Argonaut Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission

70 P.2d 216, 21 Cal. App. 2d 492, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 305
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1937
DocketCiv. 5837
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 216 (Argonaut Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Argonaut Mining Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 70 P.2d 216, 21 Cal. App. 2d 492, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 305 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

—By means of certiorari the petitioner seeks to reverse an order of the Industrial Accident Commission denying a rehearing and also asks this court to annul the award of compensation which was allowed the respondent, Blass Jurovieh, for disability incurred as a result of silicosis which he acquired in the course of his employment in its mine.

It is contended the commission exceeded its jurisdiction in determining that Jurovieh incurred his disability in the course of his employment with petitioner for the reason that the evidence is undisputed that he was aware of that ailment while he was previously employed with other mining companies. It is also asserted his right to compensation is barred by the provisions of section 11 (1) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act for failure to present the claim for disability within six months from the date when he first acquired knowledge of his affliction.

The record shows that Blass Jurovieh is forty-five years of age. He has a wife and three children. He began work *494 ing as a miner for the South Eureka Mining Company in 1908. Prom 1918 to 1921 he worked in the Central Eureka Mine on Sutter Creek in Amador County. In 1925 he worked for the Argonaut Mining Company for several months. He shifted about from one mine to another for several years, going back in 1929 for a period of time to the Argonaut mine. In 1933 he was working in the Eureka mine at Sutter Creek. During the last-mentioned period he noticed for the first time that he was frequently short of breath. He felt pains in the chest, and he had lost some weight. Jurovich consulted a physician, who examined him and sent him to Sacramento for X-ray pictures. The doctor then told him that he had tuberculosis and advised him to quit mining. He did not do so, but returned to work for the Argonaut Mining Company. In 1935 he went to work in the El Dorado Limestone mine, but soon became incapacitated for work on account of the progress of his disease of silicosis, and finally ceased working on that account February 16, 1936.

During the latter years in which the claimant was engaged in mining he operated a jack-hammer in dry drilling of rock in an atmosphere permeated with mineral dust. He repeatedly said that the condition in the mines where he worked was “dry and dusty”. The respondents concede “that the employee some time in 1933 was made aware of the true nature of his illness or disease and that his condition was due to dust from the mines in which he worked or had worked”.

When Jurovich abandoned his work in the mine in February, 1936, he was examined by a physician and definitely pronounced a victim of silicosis, which is defined to be a deposit of particles of silica in the tissues; specifically a chronic fibroid condition of the lungs or bronchial lymphatic glands, produced by inhalation of minute particles of silica. (Gould’s Medical Dictionary, 3d ed.) The patient was sent to the Weimar Sanitarium for treatment. Dr. Churchill, the attending physician of that institution, testified that Jurovich was afflicted with a chronic disease of silicosis in its third stage. The doctor was asked: “Q. From the record and his testimony, do you believe that he got the silicosis from working in mines ? A. I think so. ’ ’

A claim for compensation for disability was filed with the Industrial Accident Commission April 24, 1936. After a thorough hearing the commission adopted findings determining that Blass Jurovich sustained temporary total dis *495 ability from injury to the lungs which occurred February 16, 1936, "consisting of industrial silicosis caused by exposure to deleterious materials during the entire periods of his employment” with the several mining enterprises which were mentioned and which appeared in opposition to the demand for award. The commission further found that the claim was not barred by the statute of limitations, and apportioned its aggregate award of $13.42 per week, from February 16, 1936, against four named mining companies, among which was this petitioner, a self-insured mining company. The amount of award against the Argonaut Mining Company is $2.06 per week. Its petition for a rehearing was denied. The petitioner seeks to review that order and to cancel the award on the ground that the commission was without jurisdiction for the reasons heretofore stated.

We are of the opinion the evidence adequately supports the findings of the commission to the effect that the claimant incurred and developed silicosis in the course of his employment as a miner while he was engaged in working for the four companies against which the award was granted, and that disability on that account which caused the termination of his service occurred on or about February 16, 1936.

The contributing cause of silicosis is well known to the medical profession and to mining industries. It is prevalent among employees in mines, potteries, stone and slate factories, and in file-cutting and metal-grinding enterprises, where the air is permeated with minute particles of stone, quartz, slate or metal dust which is inhaled to the detriment of the tissues, glands and lungs. Some men appear to be immune from the disease, but a large proportion of those who are engaged in such pursuits are susceptible to silicosis. The incurring and development of this disease depends somewhat upon the constitution of the employee and upon the conditions under which he works. The course of the disease may be rapid or gradual, sometimes extending over a period of several years before the victim is finally disabled for the performance of manual labor. That was evidently true of the claimant in the present proceeding.

The compensation for the affliction of such occupational diseases for which awards are allowed under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of California does not necessarily attach from the first sympton of the existence of the ailment. Occupational diseases in their incipiency may not impair the *496 ability of an employee to fully and efficiently perform his work. Mere knowledge of the existence of an occupational disease, without further evidence that the ailment has impaired the efficiency of the workmen’s service, will not entitle him to compensation. It is a well-known fact that many such afflictions develop slowly, and the patient becomes disabled from performing his work only after the lapse of many years. The course of the disease of silicosis sometimes extends over a period of twenty years or more. Such diseases in their ineipiency are not incurable.

The law clearly distinguishes between a physical injury sustained as the result of an accident and injuries which develop from progressive occupational diseases like silicosis. In the latter class of cases compensation is authorized only when the employee is so disabled from the progress of the disease as to prevent him from efficiently performing his work. That is a mere common sense statement of the law. In accordance with that principle, the California cases have determined that injuries sustained as the result of occupational diseases are compensable only when the disease culminates in disability. That construction is in accordance with the spirit of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Section 69a of that act provides that:

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Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 216, 21 Cal. App. 2d 492, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/argonaut-mining-co-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1937.