248 Mass. 414 | Mass. | 1924
This is an appeal from a decree of the Superior Court affirming a finding of the Industrial Accident Board and ordering that the insurer pay to the dependent the sum of $4,000 “ in weekly payments of $10, beginning with the tenth day of August, 1922, and continuing according to the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act (G. L. c. 152).”
Two questions are raised.
1. Was there causal relation between the employee’s death on August 10, 1922, and his injury of January 28, 1922 ?
2. Did the Superior Court properly allow the dependent $4,000 compensation without deducting therefrom the sum of $420.57 which the insurer had paid the deceased employee, before his death?
The findings of the member that the employee received an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment on January 28, 1922, and that the employee’s death resulted
His wife testified, in substance, that “ She noticed his condition getting worse all the time. He worried all the time and said he could not get any encouragement from anybody that he would ever be any better; that his back pained him; he did not have any courage.”
His attending physician, a specialist in nervous and mental work, testified in substance that he learned in the examination of the employee that one of the physicians had told
The witness further testified in substance that what
The wife of the employee testified that her husband expressed the opinion that he was not going to get well, that life was not worth living after he thought there was no help; that from the last of March he did not think there was any help for him; that he knew there never could be anything done for him, and he did not want to live if he could not get better; that he never could get better and that after March he said he would like to get better if he thought he could but knew he could not.
The physician further testified, in substance, that worry over the accident and worry over what was going to happen to him from the accident brought on his mental condition; that there is a fine distinction between fear and worry; that in this case it was fear of what was going to happen to him, the fear of being an invalid, and the worrying over all the circumstances and what was going to happen to his wife; that the first time he saw the employee he was unable to convince him at all that there was any hope for him; that in point of fact there was a great deal of hope for him if the
Upon the reported evidence a reasonable man might adopt the opinion of the attending physician and mental expert that, while a psychasthenic case can have ideas that are not properly sane and at the same time not to be considered insane, psychasthenic cases can go over the border line and become insane and “ That is what happened in this case,— the psychasthenic case went over the border line and became insanity,” and find a causal relation between the injury and death. On the facts, the case at bar is distinguishable from Daniels v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 183 Mass. 393, and Sponatski’s Case, 220 Mass. 526.
We are of opinion the allowance of $4,000 to the dependent without deduction of the amount paid the employee before his death was error. A careful reading of the statutes of 1911, c. 751, Part II, §§ 6, 9, as amended by St. 1914, c. 708, §§ 2, 4 (now G. L. c. 152, §§ 31, 34),makes plain the purpose of the Legislature to limit the amount to $4,000 which the insurer may be required to pay for compensation for injury or for injury and death should death follow injury after compensation has been paid the injured employee. And it is plain the statute under which the present dependent claims compensation after the death of the employee should be construed in furtherance of such intent, and not in a way which ,shall permit in possible conditions a decree ordering the insurer to pay the dependent a sum of money which, with compensation paid to a deceased employee, shall exceed $4,000.
Decree accordingly.