49 S.E.2d 797 | N.C. | 1948
This is a proceeding in which the plaintiff, Jess Young, asserts that he has suffered permanent and total disablement by the occupational disease of silicosis and asks compensation accordingly of the defendants, *362
Whitehall Company, Incorporated, his last employer, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, its insurance carrier, under the general provisions of the North Carolina Workmen's Compensation Act. The defendants concede that all parties are subject to the act, assert that plaintiff is a proper subject for compulsory change of occupation under G.S.,
The data set out in this paragraph is gleaned from records kept by the North Carolina Industrial Commission, the Advisory Medical Committee, and the Division of Industrial Hygiene of the State Board of Health, and received in evidence without objection at the hearing. Plaintiff was born 14 May, 1901. He became a miner at seventeen years of age, and earned his living by mining kaolin, mica, and feldspar from that time until 24 May, 1946, when he was denied further employment in the mining industry on account of silicosis. While such does not appear as an absolute fact, it is intimated that all of the exposure of the plaintiff to the inhalation of silica dust took place in North Carolina. Be this as it may, he spent the seven years next preceding 24 May, 1946, working in the feldspar mines of his last employer, the Whitehall Company, in this State. On various occasions, he was examined for silicosis in conformity to G.S.,
"Upon the completion of the studies of your recent examination, the Advisory Medical Committee has advised the Commission that you have silicosis and that it is inadvisable for you to continue working in siliceous dust. In this the Commission concurs. The Commission finds as a fact that you will be benefited by being taken out of your present employment *363
with the Whitehall Company, and hereby directs that you be removed from such hazardous employment within 60 days from date of this letter, unless for special reason this time should be extended upon approval of the Commission. . . . The Commission hopes that you can be transferred to some non-dust-hazardous job with your present employer; but if not, you are entitled to be compensated as for temporary total disability until you can obtain employment in some other occupation in which there is no hazard of such occupational disease. Compensation is limited to 20 weeks without dependents, 40 weeks with dependents, and for special training benefits not to exceed $300 and $500 respectively. Read Section
The plaintiff offered evidence before the hearing Commissioner tending to show that he had not been able to do any work whatever subsequent to 24 May, 1946, because of shortness of breath and incessant pain in his chest resulting from silicosis. His medical witness, Dr. C. D. Thomas, Director of the Western North Carolina Sanatorium, expressed the opinion based upon his knowledge of the plaintiff's condition that the plaintiff was actually incapacitated by silicosis from performing normal labor in the last occupation in which he was remuneratively employed, and that the plaintiff's disease was progressing and would probably become worse.
The defendants presented testimony before the hearing Commissioner tending to show that the plaintiff worked with regularity until 24 May, 1946; that subsequent thereto he applied for and obtained unemployment compensation for twenty weeks, representing to the North Carolina Unemployment Compensation Commission that he was willing to work if he could find something light; and that after his removal from work in the feldspar mine of the Whitehall Company he declined to accept vocational training tendered him by the State Division of Vocational Rehabilitation upon the ground that he "did not figure that he could handle a job." The defendants offered Dr. Otto J. Swisher, Director of the Division of Industrial Hygiene of the State Board of Health, as a medical witness. Dr. Swisher based his testimony upon the case history of the plaintiff and certain X-ray photographs rather than upon any personal knowledge of the plaintiff's state. He expressed the opinion that the plaintiff was afflicted by the first stage of silicosis, and that he "could do light work if there was no silica dust involved." He stated on cross-examination that in his judgment the plaintiff was actually incapacitated by silicosis from performing normal labor in the last occupation in which he was employed.
Upon the evidence adduced, the hearing Commissioner made the following findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award: "The Commissioner *364
finds it as a fact that the claimant is not disabled from doing ordinary work. However, the Commissioner does find that it is for the best interest of the claimant not to work in a dusty trade; and it is, therefore, directed that he be not employed by any other person in a dusty occupation. The Commissioner does find, however, that the claimant is entitled to the benefits provided in the Act, Section
The plaintiff appealed to the Full Commission, which affirmed the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and award of the hearing Commissioner. The plaintiff then prosecuted an appeal to the Superior Court of Mitchell County, where the proceeding arose, and the Superior Court entered judgment setting aside the award of the Industrial Commission upon the ground that the findings of fact were insufficient for a proper determination of the questions raised and remanding the proceeding to the Industrial Commission for further findings. The defendants thereupon appealed to this Court from the judgment of the Superior Court.
