Claim of Lawson v. Wallace & Keeney

202 A.D. 435, 195 N.Y.S. 673, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4909
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 A.D. 435 (Claim of Lawson v. Wallace & Keeney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claim of Lawson v. Wallace & Keeney, 202 A.D. 435, 195 N.Y.S. 673, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4909 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Hinman, J.:

Two questions are involved upon this appeal ■— the question of notice and the question of allowance of medical and hospital bills.

The claimant worked as a salesman for a wholesale fish merchant. On or about June 10, 1919, while taking down a box of fish it fell and struck him on the left leg above the knee which he put up in trying to save the box from hitting the ground. One of his co-employees was coming in at the time to whom the claimant said: “ Geé, Joe, I guess I got.it this time,” to which Joe replied, I guess you have.” Claimant says: I walked around limping and just kept rubbing it this way [indicating] and I walked around and business got slack and I looked at it and it was just a red spot there and did not amount to much, and when I went home we tried old home remedies and rubbed it with liniments, and that helped it for two or three days; and I felt fine until about around August and September and then the leg began to bother me.” Claimant then went to see his family physician, who was a woman. She had treated him before for rheumatism following an attack of typhoid fever, which he had had about eight years before. Owing to his apparent recovery from the bruise received a couple of months before it did not occur to him to mention the accident, nor did his physician question him as to whether he had sustained an injury to the leg. She continued to treat him for rheumatism until the last of December but the leg kept getting worse and she finally sent him to an eminent surgeon. Until the claimant saw this surgeon he never thought of his trouble being due to the accident. [437]*437This surgeon says that claimant had an abscess deep in his thigh which had worked its way to the top slowly.” The abscess was at the point where the box struck the leg and the claimant had never received any other bruise or bump in that portion of his leg. Upon examining him the surgeon asked claimant whether he could remember when he had been hurt and claimant was then reminded of the falling of the box in June and of his having rubbed his leg with liniment. The fact of the accident as well as the time of its happening is confirmed by testimony of a co-employee who was present when it happened. It was January 2, 1920, when the claimant was examined by this surgeon and first learned of this serious injury resulting from his accident on June tenth. Claimant immediately notified his employer, and the employer on January 7, 1920, made a report of the injury and in writing to its insurance carrier, accompanied the report with a letter reviewing the history of the case and exhibiting an interest in obtaining a recovery for the insured party. On the day on which this report was mailed claimant was operated upon by the surgeon who at that time opened and drained the abscess. He did not recognize at that time that there was any immediate communication with the bone. On the nineteenth of April following another operation was performed for chronic osteomyelitis. The surgeon says that nobody knew what was the cause of the trouble until they X-rayed it, operated on it and found it and it was not really known until the second operation. He found that a blood clot formed from the bruise and that was the cause of the infection which resulted. The surgeon says: in my opinion this case is one of chronic osteomyelitis, latent and causing intermittent ‘ rheumatic ’ symptoms for about eight years. On this condition was superimposed the injury described by patient, which is the exciting cause of his disability.” He illustrates what he means by the exciting cause ” by saying that the predisposing cause of an explosion is the man who sets the mine, and the exciting cause is the man who sets it off.” He says that a more or less inactive, rather dormant, bone infection frequently results from typhoid. Dr. Lewy, who was present when the surgeon testified, concurred with him, adding as his opinion that what the claimant’s first physician called rheumatic pains were the result of this low grade infection, and the injury or immobilized hsematoma, which became infected as a secondary matter, caused the pus to form.” The following appears in the testimony of the surgeon under examination by Commissioner Sayer: Q. Assuming the patient to have had this low grade underlying infection of the bone and received a trauma of this kind, the kind that hag been testified to here, such as the history [438]*438you got, would early treatment have made much difference? A.' I believe it would have perhaps made a difference in this: At the time I incised this abscess which I found and did not make particularly thorough search for the communicating canal because of the rather active infection which we had to deal with — if I had opened this hsematoma before it became actively infected, earlier after the injury, it is possible that might have been found, on the other hand, I doubt whether we would have looked for it. Q. Would there be indication to open it? A. That’s it exactly — I don’t think the indication would be clear to open it. Dr. Lewy: Absolutely right; the local indication would not be indicative of operative procedure, and possibly if there was a fluctuating mass and diagnosed as a non-infection, or a non-infectious matter, the surgeon would not cut it. Dr. Jennings: Exactly. Dr. Lewy: I don’t think any time was lost. In the first place, it was not an acute virulent condition.” Dr. Lewy also expressed the opinion that where a man sustained such a blow as this on the leg and limped around for a few moments and then went back to his work, his leg being a little red where the box struck him, and in three or four days the resulting soreness and lameness wore off upon the application of liniment, he would not find indication for either an operation or an X-ray.

At first the claim was disallowed on claimant’s statement that he did not notify his employer until after the expiration of. thirty days after the accident. Subsequently the case was reopened upon the application of the employer to the Commission in the form of a letter dated October 4, 1920. In this letter the employer refers to the fact that it had received notice of the decision of the Commission to the effect that the claim was disallowed on account of notice not given to employer within the statutory time. The letter states: In this particular case the injury was not known to Lawson at the time it occurred. It appeared to him to be nothing more than a bruise. A heavy box struck him on the leg, between the knee and the thigh, and he thought nothing more of it. Two or three months afterward he began to be troubled with what appeared to be rheumatism in his knee and it was only after a considerable time later, through the "diagnosis of a very eminent specialist, that it became apparent that his trouble resulted from this accident. He was taken to a hospital and several operations resulted, and only after strenuous efforts and most careful attention it now appears that his leg may be saved. * * * As soon as the diagnosis showed the cause of his trouble, a report was at once made to us and we in turn reported to the insurance company. We" have been paying compensation insurance for a long while [439]*439and have never had a claim before. It does seem outrageous that nothing has been done for this man, as this is one of the cases that, obviously, compensation insurance is meant to cover. We are writing to ask you, in the interest of this most deserving and most unfortunate young man, whether or not this case cannot be opened and a more careful and proper consideration be given it.”

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Bluebook (online)
202 A.D. 435, 195 N.Y.S. 673, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claim-of-lawson-v-wallace-keeney-nyappdiv-1922.