Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. v. Frihauf

135 P.2d 427, 58 Wyo. 479, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 61
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1943
Docket2256
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 135 P.2d 427 (Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. v. Frihauf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. v. Frihauf, 135 P.2d 427, 58 Wyo. 479, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 61 (Wyo. 1943).

Opinion

*483 Blume, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. Fred Fri-hauf, hereinafter called the workman, an employee of *484 the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, was awarded the sum of $134.27 for temporary total disability by reason of a left inguinal hernia developed in the course of his employment. The employer, hereinafter, for the sake of brevity, called appellant, has brought this case to this court by petition in error.

The workman, 32 years of age, was engaged in the duties of general surface laborer at the appellant’s iron ore mine. His testimony is to the following effect: He commenced to work for appellant about five years previous to the injury here in question, was then examined by the company physician for hernia, who “stuck his finger up the pelvix and made him cough,” and certified him for employment. He was a professional boxer, and had been examined for hernia subsequently twenty or twenty-five times; the last time, about a year previous to the injury, by the examining physician for the State Athletic Board. He never had a protrusion before the strain hereinafter mentioned. On February 4, 1942, the workman was engaged in dumping cars. “Q. Just how do you perform that work? A. Well, you dump the doors and dump the ore in the hopper and then it goes through the plant and they pick out the rocks, and at the time I had a 3-inch pipe and was putting it in the door to dump it, and you have to raise it up; sometimes one man can’t dump them and you have to ask for help. That is when I first felt it. Q. Does that require a lot of physical effort? A. Yes. You loosen the dogs. It has dogs on it, and you do that by pushing upwards on the pipe. Well, we was dumping a short-red car. It is a railroad car, and the door wouldn’t wind up, and we had to raise them up. I suppose the doors weigh around 500 pounds. You stick a bar in, and if they don’t wind up you have to raise them way up about chin level to get them hooked. And that is where I felt the worst pain in my side.” That was the end of the work that evening. He leaned against a *485 fence for a while, and the pain was relieved. In about an hour and a half he went to the wash room, examined himself, and found a protrusion in his left side, about an inch and a quarter in diameter, the thicknes of a thumb and reddish in appearance. That was about midnight; the company physician is usually in bed at that time, and the workman went to bed. He went to Dr. Wood the next day, who found that he had a left inguinal hernia, and advised him to do nothing but light work. He did some light work during the rest of the week, but went to the Corwin hospital on Sunday, February 8, 1942, where he was operated on by Dr. Saenger on February 16. He went back to work fully recovered, on March 24, 1942. One Carl White testified that he saw the workman in the wash room in the evening of February 4; that he complained of pain; he was bent over; “a bump was raised up and it was real red and inflamed;” the workman was stooped over; “he went away slowly, like his leg was hurting, though he was usually a quick walker.” The testimony of Dr. Wood and Dr. Saenger will be mentioned hereafter.

On cross examination the workman testified as to similar work previously. “Q. Had you ever done that work before February 4th? A. Yes, I had done it for six months; immediately preceding February 4th. Q. And you were handling the same kind of bar? A. Yes. Q. Prying open the same kind of door? A. Yes. Q. Under the same conditions? A. Yes.” The appellant contends that in view of this testimony no recovery can be had by the workman; that there is no accidental strain within the meaning of our statute, if a hernia is sustained when performing work in the usual maner. Our statute on the subject as amended by Ch. 4, Session Laws of 1935, is as follows:

“A workman in order to be entitled to compensation for hernia must clearly prove:
1. That the hernia is of recent origin.
*486 2. That its appearance was accompanied by pain.
3. That it was immediately preceded by some accidental strain suffered in the course of the employment.
4. That it did not exist prior to the date of the alleged injury. If a workman, after establishing his right to compensation for hernia, as above provided, elects not to be operated upon, and the hernia becomes strangulated in the future, the results from such strangulation will not be compensated.”

In support of the contention that the workman under the foregoing testimony did not sustain an accidental strain, we are cited to McPhee Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Comm., 67 Colo. 86, 185 Pac. 268, and Industrial Comm. v. W. A. Hoover & Co., 82 Colo. 335, 259 Pac. 509. These cases are hardly in point, for they did not turn on the fact that the workman was doing his usual work in his usual way, but because testimony was lacking that the workman sustained any strain at all when performing his work. See in contrast Central Surety & Ins. Co. v. Ind. Comm., 84 Colo. 481, 271 Pac. 617. It is not necessary in this case to say that every strain, however slight, is sufficient to meet the statutory requirement. See Mathews v. Contracting Co. (Tenn.) 163 S. W. (2d) 59, 60. But in this case a door weighing 400 pounds was lifted or pried open, which necessarily involved considerable strain. In a note to 98 A. L. R. 205 it is stated that “it has been generally, though not universally, held that a hernia sustained as a result of a strain by an employee while performing his work is an accident, or an accidental injury.” See also note 114 A. L. R. 1342. Whether or not an injury is compensable when it occurs while the workman is performing his ordinary duty in a normal manner is discussed in 71 C. J. 616-621, and the decisions are not harmonious. The point seems to be settled in this state, contrary to the contention of appellant ,by the case of In Re Scrogham( 52 Wyo. 232, 73 P. (2d) 300, in which the contention here made was made and argued by both sides. In *487 that case the workman sustained a rupture (hemorrhage) in the eye by reason of lifting sacks of seed beans, weighing from 125 to 150 pounds each, which was his usual work in which he had been engaged for several months. Mr. Justice Riner, who wrote the opinion, cites and quotes at length from the case of Fenton v. Thorley (1903) A. C. 443, one of the leading cases on hernia. A number of other decisions were reviewed, and we held that the workman was entitled to compensation. In 71 C. J. 621 the conflict of authorities is stated in cases dealing with hernia. The greater number of authorities which have passed on the question have held that an employee doing his work in his normal and regular way whereby he sustains a hernia, suffers an accident which is compensable, provided other conditions, requisite under the statute, exist. Carr v. Const. Co. (Mo. App.) 18 S. W. (2d) 897, 899; Terre Haute Mfg. Co. v. McHale, 76 Ind. App. 565, 132 N. E. 698; Traveler’s Ins. Co. v. Locke, 56 F. (2d) 443; Biggs v. Glass Co. (La. App.) 170 So. 273; Webster v. Fry Roofing Co., 177 Tenn. 122, 146 S. W. (2d) 946; Creamery Package Co. v. Ind. Comm., 226 Wis. 429, 277 N. W. 117; Smith v. Cabarrus Creamery Co., 217 N. C. 468, 8 S. E.

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135 P.2d 427, 58 Wyo. 479, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-fuel-iron-corp-v-frihauf-wyo-1943.