Consolidated Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission

156 N.E. 325, 325 Ill. 261
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1927
DocketNo. 18056. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 325 (Consolidated Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission, 156 N.E. 325, 325 Ill. 261 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error was granted by this court upon the petition of Clydetta Menk and Gloria Menk, widow and child of Charles Menk, deceased, to review a judgment of the circuit court of Macoupin county setting aside the decision of the Industrial Commission awarding compensation for the death of Menk.

Charles Menk, while employed in the coal mine of defendant in error, was accidentally injured May 5, 1920. He was temporarily totally disabled for almost four months and was paid compensation for that period, after which he went to work for another employer. He filed an application for adjustment of compensation, which was finally denied in 1923. He died of tuberculosis in July, 1924, and his wife filed an application for compensation for herself and minor child on the ground that her husband’s death resulted from the injury he received in May, 1920, while in the employ of defendant in error. The case was heard before an arbitrator and the widow was awarded compensation. The claim was reviewed by the Industrial Commission on petition of the coal company and the award made by the arbitrator was sustained. The case was then removed to the circuit court of Macoupin county by certiorari and that court set aside the award. This court granted a writ of error to review the judgment. The sole question in the case is whether the death of Menk was the result of the injury he received in May, 1920.

At the hearing of the application of Menk for compensation he testified as a witness in his own behalf and described the accident and his injury. He was riding cars at the mine from the tipple to the lower end. The brake underneath one of the cars caught on the scale frame and threw Menk ten or fifteen feet into the air. He fell on the scale platform flat on his back and was unable to get up. He had to have help to be removed from the mine. At the time of the hearing he was working for the Union Supply Company. Compensation had been paid him for the time he was temporarily totally disabled. He was awarded additional compensation by the commission, but the case was removed to the circuit court of Macoupin county and was there remanded to the Industrial Commission. After a hearing upon remandment the commission set aside the award.

Mrs. Menk testified on the hearing of her application that her husband died July 23, 1924; that she thought he was always a well man before his injury, May 5, 1920; that after the injury he went to work for another employer, the Union Supply Company, weighing coal and performing other clerical duties; that he started to lose flesh within the last year and looked pale and weak for quite a while; that she noticed there was something the matter with him from the time he was hurt; that he lost weight and complained of his back and underneath his shoulder-blade ; that he went to the hospital during his last illness; that before he went he had developed a cough, which became worse before his death; that he died three weeks after he returned from the hospital.

Dr. Hunter, a witness for defendant in error, testified he treated Menk for the injury received May 5, 1920, and he had complained of his back ever since that time. From his examination and the X-ray pictures that were taken there was no injury to any of the bony structure. He had a hernia for a long time. The doctor began treating him again in December, 1923, when he developed an attack of influenza. He could see no connection between the attack and the injury of 1920. Menk sufficiently recovered to be up and around but kept on developing bronchial symptoms, and complications followed. He had been up and around for a good while before the doctor diagnosed his disease as tuberculosis, from which disease he died. After describing the condition shown by the X-ray pictures taken of the injury in 1920, the doctor said he did not think there was any direct connection of tuberculosis with the injury received in 1920; that the only possible connection that could be figured was that the injury resulted in a general weakened condition and to make him more susceptible to the disease, but the disease itself had no connection with the injury. The patient developed paralysis of the vocal chord, and he sent him to Dr. Saner, a specialist on the nose and throat, to discover, if possible, the cause. A fluid developed within the chest, and the witness drew off some of it to see whether it would make any difference, and there was no improvement. The doctor did not think it was the proper thing to do. The patient went to the hospital and passed out of the doctor’s care. He never discovered any fracture of the spine from the injury of 1920, which was about the dorsal region, nor ever found any injury to any of the vertebra. Menk was always complaining of bad health and did not seem the same. The influenza attack was in December, 1923. The doctor could find nothing more than a muscular strain resulting from the injury, and the X-ray pictures showed no indication of fluid in the chest cavity. The patient’s lung condition was the cause of his death. Lung' infiltration and pleuritis come-from tuberculosis of the lung. The only direct or indirect effect of the injury upon the final illness was that Menk was probably in a more or less weakened condition and the disease would take hold easier than if he were strong.

Dr. Zoller testified for defendant in error that Menk came to his hospital May 8, 1924, and was under his care until June 11, when he went home and went into the care of Dr. McBrien. He returned to the hospital June 16 and remained there until the 27th. When he came to the hospital he was having chest trouble, dyspnea, and was unable to breathe. The pressure from a fluid in his left chest was the cause of that. His left lung was consolidated with the fluid in the pleural cavity, and his right lung showed consolidated areas throughout. The doctor removed about two quarts of sero-purulent fluid from the left chest cavity and introduced air. The patient said his lung trouble started in November, 1923, when he was taken sick with a cough and fever, and that Dr. Hunter waited on him at that time. The doctor testified he could find no indication of trauma at all.

Dr. McBrien testified he had known Menk and treated him at different times from 1901 or 1902. He didn’t treat him for the injury of 1920. His last treatment of the patient was about two months before his death. He was called to Menk’s home to see him and ordered him taken to the hospital in Litchfield, and, Dr. Sihler took care of him. Witness made a physical examination. He asked to have an X-ray examination of the chest and a bacteriological examination of the sputum. He never examined the X-ray pictures but examined the report of the sputum. When witness saw him in 1923 the patient was in the last stage of pulmonary tuberculosis. In .his opinion the injury of 1920 could not have brought on the disease of which he died.

We have endeavored to briefly state the most material points of the testimony. The proof shows Menk was painfully and severely injured in May, 1920. The injury was muscular and did not affect the bony structure. He was temporarily totally disabled about four months and after-wards returned to work for another company, for a while receiving more wages than he did from defendant in error, but later his salary was reduced, owing to slack business of his employer. In November or December, 1923, he had an attack of influenza, from which he never entirely recovered.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 325, 325 Ill. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-coal-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1927.