This is аn original proceeding in this court, brought by Rialto Mining Company and its insurance carrier, to review an award of the State Industrial Commission in favor of Oren Leon Perry. Thе parties will be referred to as they appeared in the commission.
In June, 1946, the claimant was operated on for the repair of a right inguinal hernia. After his healing period he was discharged, by the doctor, as completely recovered and able to perform manual labor, the operation bеing successful. On August 27th he was
On September 11th he strained himself lifting a piece of equipment in the course of his employment. As a result he suffered a hernia which came through the scar left by the operation. Several doctors testified about the results of various examinations made subsequent to the latter appearance of the hernia. The testimony was conflicting as to whether the hernia was a recurrence of the original or was direct. The weight of the mеdicial testimony was also to the effect that an operation would be successful and would in all probability remove claimant’s disability, although, being a majоr operation, would be somewhat dangerous. The respondent had tendered and, again during the trial, tendered claimant an operation which had not been accepted prior to the final order.
The trial commissioner made an order and upon appeal to the commission en banc, an аward was made for .permanent total disability. The award contained, among others, the following findings:
“That on the 11th day of September, 1946, the claimant was in the emрloy of the respondent and engaged in a hazardous occupation, mining underground of mineral ore, subject to and covered by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, and that on said date he sustained an accidental personal injury, arising out of and in the course of his employment, consisting of an injury to the right side, resulting in a recurrence of a hernia in the scar of a previous hernia operation performed sometime in June or July, 1946.
“That the respondent has tendered an operation and fourteen weeks compensation herein, and that the claimant herein has refused to accept said tendered operation.”
It is the contention of petitioner herein, respondent in the commission, that the two facts contained in the first finding above — a сompensable personal injury and a recurrence of the previous hernia — could not be co-existent; and that, in either event, no award for permanent total disability could be made. It is argued that if claimant received an accidental personal injury in September, resulting in a hernia, he cannot сlaim permanent total disabilty without first submitting to an operation for its repair, citing Williams v. Commander Mills,
The opinions in all of these cases adhere to the rule as stated in Williams v. Commander Mills, Inc., et al., supra, as follows:
“Under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of this state, an injured employee disabled as the result of an oрerative hernia may not refuse an operation to correct such hernia and claim compensation for a permanent disability.”
Respondеnt employer also urges that, if claimant suffered a recurrence of the orignal hernia, he had a change of condition attributable thereto and did nоt have a disability resulting from an accidental personal injury sustained September 11, 1946, arising out of and in the course of his employment by respondent.
This court said in thе case of New York Indemnity Co. et al. v. Miller et al.,
“ . . . The record shows that that disability was the result of either a recurrence of the injury sustained from the accidеnt which occurred on February 2, 1931, or that it was caused by an independent intervening accident on November 27, 1931. It was not caused by both.”
In that case it was held that it was incumbent upon the commission to find
In the case of Safeway Stores, Inc., v. Brumley,
In the case of Crawford v. Tampa Inter-Ocean S. S. Co., Inc. (La.)
“We cannot agree with this view of thе case because it is at variance with the medical testimony. A ‘recurring hernia’ at the same spot, as the word ‘recurring’ signifies, is a return of a former hernia, whiсh, though temporarily arrested by the operation, was one of the small minority of cases in which a successful result did not follow a skillful operation. The original injury received by Crawford on May 28, 1932, is responsible for his present condition.”
In the instant case, claimant was suffering from a recurrence of the original hernia received prior to his employment by respondent or he was suffering from the results of an independent and intervening accident on September 11, 1946, while in respondent’s employ. The evidence as disclosed by the record was uncertain as to the cause of his disability, and the finding of the commission thereon was more so. Paralleling the holding in the case of New York Indemnity Co. et al. v. Miller et al., supra, we conclude “that it is the duty of the State Industrial Commission” to take further testimony and “to determine from the evidence whether the . . . disability of the claimant was due to a recurrence of the injury sustained” previously “or to an independent intervеning cause, to wit, the occurrence on” September 11, 1946, and to make or deny an award in conformity therewith in view of the foregoing opinion.
The award is vacated, with instructions that the commission proceed in conformity with the views herein expressed.
