295 Ill. 141 | Ill. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court:
This was a proceeding under the Workmen’s Compensation act brought by plaintiff in error to recover for the death of her husband by reason of an alleged accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by the Vulcan Detinning Company, July 10, 1918. The arbitrator and the Industrial Commission awarded compensation. The circuit court of LaSalle county entered an order setting aside the award and the decision of the commission, and on June 26, 1919, entered an order certifying the cause was one proper to be reviewed by this court, and the case was brought here by writ of error to the June term, 1920.
We are met at the outset by the question whether or not this court has jurisdiction to consider this proceeding under the reasoning in the case of City of Chicago v. Industrial Com. 292 Ill. 409; whether this case after July 1, 1919, can be brought here by writ of error in any way except by application direct to this court. It is obvious that if the reasoning of the decision just cited is the law, this court is without jurisdiction to review this record by writ of error on the certificate of the trial judge entered before July 1 and brought by writ of error to this court to the June term, 1920. The Workmen’s Compensation act, as stated in this, last opinion, was amended in 1919, so that the only way to review the record of the circuit court under the amended act was by a petition to this court to be permitted to sue out a writ of error. There is nothing in the amendatory act of 1919 that stated that the act was to be retroactive. As a general rule a statute is to operate in the future, only, and is not to be construed so as to affect past transactions. A retrospective effect will not be given it unless it clearly appears that such was the intention of the legislature. If it is left doubtful as to what was the real design, the statute must be so construed as to have a prospective effect, only. Thompson v. Alexander, 11 Ill. 54; In re Tuller, 79 id. 99.
Section 4 of the Illinois law on statutes reads: “Ncv new law shall be construed to repeal a former law, whether such former law is expressly repealed or not, as to any offense" committed against the former" law, or as to any act done, any penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred, or any right accrued, or claim arising under the former law, or in any way whatever to affect any such offense or act so committed or done, or any penalty, forfeiture or punishment so incurred, or any right accrued, or claim arising before the new law takes effect, save only that the proceedings thereafter shall conform, so far as practicable, to the laws in force at the time of such proceeding. If any penalty, forfeiture or punishment be mitigated by any provisions of a new law, such provision may, by the consent of the party affected, be applied to any judgment pronounced after the new law takes effect. This section shall extend to all repeals, either by express words or by implication, whether the repeal is in the act making any new provision upon the same subject or in any other act.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1917, p. 2846.)
This court in construing this section has held that unless contrary to the manifest intention of the legislature an act revising another shall not apply retrospectively to pending claims or actions. (Merlo v. Johnston City Coal Co. 258 Ill. 328.) Under the reasoning of that opinion and the cases there cited, it must be held that, properly construed, section 4 should be so construed, in connection with the amendment of the Workmen’s Compensation act in 1919, that the provisions of the old act as to the right of review in this court by writ of error must apply, and that 'this court would have jurisdiction in this proceeding to review the proceedings of the circuit court on the writ of- error' here under consideration. This conclusion necessarily follows under the- reasoning of Merlo v. Johnston City Coal Co. supra, and the cases there cited, particularly People v. Zito, 237 Ill. 434. (See, also, Western Electric Co. v. Industrial Com. 285 Ill. 279.) This court in the opinion in City of Chicago v. Industrial Com. supra, did not refer .to in any way or consider the provisions of section 4 of the law on statutes, and what is said in that opinión „ in any way conflicting with the conclusión here reached on the question of jurisdiction in" this proceeding is hereby expressly overruled.
