This employee’s claim for compensation, based upon industrial poisoning and causally related dermatitis, was filed by the employer December 3, 1929; the date of injury was given “Started Nov. 29, 1929”; the occurrence of the injury is described, “Drs. claim this injury to a sliver received in September 28, 1927. The infection of today is due what Drs. claim Dermatitis”; and the nature of the injury is stated to be, “Face and hands; skin troubles.”
The employee began work March 3, 1927, and his first attack of dermatitis was on December 11, 1928. The attack for which he was paid compensation was November 29, 1929. An agreement for compensation was entered into by which the employee was paid for total disability at the rate of $18 a week from December 5, 1929, to December 22, 1929. The agreement recites that the average weekly wages are in excess of $27. The agreement was affirmed by the Industrial Accident Board on January 30, 1930, and states that the employee returned to work and worked until October 4, 1930. The questions before the single member are stated by him to be: “Incapacity subsequent to October 4, 1930. Average weekly wages.” A hearing was had before the single member on February 9, 1932. It was agreed that the employee returned to work Decern
At the hearing before the single member the employee testified that in November, 1929, he was working for the Van Norman Machine Tool Company as a millwright and “did welding, piping, belting and all the welding, practically everything.” He stopped working in November, 1929, because of a skin condition and was paid compensation until December 22, 1929, when he returned to work and continued his work until he was laid off on October 4, 1930. During this time his hands would become “swollen and itchy,” and bothered him all the time, and have been in the same condition since October 4, 1930. He has done some work since October 4, 1930. He worked for the
Dr. Albert W. Ghoreyeb testified that he examined the employee on January 26, 1932, and found the dermatitis of the skin extending up above the elbows and around the back of the hands and fingers; that it was more or less of a chronic condition caused by some external irritant, which he presumed was the oil the employee said he had used; that some people are susceptible to such poisoning; that the employee’s field of usefulness is limited because of the condition of his skin, which seems to have been made sensitive on account of the dermatitis.
Dr. Thomas E. Cavanaugh, the impartial physician, reported as follows: “He presents at this time a dermatitis involving the entire dorsa of both hands, the anterior surfaces of the wrists, and the anterior and posterior surfaces
It could be found upon the foregoing evidence that since October 4, 1930, the employee has been partially incapacitated for work, and that such incapacity is the result of poisoning due to his constant contact with -oil in the performance of his work; that the condition of industrial dermatitis, after having been first contracted, has still continued since October 4, 1930, and was not materially affected by his subsequent employment elsewhere. The testimony was sufficient to support the finding of the board that the employee was partially incapacitated by reason of a personal injury.
This court has held that simple disease resulting from employment affords no ground for recovery under the workmen’s compensation act. Sullivan’s Case, 265 Mass. 497, 499. In that case it was said "The 'personal injury’ for which alone compensation is payable under G. L. c. 152,
The testimony warranted a finding that the original condition of dermatitis from which the employee suffered before October 4, 1930, had not entirely disappeared, but still continued after that date, and that the subsequent exposure to oil when he worked for the Phelan Barrel Company did not result in a distinct injury which constituted an independent intervening cause for his incapacity. It was a question of fact on all the evidence whether the return of the dermatitis had a causal connection with the original injury. Hartnett v. Tripp, 231 Mass. 382. Gaglione’s Case, 241 Mass. 42. It could have been found that a subsequent exposure to oil after October 4, 1930, resulted in a condition due to the original injury, from which he still suffered. Dr. Ghoreyeb testified, in substance, that by the subsequent washing of barrels the oil aggravated a previous condition, and if the employee’s hands and skin had been normal he probably would not have had a return of dermatitis. There was no evidence tending to show that when the employee went to work, for the Phelan Barrel Company there would be any danger from further exposure. The reported testimony warranted a finding that the second outbreak of dermatitis was causally connected with the original injury sustained in 1929. Willis’s Case, 245 Mass. 244, 248, 249, and Panagotopulos’s Case, 276 Mass. 600, are distinguishable in their facts from the case at bar. See Corey’s Case and Maloof’s Case, 276 Mass. 610.
Since the evidence warranted the finding of the single member and the reviewing board that the employee is entitled to partial compensation from October 4, 1930, the entry must be
Decree affirmed.