75 W. Va. 542 | W. Va. | 1915
Lead Opinion
Gaetano Poccardi, Royal Consul of Italy, on behalf of the widow of Cataldo Greco, an Italian subject, and- his sole dependent, complains of an order of the Public Service Commission, rejecting her claim against the Workmen’s Compensation Fund.
Though a surgical operation for strangulated hernia precipitated Greco’s death, the legally proximate cause thereof was the hernia. But, in the opinion of the Commission, the hernia did not result from accidental injury.
Just before his death, Greco was an employee of the Phillips Sheet and Tin Plate Company at Weirton, W. Va. On the 10th day of April, 1914, he and some of his fellow workmen lifted a heavy iron pipe called a ‘ ‘ Jim Pole. ’ ’ He worked the next day, but illness required him to go to bed on Sunday, the second day after the exertion to which reference has been made, where he remained, until April 14th, 1914, without attention from a physician. On that day, Dr. L. A. Whittaker was called. Finding his condition serious, the doctor had him removed to a hospital on the 15th, performed the operation on the 16th and the patient died on the 20th. A post mortem examination, made on the day of the death, revealed dilatation of the right ventricle of the heart as the immediate cause of death, the wound showing no unfavorable indications. Weakness of the heart had been observed while he was on the operating table.
Loney Marino, a fellow-workman, says Greco, after carrying the “Jim Pole” to the machine shop, had thrown his hands back to his hips as though he had injured himself. The man who had charge of the men engaged in the removal of the pipe and the labor boss at the plant say neither of them heard any complaint of injury. A verified certificate of the chief clerk of the company for which. Greco had worked says he “strained himself” in carrying the pipe, and “First complained of his injury in machine shop.” It further says
After the claim had been rejected, the applicant filed a letter from Dr. Whittaker, directed generally to whom it may concern, saying Greco had been injured in the course of his employment. lie further said that, at the time of his investigation, he had understood him to say, through an interpreter, that he had been ruptured previously, but was now assured by- the interpreter that he had misunderstood him. This seems to have been considered as upon an application to re-open or re-hear the ease. The Commission was notified that several persons who had known the decedent were ready to testify to his previous good health. A joint affidavit of these persons to the fact and also one made by three other persons to the effect that he had complained of abdominal discomfort immediately after the lifting of the pipe seem to have been taken, but, if so, they were not filed with the Commission at any time, nor in this court. What purport to be copies of such affidavits appear only in the brief of counsel for the petitioner. If such affidavits exist, it is not perceived how they can be considered here, they never having been filed in the proceeding in any manner or at any stage thereof.
Meager development of the merits of the case before the Commission justifies, in the opinion of some of the members of the court, refusal of the prayer of the petitioner. No doubt the operating surgeon could have determined whether the rupture was an old one or the result of disease, or a fresh wound occasioned by a strain. As to the appearance of the wound, no inquiry seems to have been propounded to him, wherefore the evidence lacks detail and particularity which no doubt could have been supplied. One or more of the members of the court entertain the view that the evidence is defective in form and character, justifying rejection, on the
The action of the Commission is final and irreviewable except as to matters “going to the basis of the claimant’s right.” Code, eh. 15P, sec. 43, Serial sec. 699. As to such matters, its function is administrative, only quasi-judicial, and the supervisory power of this court over its action respecting the right of the claimant is under its original jurisdiction by mandamus. De Constantin v. Pub. Ser. Com., 75 W. Va. 32, 83 S. E. 88. In this respect, our statute accords with the English compensation act and those of several of the states, limiting the power of review to questions of law. Gane v. Colliery Co., 2 B. W. C. C. 42; Turner v. Bell and Sons, 4 B. W. C. C. 63; Moss Co. v. Akers, 4 B. W. C. C. 294; Illinois Act, see. 19; Iowa Act, sec. 34; Massachusetts Act, pt. 3, sees. 10 and 11; Michigan Act, Pt. 3, secs. 11, 12 and 13; Minnesota Act, secs. 22 and 30; Bradbury’s Work, Com., ch. 16, pp. 892 et seq.
Under the English act, the courts regard the employer, whose place, under our statute, the Commission takes, as a demurrant to the evidence, when the issue is one of mere sufficiency thereof. If the evidence adduced or the facts found or disclosed, are uncontradicted and would sustain a verdict of a jury in favor of the claimant, there is liability as a matter of law and legal duty to pay the claim arieses. Mitchell v. Glamorgan Coal Co., 9 B. W. C. C. 16; Wright v. Kerrigan, 4 B. W. C. C. 432; Owners of Steamship v. Rice, 4 B. W. C. C. 298. What rule would govern in a case of conflicting evidence, it is unnecessary to say, since the evidence adduced here is free from conflict. All of it points in the same direction, and the only question is the weight to which inferences arising from the facts are entitled.