This leaves for consideration the question whether under the evidence the plaintiff in error is entitled, under the Workmen’s Compensation act,' to recover for the death of her husband. He was working for the Vulcan Detinning' Company at the time of his death. That company was engaged in the business of reclaiming tin and steel from tin scrap, the reclaimed tin being smelted into block tin and the steel being baled and disposed of to steel foundries. The work of the deceased consisted of feeding scrap with a fork to the steel hammer. The factory is located about two miles from Streator, in LaSalle county, employs about ninety men and occupies about twenty-five acres of ground, fenced in. The employees, except the office force, were furnished for toilet purposes with a frame building about twelve feet long and six feet wide, with a trench running through it and tile in the bottom of the trench for water to pass through. The .trench was enclosed on every side, and instead of ordinary toilet seats for the men to sit on there was a four-by-four timber, with rounded edges, along and over the front of the brick trench arid located about eighteen inches from the back wall of the building and about two feet from the floor, there being a wooden partition built vertically between the floor and the bottom of this timber. There was an ordinary board floor in the toilet in front of the rail or timber. Provision was made for water to run through the trench, but the trench was sometimes stopped up and had to be flushed out now and then. Opremchalc had been working for the company about fourteen years. The evidence tended to show that he sometimes drank to excess and on such occasions did not come to work, but there was no evidence of intoxication on the morning of his death. During the week previous he had been sick, complaining of a backache, and was away for several days from his work. He came back Friday evening, which was the next day after the Fourth of July, and remained steadily at work until the ioth. On that morning he left home and went to work at the usual time, walking to the plant a mile and a half or more. The grounds were supposed to be open for the employees any time after six o’clock. He was seen by one of his fellow-workmen at the' plant some time near 6:30 and he left his dinner pail and jacket near his place of work, and that was the last seen of him alive. In the course of the forenoon he was missed and inquiries were made and a search instituted. He was found about noon in the east end of the trench or vault of the toilet, lying lengthwise, with his head three or four inches from the east wall and with his feet to the west, partly submerged in the vault contents. His hands were crossed over his chest. His pantaloons were down around his knees and in such shape as to indicate that he had gone to the toilet to attend the needs of nature. The. building had to be removed to get the deceased and the body was taken from the trench with grappling hooks. There was a bruise on his right arm and bruises on the legs below the knees, such as might have been made by the hooks, but there were no cuts or open wounds on the body. There was very little water running through the contents of the vault or trench at the time of Opremchak’s death. The evidence tends to show that in the process of preparing scrap in the foundry for use alkali was used in the water for cleaning and some of the water from the factory so used flowed into the trench in the toilet, but there is evidence tending to show there was no gas, sulphur or acid found in the contents of the vault at the time the body was removed. The trench was about eighteen inches in width, but there is no clear evidence that he was seriously injured by the fall, although it is possible that some of the bruises on his body were made by his fall into the trench. He had apparently been dead for some hours when the body was discovered in the trench, and the toilet had been used by some of the employees after the body was there without their seeing it. The deceased had a right to go to the toilet any necessary time during his service for the Vulcan Detinning Company, and there can be no question but that his death occurred during his employment. The only question is whether it arose out of his employment.
This court has frequently stated that the burden rests upon the claimant to show by competent testimony not only the fact of the injury but that it occurred in connection with the employment; that the claimant must “furnish evidence from which the inference can be logically drawn that the injury arose out of and in the course of his employment;” that it must rest upon something more than mere guess or conjecture, but that the proof of such facts “may be established by circumstantial as well as by direct evidence, and the greater or less probability, leading on the whole to a satisfactory conclusion, is all that can reasonably be required to establish controverted facts.” (Hydrox Chemical Co. v. Industrial Com. 291 Ill. 579, and cases there cited.) “Liability cannot rest upon imagination, speculation or conjecture,—upon a choice between two views equally compatible with the evidence,—but must be based upon facts established by evidence fairly tending to prove them.” (Peterson & Co. v. Industrial Board, 281 Ill. 326; Wisconsin Steel Co. v. Industrial Com. 288 id. 206.) While the burden rests upon, the claimant to furnish evidence from which an inference can logically be drawn that the injury arose out of and in the course of. the employment, such evidence may be circumstantial. (Ohio Building Vault Co. v. Industrial Board, 277 Ill. 96.) It is impossible to lay down any rule as to the degree of proof which is sufficient to justify an inference being drawn, but the evidence must be such as would