Boswell v. Kearns Garden Chapel Funeral Home

288 N.W. 402, 227 Iowa 344
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 14, 1939
DocketNo. 44954.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 402 (Boswell v. Kearns Garden Chapel Funeral Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boswell v. Kearns Garden Chapel Funeral Home, 288 N.W. 402, 227 Iowa 344 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

R. L. Boswell was an employee of Kearns Garden Chapel Funeral Home. The National Casualty company was the insurance carrier. Boswell had a ringworm infection on his left hand which had been of long standing. It would flare up from time to time, get better and then become worse. In July, 1937, it had one of these flare-ups at which time Dr. Ridenour of Waterloo, Iowa, was called. The doctor treated him for some time during which time the irritation, which is referred to as dermatitis, would get a little better and then become a little worse. In January, 1938, they had a general housecleaning at the funeral parlors in which commercial cleaning compounds, caustics, soap and commercial wall paint cleaner were used. Part of Boswell’s duties involved the use of such compounds, etc., in cleaning up the preparation room where bodies are prepared for burial and embalming. Shortly after this house-cleaning operation, his hand “became swollen and pussed” and very painful and was so bad that he was unable to work from, the 25th of January to the latter part of April. Dr. Smith was called in to look at the hand. Smith sent Boswell to the Allen Memorial hospital in Waterloo, Iowa, where he remained for about a week, and, thereafter, Dr. Smith treated the hand for several days and finally directed Boswell *346 to a skin specialist, Dr. Normland, at the State University hospital, who examined the hand and gave claimant some medicine and directed him to resume his treatments with Dr. Smith, who continued to treat Boswell until the claimant was able to go back to work the following May. Plaintiff Boswell commenced his action by filing his claim with the Iowa industrial commissioner, predicated on a dermatitis infection to his left hand which he alleged had arisen out of and in the course of his employment. Appellees’ defense was a general denial that such injury arose out of and in the course of appellant’s employment and that the alleged condition of claimant’s hand was in no way attributable to his employment. There was an award of compensation by the deputy industrial commissioner which, on review, was affirmed by the commissioner. On appeal, the district court reversed the commissioner and claimant has appealed.

There is but one question involved, namely: Was there evidence showing causal connection between the condition complained of and the alleged infection®

The burden of proof, of course, rests upon the employee to establish his case by a preponderance of the evidence.

Where the facts are in dispute, the court ordinarily re- . fuses to disturb the finding of the commissioner, but, where the facts are not in dispute, the court may review the conclusion of the commissioner based upon such undisputed facts for the purpose of determining whether or not-, there is sufficient competent evidence in the record to support the commissioner’s decision. Guthrie v. Iowa Gas & Elec. Co., 200 Iowa 150, 204 N. W. 225; Sparks v. Con. Ind. Coal Co., 195 Iowa 334, 190 N. W. 593.

The award may not be permitted to stand if the evidence goes no farther then to show a possibility of causal connection. In other words, as stated in the case of Slack v. Percival Co., 198 Iowa 54, 59, 199 N. W. 323, 326:

“In actions of this character, it is the universal rule that the claimant has the burden to establish by a preponderance of the evidence a right to compensation. In other words, the matter cannot be left wholly to surmise or conjecture. A legal right is involved. It must be established in a legal way, and not by guess or speculation.”

*347 Dr. Ridenour, tbe first physician called to examine tbe band, testified tbat, wben be first came, there was a lesion on tbe back of claimant’s band and down between bis fingers, and further stated that:

“It was scaly, inflamed lesion and as I recall I believe there were vesicles and I took it to be ringworm probably associated with dermatitis — there was really no question about tbe dermatitis which is an inflammation of tbe skin. After about three treatments it began to clear up and I instructed him carefully bow to care for bis band, keep it out of strong solutions of any kind as tbat invariably makes it worse. You have to be so careful of these conditions as anything tbat would be tbe least bit irritating would make it flare up, such as getting tbe bands in a strong solution of any kind or even by work. * * * you have to keep using tbe preparation at times or you will have a recurrence of tbe infection. In tbe condition bis skin was wben I was caring for it was very susceptible to infection or germs and would be more liable to infection wben doing bouseeleaning. * * * In all of those cases vesicles are present, and those vesicles fill with pustules and you would say tbat it is an infection of some kind, but it is merely an irritation from tbe organism and tbat is what you always get from ringworm infection. * * * I gave him an ointment to use and told him to beep bis band bandaged or wear rubber gloves as even warm water would cause a flare-up of tbe chronic condition in a ringworm infection. I did not see tbe band after tbe middle of January.”

Tbe bouse cleaning took place in tbe middle of January and it was about the 30th of January tbat Dr. Smith was called. He testified tbat:

<<=::= # * j examined tbe band, found it swollen, indurated, tbe back of tbe band was pustular and be seemed to have some temperature. He gave a history of a chronic skin condition for several months which bad flared up shortly which I advised him to use wet packs to clear up tbe infection. The band continued in a very bad shape and be developed lymphangitis and I advised him to go to tbe hospital which he did. '* * * Tbe infection wotdd seem to subside and then flare up again * * * From tbe history Boswell gave of a chronic skin condition, fol *348 lowing this the history of the house-cleaning it is possible that he picked np an. infection on the super imposed infection of this chronic skin condition. Any skin with a lowered resistance is more subject to infection than a normal skin, in fact any irritation or sore Would make infection more susceptible.

‘ ‘ Q. And then, as I understand it, it is your opinion that he had what you would call this infection, a secondary infection? A. You mean the infection that I was treating him for?

“Q. Yes. Or was it the ordinary chronic trouble, that’s what we want to know? A. I could not say as to that definitely.

“When I first saw him he had an infected hand which from the' history he gave would have to say was super imposed on this chronic condition; the infection was present when I first seen him the latter part of January. There is no question about that, that he had an infected hand. His hand was badly swollen and he had a lot of pain on moving his fingers and I did not see how the man could have worked at his occupation and with a hand of that nature and of course an infected hand that was as badly infected as his would be aggravated by working. * * * We did not culture any organism but from the type of infection he had would call it a streptococci infection which is entirely different from eczema or ringworm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 402, 227 Iowa 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boswell-v-kearns-garden-chapel-funeral-home-iowa-1939.