Allen v. Industrial Commission

172 P.2d 669, 110 Utah 328, 1946 Utah LEXIS 128
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1946
DocketNo. 6918.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 669 (Allen v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Industrial Commission, 172 P.2d 669, 110 Utah 328, 1946 Utah LEXIS 128 (Utah 1946).

Opinions

WADE, Justice.

This matter comes to this court on a writ of certiorari to review an award by the Industrial Commission to the dependents of Bernell C. Cooper, deceased, under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The dependents claim that his death was caused by an accidental injury suffered in the course of his employment by the Allen Cash Store» at Caliente, Nevada, between the 8th of June and the 11th of July, 1944. Three questions are presented: (1) Does the Utah State Industrial Commission have jurisdiction to make an award in a case of this kind? (2) Is- the evidence sufficient to sustain a finding that the deceased was injured in the course of his employment? (3) Is the evidence sufficent to sustain a finding that his death was caused by an injury?

The Allen Cash Stores are owned and operated by George Allen and J. P. Allen, doing business under that name. They reside and have their headquarters from which they handle the general business of their stores at Tooele, Utah. They operate stores at Tooele and Nephi, Utah, and at Caliente and Pioche, Nevada. The deceased during the times covered by this case was a resident of Nephi, Utah.

About June 18,1944, deceased at Nephi, Utah, agreed to go to work in the Allens’ store at Caliente, Nevada, as a meat cutter. On June 22d, he commenced work for them at that place, and continued in such employment until July 11th, when he was so ill that he was unable to continue. About July 1st, with the permission of the store management at Caliente he drove , a store truck from that city to Nephi, *331 Utah, with the intention of moving his family to his new place of employment. Incidentally, he brought with him a cash register which he delivered to the store in Nephi. After arriving in Nephi he changed his mind about moving to Caliente and decided to terminate his employment and soon thereafter gave the Allens notice of his intention to terminate his employment on July 15, 1944. However, his wife and a child returned with him to Caliente.

His dependents claim that on June 28th, while in the course of his employment, the knife he was using slipped and cut the index finger of his right hand. They further claim that on July 5th or 6th, while unloading meat he bumped his right leg on the bumper of a car or that a quarter of beef fell from the hook onto his right leg, and badly bruised and broke the skin. After this last injury septicemia set in. On July 10th he consulted a doctor and on July 11th he was suffering great pains in his leg, had a high temperature and was compelled to leave the job before the day was over. The next morning he was taken to Nephi. About 1 o’clock of July 13th, Dr. Beckstead attended him at Nephi. At that time the doctor testified he was suffering severe pains in his leg; his temperature was high but his heart action was not bad. His hemorrhoids were sore and for some time his skin had been colored from yellow jaundice. The doctor administered a sulfa drug and upon returning the next day about the same time found his fever not so high and his pain not so acute. About 4 o’clock later that afternoon after the doctor had gone, to overcome some difficulty he was experiencing in urinating he turned over onto his hands and knees and while in that position collapsed and nearly passed out. The doctor returned immediately and found his patient in a state of severe shock, his heart action and pulse were weak. He died on July 17, 1944.

Was the evidence sufficient to support a finding that deceased was injured in the course of his employment? There was no testimony of any eyewitness as to how or when either of these accidents occurred. Dr. Beckstead testified that deceased told him that while working at the store his knife *332 slipped and cut his finger. The widow testified that he had no cut when he left to go to Caliente but had it when he returned to Nephi and that from then on she dressed and cared for that wound. Under the reasoning in Boyd v. Industrial Commission, 88 Utah 184, 53 P. 2d 80, this evidence was probably sufficient to justify the finding that the cut was received in the course of his employment. As will later appear it is not necessary for us to determine that question in this case.

As to how he obtained the bruise on his right leg the application states

“that on or about July 6,1944, he bumped his right leg on a car bumper, and on or about July 10, 1944, a quarter of beef dropped from a hook in the store onto his right leg badly bruising and breaking the skin thereon.”

The evidence on this subject is substantially as follows: Deceased’s widow testified that on the evening of July 5th or 6th, he was in considerable pain, that his right leg was badly bruised, and that he did not have that bruise when he went to work that morning, that she treated his bruise, and that he told her that while working at the store during the day a quarter of beef fell from its hook onto his leg and caused the bruise. There was testimony that he made similar statements to the doctor and others after he returned to Nephi. This was the only injury to his leg that these witnesses testify to. Mr. Vowels, the manager of the store at Caliente, on the other hand testified that on July 11th, the last night he was at the store, a load of meat came to the store which the deceased commenced to unload and shortly thereafter deceased came to witness and told him he could not finish unloading the meat because he had bumped his leg on a car bumper while unloading the meat and was therefore unable to finish the job.

The statements by the deceased to his wife and to the doctor relating how he obtained the injury to his leg is hearsay unless they were of aid to the person to whom they were made in treating the same. Boyd v. Industrial *333 Commission, 88 Utah. 184, 53 P. 2d 80. The testimony of the widow to the effect that he did not have the bruise in the morning when he left for work but did have it that night, is of facts within her own knowledge, and tends to prove when the accident occurred and also tends to prove that it occurred in the course of his employment because he spent most of the time during which the accident could have occurred according to that testimony on the job. The testimony of the manager of the store that deceased told him that he could not finish unloading the meat because he had injured his leg by bumping it on the car bumper are words which explained his actions in not finishing the unloading of the meat, and are therefore admissible to prove how the injury occurred. It also is a report of the accident to his employer and being made immediately after the accident, it satisfies the requirements of the statute that such report be made within 48 hours after the accident.

It is true that the application and the findings of the Commission do not harmonize with the testimony of either of these witnesses, and that there is a difference between the testimony of the widow and the doctor on one hand and the testimony of the manager of the store on the other. The application and the findings refer to separate injuries to his right leg, the testimony of the widow and that of the store manager while they differ as to the date of the injury and how it occurred are probably referring to one and the same event.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 669, 110 Utah 328, 1946 Utah LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-industrial-commission-utah-1946.