8 Pa. Commw. 392 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1973
Opinion by
These are two appeals from the decisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Board) affirming the dismissal by the referee of the claimants’ petition for total disability benefits allegedly due Floyd Tate (decedent) during his lifetime and for death benefits allegedly due his wife and four dependent children.
The factual basis of the claims, which essentially involve two supposed falls and the subsequent death of decedent, is amply described in the Board’s opinion:
“In the first [fall], claimant’s decedent allegedly fell eight feet, head first, into an eight-foot deep manhole. A fellow-worker saw decedent outside the hole, turned away, and then when he turned back, saw decedent at the bottom of the hole and presumed from this that claimant’s decedent fell. Claimant’s decedent dis
“The second alleged fall was actually assumed to have taken place on October 12, 1970. The decedent was supposed to have left his home momentarily to go outside and when he returned inside, his face was bleeding and his wife (claimant here) saw on the right side of his face ‘this imprint from the grass and the yard.’ This minute observation by the wife-claimant perhaps is what caused her to think the decedent fell, but when she asked decedent what happened and whether he fell, his answer was ‘I don’t know.’
“Decedent was taken immediately to the hospital and within a few hours was operated upon for an acute subdural hematoma.
“The medical witnesses of the parties agreed that decedent died because of the acute subdural hematoma and the operation thereupon of October 12, 1970, and that the hematoma was attributable to trauma.
“Claimant’s task was to relate the acute subdural hematoma of October 12, 1970, to the fall of September 8, 1970. This she failed to do. The two medical experts of the employer said the details of the operation upon the acute subdural hematoma revealed to them that a fall of September 8, 1970 would be too remote to be a causal factor. Claimant’s medical expert, Dr. Joseph Brady, who performed the operation, did testify that the fall of September, 1970 did cause the acute subdural hematoma, but his testimony on cross-examination negates this.” (Emphasis added.)
The Board then concluded with the following: “The problem then was twofold: Did the fall of September 8, 1970 cause the subdural hematoma which manifested itself acutely on October 12, 1970,
Appellants first argue that the Board capriciously disregarded competent evidence that the fall of September 8, 1970, created a condition in the decedent that caused the trauma of October 12, 1970, which in turn caused the acute subdural hematoma which disabled the decedent and caused his death.
This argument relies on the theory that the first fall itself did not cause the hematoma. Appellants say that the first fall entailed a blow to decedent’s head resulting in at least a concussion or other head injury which thereafter evidenced itself in numerous headaches, dizziness, and forgetfulness not previously experienced by the decedent. Then, on October 12, 1970, the decedent, perhaps as a result of a dizzy spell, fell and again struck his head resulting this time in the fatal acute subdural hematoma. Therefore, appellants argue, there definitely was a causal connection between the two falls.
The appellees counter that there was no evidence submitted to show what actually happened to cause the
Appellees further argue that even if it is assumed that the deceased did suffer severe brain damage as a result of the first fall, thus causing continuing problems in the decedent, it would still be pure speculation that these problems caused the decedent to fall, if in fact he did fall.
If appellants had proved that the decedent struck his head in the first fall and thereby sustained a serious, compensadle head injury, if the decedent had promptly reported his first fall to his superiors or employer, if the decedent had promptly sought medical care after the first fall to confirm a head injury, if the decedent’s unusual behavior had been definitely attributed to that injury (thus excluding the possibility of some other causal condition), if the decedent had mentioned his headaches and dizziness to hospital authorities on two other occasions between the two falls when he then sought medical care for an unrelated illness, if someone
Here there has been an attempt to relate the cause of the second “accident” to a disability arising from the first “accident.” There is no conclusive evidence, however, that any compensable first accident occurred for which the employer was obligated. Nor is there conclusive evidence of any second accident which could be causally related to the first one. We therefore must affirm the referee and the Board.
We do not think it necessary to remand these cases to the Board for a more complete explication of its reasons for dismissing the appeals. Prom an examination of the record, it is sufficiently clear that the claimants failed to prove that a compensable first fall took place which in turn created, in the Board’s words, “a condition in decedent that caused him to experience the trauma — whatever that trauma was — on October 12, 1970, which trauma brought about the acute subdural hematoma.” (Emphasis added.)
Affirmed.
“Subdural hemorrhage and hematoma means bleeding into the subdural space. The subdural space is not a space normally. It is a potential space between the dural membrane and the arachnoid membrane covering the brain and spinal cord. ... [I]f hemorrhage occurs into the subdural space, the blood is trapped and a hematoma (blood clot) is formed. This hematoma acts like a mass space-occupying lesion, causing compression of the underlying brain. Surgical intervention is required to remove the hematoma. .
“Subdural hematomas have been arbitrarily classified by different authors in accordance with the severity of the bleeding and time of appearance of signs and symptoms requiring surgical intervention. All are agreed that those in which the bleeding is so severe as to produce signs and symptoms of brain compression within the first three days after a head injury should be classified as ‘acute.’ Some authors place the outside limit for the acute subdural hematoma as six or seven days from the time of injury.”
2 Gray, Attorneys’ Textbook of Medicine ¶¶91.40 & 91.41 (3d ed. 1970) (footnote added).
A medical report in the record indicates that the decedent died at 12:40 a.m. on May 13, 1971 (footnote added).
This theory of recovery is not pursued in these appeals. (Footnote added.)
As stated in the appellees’ brief, p. 4: “Not only is there no evidence that the deceased fell, but there is absolutely no evidence what happened to the deceased while he was out of the house. We do not know if the deceased slipped, stumbled or tripped. We do not know whether he stepped into a hole, fell down the outside concrete steps, stepped on a loose object and fell, fell because of a defect in the area or twisted his ankle and fell. We do not know whether he was hit by a car, struck by a falling object or whether he was assaulted by a third party.”
“Floyd got up just around this time and went out the back I assume to get tools, but I don’t know for what. While I was waiting at the dining room table for my mother to come downstairs, my little boy came in and said, ‘Mommy, Daddy’s in the kitchen, and he’s all fuU of blood.’ X jumped up from the table, and I went in. He was standing back up against the kitchen sink. On his left side the bottom lip was extended about an inch or an inch and a half. On his right side of his face was this imprint from the'grass and the yard, and a small mark here. I got a wet washrag, .and I washed his face. * * * I asked him what happened, and he said, ‘I don’t know.’ I said, ‘Did you fall?’ He said, ‘I don’t know.’ ”