American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Industrial Commission

174 N.E. 905, 342 Ill. 605
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 20541. Judgment reversed and award confirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 N.E. 905 (American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Mutual Liability Insurance v. Industrial Commission, 174 N.E. 905, 342 Ill. 605 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error was allowed by this court on the petition of the widow of Joseph Ciemenga. Petitioner’s husband was about thirty-two years of age and was employed by the Phoenix Company, a corporation, which was engaged in the manufacture of furniture in the city of Chicago, and in connection with its business operated a number of machines of various types which were driven by electric power. Ciemenga was working on a glue press in the machine department and received an accidental injury February 7, 1929. He died March 28, 1929, on account of septicemia, alleged to have resulted from the injury. The widow of deceased filed with the Industrial Commission on April 29, 1929, an application for compensation against the employer on account of the death of her husband, and in May, 1929, filed an amended application, making the trustee of the bankrupt estate of the employer and the American Mutual Liability Insurance Company of Boston, which company had written a policy for the employer against liability under the Workmen’s Compensation act, additional respondents. A hearing before the arbitrator resulted in an award in favor of the widow, who■ was also the mother of deceased’s two surviving children, one six and the other five years of age, and she was soon to give birth to another child. The award against the employer and the insurance company for the support of the widow and her minor children was for $16 a week from the date of the injury, and if the third child was born alive the award was to be $*8 a week thereafter until the total sum of $4550 was paid. The insurance company secured a review of the award by the Industrial Commission, which commission affirmed the- award of the arbitrator. Thereafter, by certiorari proceedings the case was removed to the circuit court of Cook county, where the award of the commission was reversed and set aside. The widow of the deceased filed a petition for writ of error, and defendants in error answered the petition, relying largely on the fact that plaintiff in error in her application for the writ had not included in the abstract a copy of the insurance policy upon which she claimed the right to recover from the insurance company. Thereupon plaintiff in error filed a motion for leave to file a supplemental abstract, which was resisted by defendants in error but was allowed by this court. The supplemental abstract sets out the policy in full as well as the several endorsements attached to the policy.

One of the claims of defendants in error is that the proof did not show death to have resulted from an accidental injury to the employee. The deceased, Joseph Ciemenga, on February 7, 1929, while at work on a machine or press gluing furniture together, exclaimed excitedly, “I got sliver in my finger!” A fellow-workman by the name of Kasper, who worked within a few feet of deceased, went to him immediately, examined his hand, saw blood, and after deceased had washed his hand saw the sliver under the finger nail of the first finger of his right hand. This testimony of Kasper is claimed by defendants in error to have been incompetent as not a part of the res gestes. We do not think defendants in error have sustained this contention. Deceased continued to work for his employer until noon on February 14. Notice was given of the injury both to the insurance company and the employer.

The widow of the employee testified she had been married to deceased eight years and had two children, one six and one five years of age, and was expecting another. Her husband had always been in good health except for a chronic diabetes, which did not interfere with his capacity to work or his routine of life. His hands were well. She noticed the first week in February the index finger on her husband’s right hand was black and red and there was a splinter under the nail. It was exposed until incised by a doctor, after which the finger was bandaged. She first saw the bandage February 11, when her husband came from the doctor. He continued to work until noon on the 14th day of February. He went to bed about a week after the bandage was placed on his finger and then remained at home in bed about two weeks, after which he was taken to the Speedway Hospital, in Maywood, Illinois. She last saw him alive on the 26th day of March, when she visited him at the hospital. She further testified he had for about three years previous to his death used insulin by self-administered hypodermic injections two or three times a week, using alcohol to wash the needle and also the place on his body where he injected the needle.

■ Dr. Tenczar testified Ciemenga came to his office on February Í4, 1929. He had a bandaged finger on his right hand and complained of it being very sore. The doctor removed the bandage. The finger was greatly swollen, discharging pus, with some swelling of the hand and with red lines running up the forearm from the hand. The -latter he diagnosed as lymphangitis — a condition of traveling sepsis from the finger through the lymph vessels up the arm. He prescribed treatment of soaking the hand in hot potassium permanganate solution and dressing with wet bandages. He saw the patient again on February 15, 16, 18 and 21. The infection had somewhat abated on February 21 and he referred Ciemenga back to his employer’s doctor for further treatment. He saw him again the ninth of March at the patient’s home and he was suffering with pain in the left knee joint, which the doctor diagnosed as arthritis and prescribed an external counter-irritant and also codein for his pain. The patient was in bed at the time, complaining of great pain, and he had a temperature. The condition of the finger had apparently healed. There was no evidence of boils, lesions, abscesses, cuts or lacerations on any part of the patient’s body.

On the hearing before the arbitrator defendants in error offered no medical testimony but on review they offered five doctors as expert witnesses. All of the doctors agreed the deceased had died from septicemia. There was some difference between the expert testimony presented by the doctors for defendants in error and the evidence of the two doctors who had seen and treated deceased while he was alive, the doctor who assisted in a post-mortem examination of the body of Ciemenga, the bacteriologist who took and made the blood culture of Ciemenga while he was in the hospital, and another doctor who testified as an expert for the claimant, on review, as to whether Ciemenga died from the effects of streptococci infection or staphylococci infection. It would serve no useful purpose to set out in detail the testimony and the reasons for the opinions which were expressed by the several witnesses. It is sufficient to say there was an abundance of medical proof offered and there was much testimony in scientific terms as to the difference between and the effects of a streptococci infection and a staphylococci infection. The weight of the evidence, we think, decidedly preponderates in favor of claimant’s theory that the accidental injury to the finger of deceased was the cause of the original infection which resulted in his death. (Cockrell v. Industrial Com. 327 Ill. 438.) Proof of the health of the employee prior to the accident and its impairment afterwards tends to show that the impaired condition was due to the injury. There was some suggestion as to the deceased having taken self-administered injections of insulin, but we think the proof clearly shows that was not the origin of the infection which caused his death.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.E. 905, 342 Ill. 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-mutual-liability-insurance-v-industrial-commission-ill-1931.