Berriman v. Industrial Commission

63 P.2d 282, 91 Utah 1, 1936 Utah LEXIS 52
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1936
DocketNo. 5769.
StatusPublished

This text of 63 P.2d 282 (Berriman 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
Berriman v. Industrial Commission, 63 P.2d 282, 91 Utah 1, 1936 Utah LEXIS 52 (Utah 1936).

Opinion

EPHRAIM HANSON, Justice.

In this proceeding we are asked to review the action of the Industrial Commission of Utah in denying the application of J. H. Berriman for an award. From the record it appears that on December 3, 1918, Berriman was in the employ of the Gemini Mining Company, an employer subject to the terms of our Workmen’s Compensation Act (Rev. St. 1933, 42-1-1 et seq.). On that date, while he was drilling, a piece of rock flew and struck his left eye. On January, 8, 1919, he filed an application with the State Insurance Fund for compensation; the State Insurance Fund being the insurance carrier for the employer. The Insurance Fund, without any hearing before the Industrial Commission, recognized its liability and paid him compensation for the injury thus received.

Under date of March 19, 1935, Berriman filed with the Industrial Commission a claim for further compensation, alleging that his “left eye has recently become inflamed and flared up and as a result the right eye now has become industrially blind from the injury growing out of the accident for which compensation was heretofore awarded.”

A hearing was had before the Industrial Commission on this second application. The only question of fact before the commission on such hearing was whether the blindness then existing in the applicant’s right eye was caused by the injury received on December 3,1918. The applicant and his medical experts contended that the condition of his right eye, which admittedly rendered it industrially blind at the time of the hearing, was due to sympathetic ophthalmia arising by natural processes from the injury to the left eye received in 1918.

*3 Dr. H. G. Merrill attended Berriman when he received the original injury. His report shows that on December 6,1918, he examined Berriman’s left eye and found “traumatic iri-tis with extensive posterior synechia; pain and deep injection are extreme.” Dr. Merrill then advised that the left eye be enucleated as “his good eye is in some danger, not great, but still definite, of a sympathetic ophthalmia.” Instead of removing the eye, an operation was performed and the eye quieted down. Dr. Merrill then testified that he found no showing of any disease in the right eye until March 6, 1931, when he found the right eye showing symptoms of sympathetic ophthalmia. He treated the eye, but his vision gradually deteriorated. By November 23, 1934, there was a 95 per cent loss of vision, making Berriman industrially blind. Dr. Merrill was very definite in his opinion that the condition of the right eye was due to sympathetic ophthalmia as a direct result of the injury to the left eye in 1918. He testified that according to the best thought on the subject, the disease is transmitted from the injured eye to the other eye through the blood stream; that the disease may remain quiescent for several years without manifesting itself in any way. He further testified that the condition existing in Berriman’s right eye was altogether too destructive to be due to iritis or ordinary uveitis and could only be due to sympathetic ophthalmia. The doctor came to his conclusions by observing the way Berriman sees, from examination with a slit lamp, and by microscope. The only way in which further information could be obtained would be to remove the eye and submit it to microscopic examination. The doctor gave an extended statement of the history of the case which may be summarized as follows: Applicant’s left eye was injured December 3, 1918, and was treated by Dr. Merrill until the eye quieted down in October, 1919. After this, the left eye flared up several times, particularly in 1924, but the right eye showed no effects until in March, 1931. Applicant then reported that his injured eye had flared up two weeks previously. The right or good *4 eye was giving trouble, was sensitive to light and tender to touch. Shortly thereafter the iris was found to be stuck to the le ns. According to Dr. Merrill this flaring up of the left eye, followed in two or three weeks by a flare-up in the right eye, and the loss of vision in the latter eye, is characteristic of sympathetic ophthalmia and forms the most important element indicating that that disease is present and has been operative. He further gave as a conclusion that it would be possible for sympathetic ophthalmia to entirely destroy the vision in the right eye without leaving any evidence of its presence or workings in the front of the eye so as to be discernible from an examination of the eye. Dr. Merrill was of the opinion that sympathetic ophthalmia was not present in 1924 or 1925 when he treated the other eye and was not present until in 1931.

Dr. B. W. Palmer examined the applicant on the day of the hearing at which he testified. He had studied the written history of the case kept by Dr. Merrill and examined the right eye under a slit lamp. In his opinion, from a consideration of the history and from the examination, the condition of the right eye was due to sympathetic ophthalmia.

Dr. Fred Stauffer also gave his opinion, based upon the written history made by Dr. Merrill and an examination of the eye, that applicant was suffering from sympathetic ophthalmia. He further testified that this disease acts so differently, depending on a variety of circumstances, that it is not possible to call any particular case a typical case. From his examination, however, he had every reason to believe that applicant’s condition was due to sympathetic oph-thalmia. He admitted that he might be mistaken as there could be no positive proof.

The State Insurance Fund had examinations made of the applicant’s eyes, shortly before the hearing, by Dr. E. M. Neher and Dr. F. R. Slopanskey. Dr. Neher’s testimony may be summarized as follows: While he could not say definitely that the condition of the right eye was the result of the injury to the left eye received in 1918, he was definitely *5 of the opinion that it was not. He saw no evidence in the right eye that would indicate that its condition was due to the injury to the left eye. The only way to be absolutely positive as to the source of the condition in the right eye would be to enucleate the left eye and have it examined by the pathological department of the Army Museum at Washington, D. C. A condition similar to the condition of applicant’s right eye frequently occurs in people as they grow older and no definite cause can be given in the great majority of cases. Dr. Neher could not say what caused applicant’s eye condition. He gave no weight to the history of the ease, as the condition of the eye at the time of the examination was not such as would be found in sympathetic ophthalmia. The injury described by Dr. Merrill showing a “traumatic iritis with extensive posterior syncheia; pain and deep injection are extreme,” might produce sympathetic ophthalmia, but applicant’s condition did not show it.

Dr. Neher was withdrawn, and Dr. Merrill gave a full statement of the history of the case and his findings and the opinions of other doctors relative to different phases of sympathetic ophthalmia. After hearing this statement, Dr. Neher was nevertheless of the same opinion that the condition of the right eye was not due to sympathetic ophthalmia. In his written report of his examination, which is a part of the record, Dr. Neher stated that Berriman advised him that he (Berriman) had had no inflammation or irritation to light, redness or pain in either eye since his recovery from his injury in 1918.

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Related

Roberts v. Industrial Commission
47 P.2d 1052 (Utah Supreme Court, 1935)
Kent v. Industrial Commission
57 P.2d 724 (Utah Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 282, 91 Utah 1, 1936 Utah LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berriman-v-industrial-commission-utah-1936.