157 A. 264 | Conn. | 1931
The compensation commissioner found that the plaintiff entered the employ of the Collins Company in February, 1917, and worked for that company at wet grinding intermittently until September, 1922, an aggregate period of wet grinding of about forty months. From September, 1922, to July, 1924, he was not working for this company, but thereafter he worked at various times for this employer at polishing until December 16th, 1930, when he became disabled through pneumoconiosis with tuberculosis superimposed thereon. The commissioner found that this disability was directly traceable to the employment as a wet grinder between 1917 and 1922, and that his further employment by the company as a polisher, or elsewhere, was not a material factor in producing the disability. The evidence of record is sufficient to prevent the correction of the findings pertaining to causal connection between the plaintiff's employment and his present disability.
Two insurance companies appeared by counsel at the hearing before the commissioner, each denying that the plaintiff had sustained any compensable injury, but claiming, further, that any such injury, if found, was not within the period of its coverage. The Collins Company moved that the insurers be denied the *27
privilege of defending the case on the ground that it was apparent that both would attempt to impose the liability on each other or on the employer as self-insurer. Denial of this motion is made a ground of appeal. Under § 5256 of the General Statutes, the insurer is required to include in its policy a provision that it shall be in all things bound by and subject to the findings, awards, and judgments rendered against the assured, and under § 5285 the award is enforceable against the insurer in all respects as against the employer.Witchekowski v. Falls Co.,
The disease from which the claimant was suffering was not made compensable until the amendment to the compensation law enacted in 1919. The claimant's employment at wet grinding began before and continued after that time. Inasmuch as the commissioner has not found when the pneumoconiosis began, the appellant claims that there was no basis for an award of compensation to him because it cannot be determined that the statute afforded a right to compensation for such a disease at the time when the injury arose. Pneumoconiosis is an occupational disease which may develop into tuberculosis. Madore v.New Departure Mfg. Co.,
A problem analogous to that presented by the instant case was involved in Dombrowski v. Jennings Griffin Co.,
We see no reason why the same principle is not *30
applicable in the present instance, and discover in the record no indication of compliance therewith. In the absence of proof that the pneumoconiosis existed before July 1st, 1919, and in what degree, the commissioner was justified, as in the Dombrowski case, in holding the statute in effect after July 1st, 1919, and in 1922 applicable thereto. This conclusion is fortified by our ruling that the provision of the statute (now contained in § 5223) for apportionment of compensation in cases of aggravation of pre-existing disease was not intended to include an injury or disease, such as pneumoconiosis, "which was contracted, developed and aggravated by one industry or business under employment by the same employer, in one continuous employment or in successive employments."Romaniec v. Collins Co.,
The commissioner "as a matter of information" found the average weekly wage of the plaintiff during twenty-six weeks prior to September 16th, 1930, the last day on which he worked, to be $14.54, but based the award on the average wage, $20.24, for the twenty-six weeks preceding the last day, in September, 1922, on which he did wet grinding. The statute, § 5238, prescribes that ascertainment of the average weekly wage for the purpose of fixing the amount of award shall be made by recourse to "the total wages received by the injured workman from the employer in whose service he is injured during the twenty-six calendar weeks immediately preceding that during which he was injured." The question presented by the assignment of error pertaining to this action of the commissioner is the construction to be accorded to the term injury as involved in this statute. In most sections of the Compensation Act "injury" has reference to the accident or event which results in incapacity to work. In the usual case of an industrial accident, the injury *31
and the incapacity are substantially coincident. This may also be true where incapacity traceable to pneumoconiosis occurs while the employee is still engaged in the occupation which produced it. In cases like the present, where a considerable period (here eight years) intervenes between the actual injury and the consequent incapacity, determination as to whether the date of the former or the latter is to be taken as the basis of the award becomes of practical importance. There can be no compensation without incapacity. "Compensation under our Act is based upon incapacity, total or partial, and hence is based upon loss of earning power." Hines v. Norwalk Lock Co.,
In