induce a reasonable man to draw such inference. Where the known facts are not equally consistent, where there is ground for comparing and balancing probabilities at their respective values, and where the more probable conclusion is that for which the applicant contends, the arbitrator is justified in drawing such inference. (Peoria Railway Terminal Co. v. Industrial Board, 279 Ill. 352.) What is evidence of a fact and what is merely guessing at the fact cannot be defined by any formula that one can invent. What is wanted is to weigh the probabilities, to see if there be proved facts sufficient to: enable one to have some ground for comparing and balancing the probabilities and their respective values, one against the otheri (Owners of Ship Swansea Vale v. Rice, 4 B. W. C. C. 298.) There can be no question but that the death of Opremchak occurred' while he was in the toilet. There is no evidence in the record tending to show that he had heart trouble or any other chronic disease that would result in his sudr den death. There is no question from the record but that the construction of the toilet seat was such that one might easily fall backward from it into the trench, which would not have been possible.with a toilet seat as ordinarily constructed. We understand that this toilet has been re-built according to modern methods since the death of the applicant’s husband. The evidence shows that he had been in fairly good health, although there is some evidence that he had been poorly for a few days the week previous' to the accident. The evidence shows that the feet of deceased were entirely covered by the human waste in the vault when he was found, and there is some evidence tending to show that this matter covered the body up to his chin, and that some of it was even upon his chin, and one witness testified he thought' Opremchak was filled up with it, and while there is some evidence that his body below the shoulders was not entirely covered with the material in the vault, it has been repeatedly held that the courts cannot weigh the evidence; that in the absence of fraud the courts are bound by the decision of the Industrial Commission, if there is any legal evidence to support it. Bailey v. Industrial Com. 286 Ill. 623; Munn v. Industrial Board, 274 id. 70; Mueller Construction Co. v. Industrial Board, 283 id. 148; Chicago Steel Foundry Co. v. Industrial Com. 286 id. 544.
The testimony shows that Opremchak was a strong man physically, about forty-nine years old; that it took him about thirty minutes to walk from his home to the factory on the day of his death; that he was sober, and that while he had been suffering from backache a,few days before, he did not call a doctor and went back to work and worked every day until his death, and that he was a steady worker. There is no evidence tending to show that he was an habitual drunkard or any justification for the conclusion that he fell into the vault while under the influence of liquor, and it would be pure guess or conjecture to say that he fell because of heart trouble or other chronic disease. A workman employed in unloading coal from a ship, who was required in the course of his duty to stand by the open hatchway through which the, coal was being brought up from the hold, was seized with an' epileptic fit while at work and fell into the hold and was seriously injured. The court held that regard must be had to the proximate cause of the accident resulting in the injury, which was to be found in the necessary proximity of the workman to the hatchway, and that it was the fall, and not the fit, which occasioned the accident, which was the effective and so the proximate cause of the injury. (Wilkes v. Dowell & Co. (1905) 92 L. T. R. 677; Peoria Railway Terminal Co. v. Industrial Board, supra.) Even if the fall were occasioned by heart trouble or other chronic disease, under the reasoning of the decision just cited that would not necessarily prevent the fall from being the proximate cause of the death of Opremchalc unless the proof was clear and conclusive that he was dead at the time of the fall. While the facts in this case might give rise to conflicting" inferences there is certainly ground here for comparing probabilities at their respective values, and in so comparing them is" not the conclusion from the known facts that Opremchalc came to his death by the fall into the vault more probable than that he died because of heart trouble or some other sudden bodily affliction, and were not the arbitrator and Industrial Commission justified in drawing the conclusion that the greater probability in this case leads, on the whole, to the conclusion that the deceased met his death by suddenly falling into the vault during the course of his employment ?
The coroner’s verdict was introduced on the trial before the Industrial Commission, but it is conceded, and the Industrial Commission stated in its finding, that it was not properly in evidence but that there was evidence outside the coroner’s verdict that the death was accidental and arose out of and in the course of the employment. Later, after the body had been buried, an autopsy was requested by a representative of the insurance company and refused by the widow on the advice of her counsel, it is argued, on the ground, as suggested by. counsel, that the autopsy after the undertaker’s preparation of the body for burial could not show clearly the cause of the death. We are of the opinion that such refusal, under the circumstances found in this record, should not necessarily be treated as an admission or a legal presumption, one way or the other, as to the Cause of the death.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the decision of the Industrial Commission will be affirmed.
Judgment reversed and finding
of commission confirmed.