesday, November, 4, 1914, he was operated on for hernia.
At the time the employee was injured there were posted in the mill where he worked printed notices informing employees that in case of injury Dr. Carl R. Moeckel or Dr. Howard L. Cushman
Under the workmen’s compensation act, the reasonable medical services required during the first two weeks after the injury are to be furnished by the insurer, the duty of supplying medical aid being imposed upon the insurance company with the obligation of paying therefor. The right to select the attending physician is given to it by the statute. It is evident, we think, that the Legislature in passing this act did not intend to give to the employee the privilege or right of selecting his own physician at the expense of the insurer. Under the amendment of 1914,
Even if on Saturday afternoon, when the pain was intense, an emergency then existed which made it prudent to call Dr. Gregg, and he could respond more quickly than the physician of the company, and the employee was justified in sending for him, (which we are not called upon to decide,) there is nothing in the evidence which discloses any such emergency existing on the Wednesday following when the services were rendered, and nothing is shown which would justify the employee in failing to secure the services of the physicians offered by the insurer.
In Panasuk’s Case, 217 Mass. 589, it was held that the employee, an “illiterate foreigner who is unable to read, write or understand the English language,” was not bound by a notice printed in English. In the case at bar the employee could read and speak English; notices were conspicuously posted; we think he was charged with knowledge of them and their contents and there is no evidence which justified him under the statute in neglecting to secure the services of either of the physicians named. Daniels v. New England Cotton Yarn Co. 188 Mass. 260.
His ignorance of his rights and obligations under the workmen’s compensation act cannot excuse him from compliance with its terms. McLean’s Case, ante, 342.
Decree reversed.
St. 1911, c. 751, Part II, § 5, as amended by St. 1914, c. 708, § 1, is as follows: “During the first two weeks after the injury, and, if the employee is not immediately incapacitated thereby from earning full wages, then from the time of such incapacity, and in unusual cases, in the discretion of the board, for a longer period, the association shall furnish reasonable medical and hospital services, and medicines, when they are needed. Where, in a case of emergency or for other justifiable cause, a physician other than the one provided by the association is called in to treat the injured employee, the reasonable cost of his services shall be paid by the association, subject to the approval of the Industrial Accident Board. Such approval shall be granted only if the board finds that there was such justifiable cause and that the charge for the services is reasonable.”