Bulger v. Industrial Accident Commission

24 P.2d 796, 218 Cal. 716, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1933
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14838.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 24 P.2d 796 (Bulger v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bulger v. Industrial Accident Commission, 24 P.2d 796, 218 Cal. 716, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 570 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Petition by James P. Bulger, after order depying a rehearing, praying for a review of an order made *717 by the Industrial Accident Commission denying petitioner compensation rating for an injury alleged to have been suffered by him arising out of and in the course of his employment, while engaged as assistant engineer and watchman at the Shredded Wheat Company’s plant located in the city of Oakland, this state, on July 28, 1931. Respondent Shredded Wheat Company, a corporation, which is an adjunct of the National Biscuit Company, is self-insured. The commission held that petitioner’s claim for compensation was barred, inasmuch as no claim was filed within a period of six' months following the day of alleged injury, and no medicinal treatment was furnished or compensation paid, or other act done by the employer during or after the expiration of said six months’ period which could be said to be sufficient to toll the statute. No other issue was decided.

Petitioner at the time of said injury was forty-six years of age, and apparently in sound health. He had been in the employ of the company continuously for a period of nine years and admittedly was a very trustworthy employee. His stipend was $43 per week. Prior to July 28, 1931, the duty of watchman was consolidated with his duty as assistant engineer, and he was working in such dual capacity at the time he claims to have received injuries which have resulted in- total permanent disability. Permanent disability, rapidly following the incident which will hereafter be related, is admitted by respondent Shredded Wheat Company, and it was solely for this reason that his employment came to an end by order of said company. Petitioner’s hours on the Sunday night in question were from 12 o’clock midnight to 8 o’clock the following morning.

The building in which petitioner was working is a four-story building proper. The roof also serves as a floor. The smokestacks are visible from the roof. A steel staircase leads from the basement in which the steam engines are located to the roof. These stairways, which have iron railings, are somewhat precipitous. At about 2 o’clock A. M., petitioner made his way to the roof of the building on his rounds, punching the time-clocks which were placed on each floor. This took his attention from the boilers from fifteen to twenty-five minutes. No claim is made that petitioner was not at all times acting within the scope of his employ *718 ment. While on the roof in the performance of duty, he observed that the smoke coming from the stacks appeared white, resembling steam. This indicated that the fires were out and quick action was necessary in reaching the boiler-room, as the danger was great that the engine would backfire and blow the front out and cause serious damage. Such a casualty had occurred once before. With the seriousness of the. situation in his mind, petitioner describes the hurried descent he made to the basement down a dimly lighted stairway ITe was saved from falling headlong several times by grabbing the railing on his way to the engine-rooms. Petitioner claims that his arms and body were badly wrenched and jarred by catching the railing to break the momentum of his descent. He also claims that he experienced severe pain through his shoulders and arms, especially in the left arm, before he reached the engine-room. Pie testified that he related his experience to two fellow-employees on the morning of the incident, but made no formal report to the company, as he did not then regard it as serious. Petitioner, though suffering pain, continued to work until August 7th, a period of ten days from the day of injury, when he was compelled to lay off by reason of increasing pain and go under the care of a physician. On August 9th he was placed in a hospital, where he remained for a week under treatment. He testified that immediately after making the violent descent described down the stairway, his troubles started and grew progressively worse until halted somewhat by hospital treatment which he received. He suffered severe pain in his arms, shoulders and chest. His left hand and fingers also became seriously involved. Dr. Prank R. Makinson, the company’s physician, who saw the petitioner twice, testified that he did not regard the case as a proper charge on industry. He diagnosed it as rheumatic endocarditis bearing no causal relation to the injuries which petitioner claimed to have suffered. When asked if a severe strain such as petitioner described could have been the proximate cause of the development of rheumatism or arthritis, his answer was that such things were debatable, and possibly within the realm of possibility, but not probability. When pressed further he said: “I say that it is within the realm of very remote possibility, but not probability. To say no, I think would be unfair. The picture is that of acute rheu *719 matism. There is nothing unusual about this acute attack of rheumatism, as I see it.”

Dr. H. L. Parish, the physician who had charge of the case from August 7, 1931, and made fifty-eight visits, ending August 27, 1932, in a very full report described the pain centers in the left shoulder, anterior chest wall, and right shoulder, all of which were swollen on his visit of August 9th. The knees, ankles, wrists and joints of the fingers were also badly swollen. The character of the approach, involving one joint after another, indicated to him the beginning of articular rheumatism. He felt positive that the original muscular strain furnished the evidence of an accidental etiology.

No other physician testified in the proceeding. "What relation .the mental and physicial shocks may have had to the ills, if any, which have permanently afflicted petitioner, was not found by the commission, as compensation was denied on the ground that the proceeding was barred by the statute of limitations.

The question presented is whether as a matter of law petitioner’s claim was barred, as held by the Industrial Accident Commission, by the provisions of section 11, subdivisions (b) 1 and (c) of the Workmen’s Compensation, Insurance and Safety Act of this state. The issue was decided by the commission upon the interpretation it placed upon certain letters and certain acts of the parties about which there is no dispute.

Subdivision (b) 1 of section 11-of the Workmen’s Compensation Act provides that proceedings for the collection of the benefit provided by the act for the collection of disability payment must be commenced within six months from the date of the injury. Subdivision (e) provides that the payment of compensation, or any part thereof, or agreement therefor, shall have the effect of extending the period within which proceedings for its collection may be commenced, six months from the date of agreement or last payment of such compensation, or any part thereof, or the expiration of the period covered by any such payment. The concluding language of said subdivision (c), however, excepts from the bar of the six months’ period, persons suffering from the following physical disabilities: “provided, further, that the provisions of this section shall not apply *720 to an employee who is totally disabled and bedridden as a result of his injury during the continuance of such condition, or until the expiration of six months thereafter”.

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Bluebook (online)
24 P.2d 796, 218 Cal. 716, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulger-v-industrial-accident-commission-cal-1933.