Balash v. Mills

40 A.2d 617, 23 N.J. Misc. 35, 1945 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 1
CourtPassaic County Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 40 A.2d 617 (Balash v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Passaic County Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balash v. Mills, 40 A.2d 617, 23 N.J. Misc. 35, 1945 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 1 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Delaney, C. P. J.

Max Balash sought compensation for temporary and permanent disability alleged to have resulted from an accident occurring on August 31st, 1943, out of and in the course of his employment by Gera Mills, a manufacturer of woolen textiles. He prevailed in the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau, and from the judgment entered on the determination of facts and rule for judgment his employer appealed.

Balash was one of eight men, including a foreman, employed at the time in question by the woolen manufacturer as “final examiners.” They made the last inspection of the finished cloth, which thereafter passed into the “merchandise department.” Equipped with “spickers” needles and scissors, they explored the fabrics, both front and back, for every sort of flaw and imperfection resulting from the processes of spinning or of weaving, for marks, and also for the proper width and feel. If the goods were found to be too hard or of improper width, they returned them to steaming machines for correction; but otherwise they set down on the several lines of a tag aifixed to the piece, a report of their findings, folded the cloth, raised it upon their right shoulders, and carried it to a truck which, when filled, was drawn or pushed to an elevator and then moved to another floor. When examining the cloth, each workman apparently stood by his own table, on the fiat surface of. which the piece was pulled down from a roll on a movable stand and minutely inspected.

The cloth examined varied from time to time in weight, sometimes being heavier, and again lighter, than the average. The material under examination on August 31st, 1943, was “Government” or “Khaki” serge, running fifty-five, sixty, and sixty-five yards in length—the average piece being sixty yards—and nearly, if not quite, two yards in width, weighing fourteen ounces to the yard, the weight of a piece of average length being somewhat over fifty pounds.

The examiners worked in a large room, described as being over thirty yards in length, in which stood' the steaming machines and “a very big pressing machine,” and in which [37]*37the temperature, usually warmer than out-of-doors, sometimes rose to a hundred degrees and over. Their hours of work ran from eight o’clock in the morning until half past four in the afternoon, with a thirty-minute intermission for lunch at noon. Their work, it is apparent, was specialized, and. the workers were experienced. Balash had. been employed in it for Gera Mills for seven years, and for an earlier employer twenty years. The foreman, Zalenfce, had held his job for thirty years, and another examiner, Euttger, twelve years. Their tables were plaeed where the northern light fell upon them. It seeras to have been exacting work in which they were engaged, calling for close application. They examined fifty or fifty-five pieces a day, about half of them in the-forenoon.

At noon on the day in question, when a bell announced the recess period, each examiner, in accordance with Ms daily custom, ceased his work, left the cloth lying upon his table without regard to how far his inspection of it had advanced, and. ate his lunch at his own table. When at half past twelve the bell again rang, all of them, except Euttger, who appears to have left his table, at once commenced to work—-the promptitude with which they resumed their tasks turning, we gather from, the testimony of the foreman, on the volume or urgency of the work.

Not long afterward—-the foreman estimates about five, ten, or fifteen minutes, and Euttger “a few minutes,” after half past twelve; “I w-ould say near twenty-five to one”—when all the examiners, save Euttger, were again busied in their work, Balash eoncedediy suffered a coronary thrombosis, from which admittedly came the disability, temporary and permanent, for which he made claim.

He testified that when the bell sounded at noon he had finished the actual examination of a piece, “but I didn’t mark on the baek and the result on the ticket. I stopped because - the hell was ringing for lunch.” He testified further th-a-t he left the cloth lying folded upon his table, and that right after half past twelve he made the markings on the ticket, raised and shouldered the piece, and thereupon felt extreme pain in the upper left shoulder area in his back and in Ms [38]*38chest, began to sweat and feel faint and dizzy, and being unable to throw the cloth upon the truck, managed at length to push it onto the truck from his table.

He called the attention of the foreman to his state, or the ■foreman perceived the man’s pallor and perspiration, and summoning Buttger, who then had got back to his table, directed him to take Balash to a nurse in another building.

At the hearing in the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau and, of course, here on appeal, counsel for the parties have restricted the subject of controversy to a single question: Was the coronary occlusion the result solely of the natural progress of disease, or did exertion either eanse or precipitate it ? It was granted, for the purposes of this proceeding, that physical effort—and the very exertion which Balash underwent in raising fifty pounds of cloth to Ms shoulder, if, in fact, he lifted it there—may cause, or accelerate and so contribute to, a coronary thrombosis in a man who, like Balash, was then in Ms sixty-fourth year, and suffering from a preexisting coronary sclerosis. It is undisputed that the thromiboeis occurred “in the course of Ms employment;” but Ms employer’s position is that Balash was stricken during the lunch period and did not afterward resume work, and sustained no “accident” and suffered nothing arising “out of” Ms employment.

If is properly conceded in the brief f-or the employer that disability resulting from coronary occlusion occasioned by ; exertion, strain, or trauma, is compensable in this state, in-those instances in which the exertion, strain, or trauma arose out of and in the eourse of the claimant’s employment.

It is fee established law also that an accidental strain upon the heart, even though it was previously weakened by disease, may be a compensable injury, under our statute, where the accident arose out of and in the course of the employment. Hertz v. Janssen Dairy Corp., 122 N. J. L. 494, 508; 6 Atl. Rep. (2d) 409.

The benefits of our aet (N. J. S. A. 34:15—1, et seq.) are not limited to those who suffer no previous physical impairment. Molner v. American Smelting and Refining Co. (Court of Errors and Appeals), 128 N. J. L. 11; 24 [39]*39Atl. Rep. (2d) 392; Bernstein, Furniture Co. v. Kelly 114 N. J. L. 500; 177 Atl. Rep. 554.

The central question in the matter is one of faet. The burden of proof is, of course, upon the claimant. Armstrong v. Union County Trust Co., 14 N. J. Mis. R. 648; 186 Atl. Rep. 522; affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals, 117 N. J. L. 423; 189 Atl. Rep. 138.

The presumption is that a coronary thrombosis “was due solely to disease; and the onus is on claimant to establish that the asserted accident was at least a contributory cause without which the occlusion would not have occurred.” Schlegel v. II. Baron & Co., 130 N. J. L. 611; 34 Atl. Rep. (2d) 132.

The court must be satisfied “that but for the employment” the injury “would not have occurred when it did.” Ciocea v. National Sugar Refining Company of New Jersey,

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Related

Bernstein Furniture Co. v. Kelly
177 A. 554 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1935)
Armstrong v. Union County Trust Co.
186 A. 522 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 617, 23 N.J. Misc. 35, 1945 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balash-v-mills-njsuperpassaic-1945.