52 Ga. App. 416 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
This is a case under the workmen’s compensation act of this State. Mrs. J. J. Maddox, the claimant, is the widow of
1. Findings of fact of a single director of the department of industrial relations, where approved on review by the full department, stand in this court on the same footing as the verdict of a jury; and where supported by some competent evidence, they will not be disturbed. Maryland Casualty Co. v. England, 160 Ga. 810 (129 S. E. 75); London Guarantee &c. Co. v. Shockley, 31 Ga. App. 762 (122 S. E. 99); Jackson v. Lumberman’s Mutual Casualty Co., 33 Ga. App. 35 (125 S. E. 515); Burdett v. Ætna Life Ins. Co., 40 Ga. App. 92 (149 S. E. 55). Where the facts found by the directors do not support the order or decree, or where there is not sufficient competent evidence in the record to warrant them in making the award complained of, or where the directors acted without or in excess of their powers, or where the award was procured by fraud, the superior court should set such award aside on appeal, and this court will affirm that judgment. Code of 1933, § 114-710; Maryland Casualty Co. v. England, supra, s. c. 34 Ga. App. 354 (129 S. E. 446).
2. Injury means an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment, and does not include a disease in any form, except a disease resulting naturally and unavoidably from the accident or injury received. Code of 1933, § 114-102; U. S. Casualty Co. v. Smith, 162 Ga. 130 (133 S. E. 851).
3. Where the employee dies of a disease that results naturally and unavoidably from an injury received, which injury itself is compensable, such death is within the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act, and, nothing else appearing to prevent it, the dependents of such deceased workman should be compensated. See 71 C. J. 585-587, §§ 335, 336.
(a) An award denying compensation for the death of an employee, where the evidence is that death resulted from tuberculosis, which the employee had in a latent stage, but which flared into activity as a result of an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, and where there is no evidence that the death of the employee was the result of tuberculosis alone, not aggravated
(6) Compensation acts, though in derogation of the common law, are highly remedial in character and should be liberally and broadly construed to effect their beneficial purposes. Such an act will be reasonably construed so as to prevent, if possible, a miscarriage of the objects and benefits for which it is designed. New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Sumrell, 30 Ga. App. 682, 689 (118 S. E. 786); Jones v. Georgia Casualty Co., 30 Ga. App. 207, 210 (117 S. E. 467); Georgia Casualty Co. v. Martin, 157 Ga. 909 (122 S. E. 881).
(c) The holding of the judge before whom this matter came on appeal, to the effect that the undisputed evidence showed one of two things, that is, that the deceased employee either did not have tuberculosis just prior to the injury of June 29, 1933, and the same was produced solely by such injury, or that, “if the tuberculosis germ in a latent form was in the throat and lungs of J. J. Maddox, all the competent evidence is to the effect that an infection is quite frequently associated with a trauma or injury to the chest; that it would cause the tuberculosis germ to flare up as a natural result of the injury on June 29, 1933; that in his weakened condition the
4. The judgment setting aside the award of the industrial commission, and directing that compensation be paid to the claimant, was not erronous for any reason assigned.
Judgment affirmed.