302 Mass. 465 | Mass. | 1939
The grounds of this appeal from a decree of the Superior Court awarding compensation to an employee are that no causal connection has been shown between the injury and the employment and that there was error in finding that the want of notice of the injury and the making of a claim after the time prescribed by the statute did not prejudice the insurer. These are essentially questions
There was evidence that the employee had been steadily employed since 1917 by the insured, a manufacturer of yarn from jute. The jute, after it was removed from its containers upon the first floor of the factory, by men, some of whom wore masks to protect them from the dust, was brought tb the second floor, where the employee worked, and was put through the roving machines, one of which was operated by the employee. During the last eight months of his service with the employer, the employee was steadily engaged in working upon jute "for the post office job,” although other employees on this job were changed every two or three weeks to other work. The request of the employee that his work be changed was refused. While working on the jute for this job, the employee noticed that dust would pile up on his head and shoulders within ten to fifteen minutes after he commenced work. It was impracticable to wear a mask while operating the machine unless it could be cleaned every five minutes. There was so much dust from this jute that it was necessary for him to clean his machine six times a day. He was feeling well when he began work on this lot of jute, but .as the work continued the inhalation of the dust caused pains in his chest and sometimes expectoration of blood. He was compelled to quit his work on March 16, 1935. The single member found that the employee was suffering from pneumoconiosis, caused by his employment, and that he was totally incapacitated for work. He awarded compensation to the employee. These findings were adopted and affirmed by the reviewing board.
The evidence concerning the cause and nature of the employee's disability was conflicting. It need not be nar
The claim for compensation was filed on November 13, 1936. The board found that the insurer was not prejudiced by the want of notice of injury or by the filing of the claim on the last-mentioned date, which was nearly twenty months after the employee quit his employment. We are not dealing with the happening of a single event concerning which the rights of the insurer might be impaired if it were kept in ignorance of its occurrence and so prevented from conducting an investigation to determine whether such an event had in fact taken place and, if it had, to ascertain all the attending circumstances, including an inquiry as to whether there was a causal connection between the employment and the injury and between the injury and the disability. Kangas’s Case, 282 Mass. 155. Booth’s Case, 289 Mass. 322. Hatch’s Case, 290 Mass. 259. Meagher’s Case, 293 Mass. 304. The evidence showed that the jute upon which the employee worked during the last eight months of his employment contained more than the usual
We need not consider the finding “that the employee had reasonable cause for not filing a claim within the statutory period” or the subsidiary finding that “it was not until he was at the Mercy Hospital in 1936 that he was aware of the nature of his condition and its relationship to his employment.” The employee satisfied the statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 49, if he proved that the filing of his claim after the period stated in § 41 did not prejudice the insurer, or if he showed a reasonable cause for not filing it within the said period. A finding of either, if warranted, prevents the employee’s delay in making claim from barring proceedings for compensation. Barry’s Case, 240 Mass. 409. Dorney’s Case, 259 Mass. 350. Tingus’s Case, 273 Mass. 453. Gaffer’s Case, 279 Mass. 566. Rich’s Case, 301 Mass. 545.
We cannot say that any of the findings in question is shown to have been unsupported by the evidence.
Decree affirmed.