Benson v. Jarvis

127 P.2d 784, 64 Idaho 107, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 11
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1942
DocketNo. 7004.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 127 P.2d 784 (Benson v. Jarvis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benson v. Jarvis, 127 P.2d 784, 64 Idaho 107, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 11 (Idaho 1942).

Opinion

BUDGE, J.

Appellant filed a claim with the Industrial Accident Board, and thereafter filed his application for hearing. In his claim, he alleges inter alia that he sustained a personal injury by accident by contracting silicosis while he *110 was working for respondent at the Hayfork Mine operated by respondent and located near Idaho City, Boise County, Idaho; that by reason of so contracting silicosis he became totally and permanently disabled from performing work and labor; that such personal injury was caused by respondent’s negligent operation of the mine. The claim was resisted, and upon a hearing regularly had before the board, compensation was denied and appellant’s application dismissed, and an order entered to that effect, from which order this appeal is prosecuted.

Among other findings of fact, the board found:

“That the said claimant is 62 years of age, and for the past 35 years has been engaged almost continuously in mining * * *; that while so engaged in said occupation as a miner, he has been exposed to inhalation of silica dust to such a degree that he now has, and all during the time he was in the employ of said defendant had, silicosis grade 2; that at sometime in the past the claimant also suffered with tuberculosis, the healed lesions of which are visible in an x-ray photograph of his lungs; that as a result of the said silicosis and of the condition of his- lungs resulting therefrom and from the tuberculosis he previously had, he now has a disability for work equivalent to and comparable with the loss of one hand at the wrist. (Finding No. 3.)
“* * * the claimant, Bert Benson, made a claim for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law on account of a personal injury by accident occurring between July 18, 1941, and October 5, 1941, while working in ‘mine, stopes and raises where blasting carried on creating extreme dust conditions * * *, powder smoke and gas resulting in poor ventilation, also timber gas’ while working in said Hay-fork mine and alleging the same to have caused injury to. his ‘lungs, lighting up latent tuberculosis, and causing, aggravating, and accelerating silicosis’, and claiming to be ‘totally and permanently disabled since October 4, 1941’ * * *. (Finding No. 4.)
“That the Hayfork Mine operated by the defendant, Hal R. Jarvis, and in which the claimant worked as above stated, consists of four tunnels,- two of which run entirely through the mountain in which the mine is situated, and second and fourth being connected by a raise from the fourth tunnel approximately 40 or 50 feet from the opening of the second tunnel, and the third tunnel running from the *111 portal into the mountain beyond said raise and being connected with said raise running from the fourth to the second; that out of the raise running between the fourth and second tunnel and about 40 feet below the third tunnel there is a drift approximately 20 feet long, which now is also connected by a raise from it with the third tunnel; that the draft of air in the second and fourth tunnel is so strong, and during the time the claimant worked in said mine was so strong, that when a person stands, or stood, in one of them ‘it almost blew your hat off’. (Finding No. 5.)
“That while he worked in said Hayfork Mine as above stated, the claimant drilled with drill steel and hand hammer and at no time used any machine drills; that when drifting he also moved muck from the place he had blasted to where it was loaded on wheelbarrows to be taken out of the mine; that at all places where he drilled and mucked, the ground was damp, and that due to the draft through the second and fourth tunnels and the ventilation resulting therefrom in all other parts of the mine, the air in which claimant worked circulated to such as extent that there was sufficient fresh air in which to work without injury; that in the evenings when claimant would come off his working shift, his hands, face, and clothing would he grimy as a result of his work. (Finding No. 6.)
“That the said defendant did not negligently or unlawfully operate the said Hayfork Mine during the time the claimant was employed therein, and that at no time was there not sufficient or adequate ventilation in said mine for carrying off silica laden dust, and dust laden with powder smoke and gas and timber gas; but that at all times the claimant worked therein the natural ventilation was adequate to provide sufficient and adequate ventilation in said mine; that the defendant did not furnish claimant with a mask for his protection; that under the conditions appertaining in said mine, it was not bad mining practice not to furnish such a mask. (Finding No. 8.)
“That after the claimant had worked * * * for about fifteen or twenty days, he became ill and gradually lost appetite and had some shortness of breath; that claimant then visited a physician in the city of Boise, who examined him and found that he was suffering with chronic silicosis, grade 2, and that he had had tuberculosis, the lesions of which were then healed; * * *. (Finding No. 9.)
*112 “That the work the claimant did for the defendant did not cause the silicosis from which he is now suffering and did not cause or light wp, or aggravate tuberculosis, and did not aggravate the silicosis more than any other work would have done if it aggravated it at all; that neither the onslaught of silicosis nor the aggravation thereof was sudden. (Finding No: 10.) (Italics ours.)
“That the claimant, Bert Benson, did not between the 18th day of July, 1941, and the 5th day of October, 1941, or while in the employ of the defendant, Hal R. Jarvis, sustain a personal injury by accident arising out of and in the-course of his employment. (Finding No. 11.)
“That the claimant is not actually incapacitated, because of the silicosis with which he is suffering, from performing any work in any remunerative employment and has only a partial disability due to said silicosis and the tuberculosis with which he had previously been afflicted; that the silicosis which he now has is not complicated with tuberculosis of* the lungs.” (Finding No. 12.)

Based upon the foregoing findings of fact, the board made the following ruling of law:

“That the claimant, Bert Benson, is not entitled to an award against the defendant, Hal R. Jarvis, for compensation either under the Workmen’s Compensation Law or the Occupational Disease Compensation Law; that his claim for compensation should be denied and his application dismissed; that an order should be given, made, filed and entered accordingly.”

Whereupon the board made the following order:

“Wherefore, It Is Ordered, and This Does Order, That the claimant, Bert Benson, take nothing by this proceeding, and that his claim for compensation be denied and his application dismissed.”

The following principles of law are well settled in this jurisdiction, namely, that in compensation cases, claimant has the burden of proving his case by a preponderance of the evidence; (Leach v. Grangeville Highway District, 55 Ida. 307, 41 P. (2d) 618; Cunningham v.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P.2d 784, 64 Idaho 107, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-jarvis-idaho-1942.