Collins & Ryan v. Hudson

75 A.2d 261, 45 Del. 438, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 157
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 27, 1950
Docket330 Civil Action 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 A.2d 261 (Collins & Ryan v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins & Ryan v. Hudson, 75 A.2d 261, 45 Del. 438, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 157 (Del. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Carey, J.:

Two questions are presented: (1) is the evidence sufficient to justify the Board’s finding that claimant’s hernia arose out of his employment; (2) is the award for surgical, medical and hospital bills justified by the evidence? Discussion of these questions requires an examination of the testimony and other parts of the record.

The claimant’s usual work was that of a salesman of gas and electrical appliances. Apparently, he was not ordinarily called upon to lift heavy objests. On January 3, 1949,- the day of the alleged accident, he was helping to take inventory. It became necessary to stack a crated gas range weighing about 300 pounds on *441 top of another one. Claimant and another man did so, each lifting one end of the range.

The foregoing testimony was given by claimant and verified by his foreman and was not disputed. Claimant further testified that, when he and his co-worker had raised the range about shoulder high, he suddenly felt a sharp pain in his side; that he immediately called out to his foreman who was standing a few feet away; that he stopped work but stayed around the warehouse for about half an hour, then went home; that he came back to work the next morning and resumed taking inventory but did no more lifting; that, after the inventory was finished a few days later, he went back to his usual work as a salesman; that, about a week after the accident, he noticed for the first time a lump as large as a grape or walnut at the place where he had felt the sharp pain on January 3d; that over a period of weeks this lump grew larger, although it gave him no pain, until it became the size of an egg; that he finally went to a doctor at a hospital on May 23d who informed him that he had a hernia and needed an operation; that he returned to the hospital the next day for the operation. He denied having had a hernia or any other trouble with his side prior to January 3d.

The only witness called by claimant was his foreman who verified claimant’s testimony as to what happened at the warehouse on January 3d.

On behalf of the employer, the hospital records were produced. They showed a diagnosis of, and an operation for, a right direct inguinal hernia. They also contain the statement that the claimant had had the rupture for about two years. This statement, however, does not purport to be a medical conclusion but is apparently a part of the patient’s history as given by him upon admission to the hospital. The interne who took this history testified that he entered it upon the hospital records just as the claim *442 ant gave it to him and that he believed “that is the way the patient told me”. On his own behalf, the claimant flatly denied saying this to the interne. He also stated that he could not remember saying it to anyone else, and that he would have had no reason to say it because it was untrue.

The basic question for the Board’s determination was whether the hernia was directly caused by the episode of January 3 or whether it was a pre-existing condition. The appellant does not deny that issues of fact, and inferences to be drawn therefrom, are matters for the decision of the Board, and that this Court will not reverse that decision if the record contains competent evidence to support it. Le Tourneau v. Consolidated Fisheries Co., 4 Terry 540, 51 A. 2d 862. The contention is that the evidence here presented is incompetent, in the sense of being inadequate, to support the finding of causal connection between the lifting and the hernia. Pointing out the fact that a hernia may be and often is the result of natural causes, the appellant argues that a heavier burden than usual rests upon a claimant in hernia cases to prove this causal connection, and that this burden can be sustained only by the introduction of medical testimony showing such a connection.

Although it is undoubtedly the law of this State that the burden of proving causal connection by the preponderance of the evidence is upon the claimant, I cannot agree with the proposition that medical testimony is necessarily required for that purpose. In this respect our statute is unlike those of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and several other states which lay down specific and detailed requirements of proof in hernia cases. Cf Zelenko v. Carnegie Coal Co., 132 Pa. Super. 135, 200 A. 608; Covitz v. Carroll Bakery, 45 A. 2d 127, 24 N. J. Misc. 145; Arduini v. General Ice Cream Co., 123 Conn. 43, 192 A. 314, 114 A. L. R. 1333.

Decisions under such acts are therefore of little help. The *443 Delaware law does not even mention hernia. If caused by overexertion arising out of and during the course of employment, it is concededly compensable just as any other accidental, violent damage to the body. In the absence of statutory mandate necessitating some special type or quality of proof, it must be assumed that the Legislature intended to require none, but was satisfied to allow the Board to be governed by the same basic rules as in any other kind of injury. The imposition of an additional qualification by this Court would amount to an amendment of the Act. Buncle v. Sioux City Stockyards Co., 192 N. W. 555, 185 N. W. 139. Whether the possibility of fraudulent claims warrants a difference in the degree of proof required in hernia cases is a matter for legislative consideration.

The many cases collected in 20 A. L. R. 48 and 73 A. L. R. 520 announce no principle in conflict with the foregoing. They do illustrate the point that each case must be decided upon its own facts and circumstances, and the further point that an award may not be based upon surmise or conjecture. The New York case of Alpert v. J. C. & W. E. Powers, 223 N. Y. 97, 119 N. E. 229, cited by appellant, is distinguishable on the facts. In it there was no finding by the Commission that the hernia was caused by lifting or straining, or was in any way due to the work performed. The actual events proven would indicate that it was probably due to natural causes. Consequently, said the Court, “the subsequent finding that the injuries were accidental and arose out of and in the course of his employment are conclusions without facts or evidence to support them.”

In the present instance, the Board saw and heard the witnesses. It believed the claimant’s story to the effect that he had never had a hernia prior to January 3d and that he was lifting one end of a 300-pound stove and had raised it shoulder high when he felt sharp pain at the very spot where the hernia was later *444 found to exist. The inference that it was caused by the lifting or strain was permissible under the evidence presented. That part of the award allowing payments of compensation for the period of disability must be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
75 A.2d 261, 45 Del. 438, 1950 Del. Super. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-ryan-v-hudson-delsuperct-1950.