Summary
In Ackerman v. Industrial Commission, 131 Ohio St. 371, 3 N.E.2d 44, this court held that in order for a death to be compensable, the claimed diseased condition must have existed at the time of injury. That case, however, followed the Weaver case in recognizing the acceleration theory.
Summary of this case from Senvisky v. Steel Corp.Opinion
No. 25857
Decided July 1, 1936.
Workmen's compensation — Injury accelerated diseased condition and hastened death — Claim not compensable unless diseased condition existed at injury — Testimony to show acceleration, incompetent, when.
1. In an action brought by a dependent for a death award under the Workmen's Compensation Act, on the ground that the injury accelerated a diseased condition and hastened death, such diseased condition must exist at the time of injury, else the case is not compensable.
2. Unless and until it is shown that the diseased condition existed at the time of injury, all testimony tendered for the purpose of showing acceleration of a diseased condition is incompetent and should be excluded.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals of Mahoning county.
This case was tried in the Common Pleas Court of Mahoning county. The court sustained a motion for a verdict directed in favor of the Industrial Commission and afterward overruled a motion for a new trial. The Court of Appeals reversed that judgment and remanded the cause for a new trial and error is prosecuted to this court to reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
The petition alleges that the plaintiff, Agnes Ackerman, is the daughter of Edward Colby, deceased; that she was dependent upon him and that he was employed by the Struble-Leach Company in Mahoning county; that he was injured on June 21, 1929, in the course of his employment, and died as a result thereof on November 29, 1930.
The defendant, the Industrial Commission, admits that Colby was an employee of the Struble-Leach Company at the time of the injury and that such company had complied with the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Law; that Colby received an injury to his foot on or about the date alleged and died on November 29, 1930, of cirrhosis of the liver. It is also admitted that plaintiff is the daughter of Colby, and that an application for compensation was filed and proceedings had thereon. Each and every other allegation of claimant's petition is denied.
The testimony in the case developed the fact that Colby was at the time of injury fifty-nine years of age and on June 21, 1929, while assisting in moving a gas drum by means of ropes and chains one of the chains broke and fell, causing an injury to his right heel bone. He died on November 29, 1930, from what the attending physician described as cirrhosis of the liver.
It is claimed by the defendant that there is no proof of a causal connection between the injury and the death, which occurred about eighteen months after the injury.
The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court for error in the exclusion of testimony.
Mr. Harry T. Rapport, for appellee.
Mr. John W. Bricker, attorney general, and Mr. R.R. Zurmehly, for appellant.
At some point during the progress of the case the issue made by the petition must have been abandoned and a new issue injected into the case in some way. The petition directly avers that Colby died as a result of the injuries received by him on June 21, 1929, in the course of his employment. No claim is made in the petition that the injury accelerated an existing condition, to wit, cirrhosis of the liver. It pleads unequivocally that the injury caused the death.
It is an old rule that the evidence must correspond to the pleadings and be confined to the point in issue. The theory of recovery for death on the ground that the injury accelerated an existing condition seems to have been imported into Ohio from the state of Illinois in the case of Weaver v. Industrial Commission, 125 Ohio St. 465, 181 N.E. 894, wherein the following cases are cited: West Side Coal Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, 321 Ill. 61, 151 N.E. 593, and Springfield District Coal Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, 303 Ill. 455, 135 N.E. 789.
While the theory of acceleration was not in the case by the pleadings, it has been treated as being in the case by the briefs and we will so treat it to a certain extent.
In the case of West Side Coal Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, supra, this proposition of law is made very explicit, that where the recovery is claimed on the basis of the acceleration of an existing diseased condition such condition must have been in existence at the time the injury was received. There is not a shred of testimony along this line except the answer of Dr. Mossman, decedent's attending physician, to one question. The question and answer we quote:
"Q. He didn't have any other physical disability at that time, in June, 1930? A. Not that I could detect. They were undoubtedly there."
This is a mere guess even as of that time, which was after the accident. If the doctor could not detect them, how did he know there were other disabilities? Dr. Mossman further testified that on June 2, 1929, he made an examination of decedent, who had been ill with lobar pneumonia, that he gave him permission to return to work and told him that his heart and lungs and kidneys were sound in so far as he could ascertain in the customary method of examination.
The injury in this case was to the oscalcis bone, one of the bones of the heel. All the medical testimony was to the effect that an injury to the oscalcis could not cause cirrhosis of the liver. The testimony was to the further effect that there was absolutely no connection between the injury and the liver condition.
The testimony that was excluded by the trial court did tend to prove that the cirrhosis was accelerated by the injury; but there is nothing to prove that the cirrhosis existed at the time of the injury. By the weight of authority, before claimant could recover upon the theory of acceleration, she was required to first show that the decedent had cirrhosis at the time he was injured. This she failed to do.
The two Illinois cases cited in the case of Weaver v. Industrial Commission, supra, are interesting and we quote briefly from those cases. In the case of Springfield District Coal Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, supra, the court said, in effect:
If death is fairly chargeable to an accident suffered in the course of the employment as an efficient cause, compensation may be awarded, and the previous physical condition of the employee does not affect the right. So long as the injury sustained is the proximate cause of the incapacity or death, compensation is to be allowed although there was a pre-existing disease, if the disease was aggravated or accelerated by the accidental injury.
This pronouncement of the law is supported by most of the Illinois authority.
The court goes further and states: "But there must be a direct relation between the accident and the consequent disability or death," citing Lawrence Ice Cream Co. v. Industrial Commission, 298 Ill. 175, 131 N.E. 369. "Liability cannot be based upon a choice between two views equally compatible with the evidence." The court here cites C. E. Peterson Co. v. Industrial Board, 281 Ill. 326, 117 N.E. 1033. "In this case * * * there was no connection between the accidental injury as a moving cause and the death. The most that the doctor was willing to say was that there was a possibility, due to the weakened condition of Zara from pre-existing disease and increased weakness from the sprain, that the sprain may have been a predisposing cause of pneumonia; but in his opinion there was no connection whatever."
The Illinois statute makes no provision for the recovery of compensation by dependents in case of death resulting from an acceleration of an existing condition any more than does the Ohio statute. The Supreme Court of Illinois just seems to have reasoned it into the law, and we adopted it in the Weaver case, supra. Even in Illinois, where the acceleration theory seems to have originated, it is a sine qua non that the condition accelerated must have existed at the time of injury in order to make a compensable case.
The objectionable testimony proffered by claimant, even upon the theory of acceleration, which was not in the case by the pleadings, was totally incompetent unless and until she made the showing that Colby, the decedent, had cirrhosis of the liver at the time of injury. Not having done so, the trial court committed no error in the exclusion of the testimony.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and that of the Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
Judgment reversed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., WILLIAMS, JONES, MATTHIAS, DAY and ZIMMERMAN, JJ., concur.