THE RALPH H. SIMPSON COMPANY, Plaintiff in Error, vs. THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION et al. (LINNIE CARR, Defendant in Error.)
No. 19400
Supreme Court of Illinois
December 20, 1929
337 Ill. 454
CASSELS, POTTER & BENTLEY, (RALPH F. POTTER, and CLAUD D. RABER, of counsel,) for plaintiff in error.
Mr. COMMISSIONER PARTLOW reported this opinion:
This case comes to this court upon a writ of error to review a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county confirming an award of $3700 made by the Industrial Commission under paragraph (а) of section 7 of the Workmen‘s Compensation act to Linnie Carr, the widow and sole dependent of David M. Carr, deceased, on account of his death on August 23, 1926, from injuries alleged to have been received by him on February 25, 1926, while in the employ of plaintiff in error, the Ralph H. Simpson Comрany.
Plaintiff in error insists that the evidence does not show that Carr suffered an accidental injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment and that there is no causal relationship between the alleged accident and the death.
The evidence shows that plaintiff in error was engaged in the structural iron and steel business in Chicago and had a contract to construct japanning ovens at Waukegan, Illinois. Carr was sixty-three years old, had been in the employ of plaintiff in error for over twenty-five years, and at the time of his injury was the foreman supervising the work, which bеgan about February 15, 1926. Gerald D. Hammond testified that about February 25, at one o‘clock P. M., he and Joe Millinise, who did not testify, were hoisting by means of a block and tackle a steel plate weighing about 500 pounds. They had it part way up, but it was too heavy for them to handle. Carr, who was standing by, took hold of the rope, and after giving one pull his hand “crunched down” and slipped. He let go of the rope and put his hand upon his back on the right side and said he had hurt his back. The witness did not see whether his foot
Dr. Schupman was a witness for defendant in error. Substantially the same hypothetical question was put to him as was put to Dr. Clark, and he answered that in his opinion it was possible for a man to strain the muscles of his back and get a sarcoma as a result оf the strain; that a bruising or twisting of the muscles would set up a pathological condition which would cause a sarcoma of the muscles and the ligaments underlying; that the general cause of sarcoma is some injury to the underlying cell structure which causes a proliferation of the cells; thаt a strain would come within the definition of trauma because of injuries to the cells and the underlying structure; that a sarcoma develops rapidly, and if the accident happened on February 25 it could develop by April; that misplaced cell tissue is another theory advanced аs a cause of lymphatic sarcoma; that after the injury the cells re-act and start to proliferate, grow rapidly and take on a wild embryonic type, and that there may be evidence of objective symptoms internally which are not visible to the eye. If the injury is internal it may not cause swelling or discoloration. If blood vessels were ruptured there would be a discoloration; that the fact that Carr worked after the injury would not have any bearing upon the question as to whether or not he sustained an injury to a cell which eventually led to lymphatic sarcoma, because the work would make the cells grow faster. He testified that he had treated 500 cases of this kind in the Cook county hospital.
Dr. Stevens, a witness for defendant in error, in answer to substantially the same question, testified that in his opinion the act of Carr in pulling on the rope would require enough muscular exertion, particularly in the muscles of the back, to excite and cause the cells of the lymphatic sarcoma to grow; that sarcoma, at the beginning, is an embryonic tissue made up of connective tissue—some
Dr. Wright, a witness for plaintiff in error, testified that he examined Carr on July 3, 1926, at his home. He was emaciated, was rather anæmic and wаs running a temperature. He had an incision in the right side about ten inches long, over the kidney. It was nearly healed but had an opening in the center from which a vile discharge of pus was oozing. The muscles on the right side were hard and board-like. He testified that Carr was suffering from some form of malignanсy—from a tumor in the nature of a sarcoma. A hypothetical question was put to the doctor similar to the one put to the other doctors, and he answered that there was a remote possibility that there was a causal relation between the accident and the conditiоn in which he found Carr; that a lympho-sarcoma is a new growth, and that the causes of sarcoma are purely a matter of theory. One theory is that it is the result of displaced tissue—that is, tissue growing where it does not belong. Another theory is that it is the result of trauma from a direct blow on the locality where the tumor starts. From the description he testified that Carr probably sustained a sprain; that he did not know whether a sarcoma resulted from the sprain; that it seemed approximately unlikely although there might be a remote possibility, but he could not be positive about it. He thought the deаth was directly due to sarcoma.
The burden was upon defendant in error to prove that an accidental injury was sustained which arose out of and
Plaintiff in error insists that it did not receive notice of the accident within thirty days, as required by
Leonard D. Hook was the superior officer of Carr. He testified that he had a conversation with Carr in February, 1926, after the accident, in which Carr told him that he hurt his back. This conversation was within a week of the accident, and the evidence shows that Carr was working at this same place during the latter part of February, therefore plaintiff in error had notice, approximately, as to the time and place of the accident. Ralph H. Simpson, the vice-president of the plaintiff in error, was called
Plaintiff in error calls attention to certain cases which it is insisted hold that statements of the person injured are not competent to prove the cause of the injury unless such
We find no reversible error, and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
PER CURIAM: The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Judgment affirmed.