The written opinion adopted by the Commission rests largely upon the sound legal proposition that evidence giving rise to inferences consistent with the theory of liability and inconsistent therewith, in equal degree, is insufficient. An illustration of such evidence is found in Hawkins v. Coal Co., 4 B. W. C. C. 178. A workman, whose heart was shown to
In the absence of such contradiction, however, the probability arising from the facts disclosed governs and concludes. A night workman who had gone to his work, a mile or more distant, in the evening, sound and well, came back in the morning, at the usual hour, in his working clothes and with a finger crushed and bleeding, unwashed and wrapped in a rag. Continuing his work, blood poison set in and he died. The county judge held his widow had not proved a case, and said the accident might have occurred in the walk from the colliery. But the appellate court, reversing, said ‘ ‘ The workman was engaged in work at which accidents do happen, and the probability, therefore, is that the accident happened at the time when he was so engaged, rather than at a time when, in the ordinary course of life, such accidents do not happen. There is nothing to suggest here that the accident happened on the way home.” Mitchell v. Coal Co. cited. A man whose duty it was to lift coffins went to work apparently well and, on returning, complained of having been hurt and had marks on his side and chest and a swollen leg. He died about a week later of pneumonia superinduced by the injury. There was no proof as to how he was injured except a statement to his physician that he had “met with an accident by moving a
This principle applies as well to the ascertainment of the times and causes of internal injuries, such as ruptures. Here, as in many other instances in the administration of the laws, the right is not susceptible of complete and certain demonstration, and probability, which, ex vi termini, is evidence, must take its place as inconclusive, but, nevertheless dependable, proof. In one of the most notable English eases decided, apparently by the House of Lords, the decision of the county judge, denying right of compensation for a rupture, affirmed by the Court of Appeal, was reversed and the case remanded for ascertainment of the amount of compensation. Fenton v. Thorley & Co., 5 W. C. C. 1. In that case, Lord Lindley said: “The personal injury was the rupture; the cause of it was the unintended and unexpected resistance of the wheel to the force applied to it: * * * * The proximate cause may be an internal strain.” In Fulford v. Coal and Ballast Co., 1 B. W. C. C. 222, compensation for injury by rupture was awarded to a man who had a previously existing rupture, on the theory that it had been so increased by a strain as to incapacitate him. The court said: “I think, regarding the case solely from the medical aspect, the injury could not have been an untoward event not expected. On the other hand, the man had worked in the chalk quarry for six months and had dug out lumps of chalk quite as large as the one in question without injury, notwithstanding the strain he was suffering from, and, as far as he or any one without medical or surgical knowledge was concerned, the injury was occasioned by means of a' mishap or untoward event not expected or designed.” In Scales v. West Norfolk etc. Co.,
Responding to medical criticism of the theory of rupture by strain or exertion, the Washington Industrial Insurance Commission has adopted rules requiring proof, in cases of claims predicated on hernia, (1) that its origin was recent, (2) that it was accompanied by pain, (3) that it was immediately preceded by accidental strain in hazardous employment, and (4) that - it did not previously exist. Similar rules have been adopted by the Commission. Notwithstanding the criticism calling forth these rules, they impliedly admit possibility and probability of rupture from a strain, when the strain and the rupture are in close relation. So does an article by the attorney for the Michigan compensation board, published in The National Compensation Journal, brought to our attention by the brief for the Commission. Both the rules and the thesis admit the English proposition that an internal injury resulting from a strain while at work is an accident within the meaning of the act, and their limitations or restrictions upon proof of the fact have not been judicially approved.
Under the decisions to which reference has been made, the circumstances stated, if sufficiently proved, make out a prima facie case of right to participation. Greco had worked for ■ his employer more than two months. There is no proof of any antecedent infirmity of any kind on his part. In his employment, he was subjected to unusual physical exertion on Friday. He took to his bed on Sunday and his ailment proved to be hernia. The surgeon who operated upon him and saw the rupture, had no personal knowledge of the exertion, but was informed as to that fact. If a competent physician and surgeon, he was likely able to tell, from his inspection, whether the rupture was of recent origin. Having inspected it and knowing from others what the patient had previously done, he gave it, as his opinion, that the injury had resulted from strain in lifting the pipe. Support of his
The case has been very poorly developed. No effort by the applicant strictly to prove the claim was made, until after its rejection. lie relied upon the result of the Commission’s investigation and apparently was not advised of the supposed insufficiency of the evidence, before the finding and announcement of the result. Then, although an informal re-hearing seems to have been allowed, no new evidence of consequence was filed. The suggestion here of additional proof is utterly futile. However, the facts disclosed by the record establish the claim.
Accordingly an order will be entered, requiring the Commission to ascertain the amount of the indemnity and cause it to be paid.
Ordered that claim presented be paid.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
In view of the hearsay and unverified character of the evidence before the Commission when it passed on this claim, and the insufficient force thereof, lacking as it does any direct and certain probative force, the finding should not be disturbed.