Opinion
The trial court correctly ruled that the commissioner was justified upon the medical testimony in finding that the plaintiff developed maniac psychosis as a result of an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, and that the testimony was sufficient to remove the question beyond conjecture or surmise.
Argued January 4th, 1938
Decided February 1st, 1938.
APPEAL from a finding and award of the compensation commissioner for the fourth district in favor of the plaintiff, brought to the Superior Court in Fairfield County, Simpson, J.; judgment dismissing the appeal and affirming the award, from which the defendants appealed. No error.
The memorandum of decision of the trial court is as follows:
"The commissioner has found that the claimant sustained an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment on May 8th, 1936, which incapacitated him from that date; that subsequently he developed maniac psychosis as a result of said injury, and because of said injury and the resultant psychosis he has been totally incapacitated since May 8th, 1936. The appellant attacks this finding principally upon the claim that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the psychosis resulted from claimant's injuries, and that claimant's testimony failed to remove the question beyond mere conjecture. It may be conceded without comment that the burden was upon claimant to prove the nature of his injuries and result thereof, and if his evidence does not remove the question of the result beyond conjecture or surmise, he is not entitled to compensation for the claimed result.
"The finding that the psychosis developed as a result of the injury was a finding of a primary fact. Nicotra v. Bigelow, Sanford Carpet Co., 122 Conn. 353 [ 189 A. 603]. If there was sufficient medical testimony, in view of other related facts, to support this finding, it will have to stand. If this finding stands, then the finding cannot be corrected in any material way. Whether there was sufficient medical testimony to support the finding that depressive psychosis resulted as a result of claimant's injuries is therefore the chief question in the case. After carefully reading the testimony the court feels that what the Supreme Court said in the case of Kosik v. Manchester Construction Co., 106 Conn. 107, 109 [ 136 A. 870], might with equal force be said in this case: The court there said: `But our examination of the testimony of the physician called by the claimant convinces us that, while conservatively expressed, when considered in its entirety, it merits the construction given it by the commissioner and amounts to expression of an opinion that, at least, it was reasonably probable that the claimant's condition was due to contact with cement and therefore occupational in its cause.'
"The commissioner has found that the claimant was thrown from a truck in which he was riding in the course of his employment, when the truck was struck by a bus. This part of the finding is not questioned. The claimant's testimony supports the finding that claimant became unconscious as a result of being thrown from the truck and striking the ground. The commissioner could have also found that soon after claimant reached the hospital he was dizzy, complained of headaches and became restless, sleepless and nervous, and that these became progressively worse. The claimant called two physicians, Dr. DeMelia and Dr. Emanuel, whose qualifications were not questioned. From Dr. DeMelia's testimony the commissioner could have found claimant suffered a concussion of the brain, and that he was suffering from traumatic neurosis. Dr. Emanuel who had the claimant under observation and treatment at Dr. Barnes' Sanitarium in Stamford, after describing claimant's then condition, upon [being] asked as to whether the condition to which he had testified may be attributable to a blow on the head or injury in the accident, said, among other things, such an accident could cause such a condition, depending upon his previous condition, and when asked if there was no indication of the mental condition previous to the accident in May, he said the accident would be the precipitating cause.
"Dr. Griffin, upon a more or less inaccurate recital of the testimony in the case, testified that he did not believe that the accident caused his alleged psychosis. He also subsequently testified that a man thrown from a truck, falling on the sidewalk, as the claimant is alleged to have fallen, could develop as a result of the fall a mental condition. He also testified that his opinion that the mental condition could not be linked to the accident was based upon the question as asked, and that he had said it could not.
"The commissioner could have found that prior to the accident claimant had shown no indication of a mental condition, and that prior thereto was in good physical condition, and could have reasonably come to the conclusion upon the whole evidence and more or less conflicting opinions of the medical experts, that the fall of claimant was more probably the precipitating cause of the mental condition of which he was suffering than any other suggested cause. In view of the fact claimant's mental condition appears to have been progressive in nature, the commissioner might well have concluded that the mental condition was not brought on by worry and brooding over his son's imaginary injury, but that the worry and brooding, occurring six months after the accident, were brought on by a precipitating compensable injury; that the worry and brooding were symptoms of an affected mind, and not the cause of the mental condition."
John F. Keating, for the appellants (defendants).
Frank J. DiSesa, for the appellee (plaintiff).
The memorandum of decision of the trial court accurately and fully presents the case as it appears upon the record before us, and the judgment is affirmed upon that opinion.