320 Mass. 416 | Mass. | 1946
The employee, a laborer in a foúndry, sustained a hernia on August 23, 1943, “as the result of lifting a heavy piece of steel,” and after it was repaired by an operation on September 20, 1943, he sustained a recurrence of the hernia and submitted to a second operation on March 29, 1944. Compensation was paid to July 31, 1944, and he now claims compensation subsequent to that date for partial disability.
The single member found that the employee presents a history of weak abdominal walls which are far weaker than those that a man sixty years of age would normally have, and awarded compensation. The reviewing board found that the employee since the date of the second operation has continued to have weak abdominal walls, making heavy work as a laborer inadvisable, and awarded compensation. The insurer appealed from a decree ordering it to pay compensation.
No injury so far as appears was sustained by the employee after August 23, 1943, the date when he suffered a hernia. This injury and the recurrent hernia were doubtless .compensable under the workmen’s compensation act. Gaglione’s Case, 241 Mass. 42. Sylvia’s Case, 313 Mass. 313. McSweeney’s Case, 318 Mass. 620. Perrotta’s Case, 318 Mass. 737. There is no. finding that the present condi
The present case is distinguishable from Gaglione’s Case, 241 Mass. 42, Mills’s Case, 258 Mass. 475, and Harrington’s Case, 285 Mass. 69, in all of which the employee sustained a hernia and the question was whether it was shown to have had a causal relation to the employment.
It follows that the decree entered in the Superior Court must be reversed, but the claim ought not to be dismissed without affording the employee an opportunity to obtain a finding as to whether or not he now has a hernia and, if
So ordered.