44 Del. 437 | Del. | 1948
delivering the opinion of the Court:
The Court below held that the Board’s findings of fact were supported by the evidence and that the facts justified the conclusion that Farran had suffered a compensable personal injury by accident. The appellant contends that certain findings of the Board are not supported by the evidence and that Farran did not sustain an injury by accident.
Under § 6072, Sec. 2, c. 175, Revised Code 1935, an injury must be the result of an accident in order to be compensable. In Hendrickson v. Continental Fibre Co., 3 W. W. Harr. 304,136 A. 375, our Superior Court held that a slow, gradual, idiopathic disease unaccompanied by and unrelated to any injury by accident, is not compensable.
The Board also found that Farran was not engaged in his usual work at the time of the attack but because of an emergency was performing a task requiring greater exertion than his regular work. The Court below approved this finding, but refused to decide whether an injury of
Like the Court below, we consider it unnecessary to decide what the Delaware rule is with regard to this point. At the time of the injury, appellee was performing work which he had previously done but once or twice a year, the last prior occasion having been probably six months before. We are of the opinion that the evidence justified the Board’s finding that it was an unusual task requiring unusual effort, as contrasted with his regular work. Farran is therefore entitled to compensation.
The word “accident” has been variously defined in workmen’s compensation cases. The definition suggested by counsel for the appellant and accepted by the Court below is “an occurrence which proceeds from an unknown cause, or which is an unusual effect of a known cause, and
The judgment of the Court below will be affirmed.
Varlous statutory amendments have since made certain “occupational diseases” compensable, but heart disease is not among them.