As originally adopted in 1929, the North Carolina Workmen's Compensation Act provided merely for compensation for the death or disability of a workman resulting from injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. G.S.,
In thus extending the coverage of the statute, the Legislature expressly decreed that disablement or death of a workman from a designated occupational disease "shall be treated as the happening of an injury by accident within the meaning of the North Carolina Workmen's Compensation Act and the procedure and practice and compensation and other benefits provided by said act shall apply in all such cases except as hereinafterotherwise provided." G.S.,
A proper consideration of the special provisions of the statutes relating to asbestosis and silicosis must rest upon a conviction that in passing these laws the Legislature gave due heed to the nature of these diseases.
The definition of silicosis itself makes it plain that the legislators approved the amendment covering occupational diseases with full knowledge that silicosis is a disease of the lungs contracted by breathing air containing silica dust. G.S.,
We are dealing here with silicosis alone. But as it and asbestosis are always coupled in the statutes, it is well to note that asbestosis is a disease of the lungs occurring in persons working in air laden with asbestos dust. G.S.,
When the special provisions of the occupational disease amendment relating to asbestosis and silicosis are read in their entirety, it is apparent that they are designed to effect these objects: (1) To prevent the employment of unaffected persons peculiarly susceptible to asbestosis or silicosis in industries with dust hazards; (2) to secure compensation to those workers affected with asbestosis or silicosis, whose principal need is compensation; and (3) to provide compulsory changes of occupations for those workmen affected by asbestosis or silicosis, whose primary need is removal to employments without dust hazards.
It is to be noted that there is a radical difference between the criterion of disability in cases of asbestosis and silicosis and that of disability in cases of injuries and other occupational diseases. An employee is disabled *366
by injury or an ordinary occupational disease within the purview of the Workmen's Compensation Act only if he suffers incapacity because of theinjury or disease to earn the wages which he was receiving at the time ofthe injury or disease in the same or any other employment. G.S.,
Moreover, it is clearly implicit in the special provisions relating to asbestosis and silicosis that the lawmaking body did not contemplate that a worker suffering disablement by asbestosis or silicosis within the meaning of G.S.,
"Where an employee, though not actually disabled, is found by the Industrial Commission to be affected by asbestosis and/or silicosis, and it is also found by the Industrial Commission that such employee would be benefited by being taken out of his employment and that such disease with such employee has progressed to such a degree as to make it hazardous for him to continue in his employment and is in consequence removed therefrom by order of the Industrial Commission . . ., he shall be paid compensation as for temporary total or partial disability, as the case may be, until he can obtain employment in some other occupation in which there are no hazards of such occupational disease; Provided, however, compensation in no case shall be paid for a longer period than twenty weeks to an employee without dependents, nor for a longer period *367
than forty weeks to an employee with dependents, and in either case said period shall begin from the date of removal from the employment, unless actual disablement from such disease results later and within the time limited in section
Unhappily, the phraseology of G.S.,
G.S.,
It is well to note the meaningful language used by the Legislature in authorizing the Industrial Commission to compel a workman embraced by G. S.,
Obviously, the Legislature enacted G.S.,
The task of applying the law to the case at bar still remains.
The Industrial Commission properly permitted the plaintiff to contest in this proceeding the applicability of G.S.,
We are constrained to hold upon the record here presented that the Superior Court was justified in setting aside the award and remanding the cause to the Industrial Commission because the evidence does not support the finding that the plaintiff "is not disabled from doing ordinary work" and the other findings of fact are insufficient for a proper determination of the questions raised. Logan v. Johnson,
When viewed in the light most adverse to him, the evidence merely tended to show that the plaintiff "could do light work if there were no silica dust involved." Light work and ordinary work are not synonymous in the realm of manual labor. We cannot agree with the assertion of the defendants that the finding here considered is both supported and required by the fact that the plaintiff worked with regularity in the mine of the Whitehall Company until 26 May, 1946. This contention scarcely comports with the records of the examinations held under G.S.,
Manifestly, the questions arising in this cause cannot be determined in the absence of a finding as to whether the plaintiff is actually incapacitated because of silicosis from performing normal labor in the last occupation in which he was remuneratively employed. If the Industrial Commission should find that plaintiff is disabled by silicosis in this sense, the plaintiff would be entitled to ordinary compensation under the general provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act, unless the Industrial Commission further finds that there is a reasonable basis for the conclusion that the plaintiff possesses the actual or potential capacity of body and mind to work with substantial regularity during the foreseeable future in some gainful occupation free from the hazards of asbestosis and silicosis.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed. *370