Coombs v. Kirsch Co.

2 N.W.2d 897, 301 Mich. 1, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 513
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
DocketDocket No. 80, Calendar No. 41,855.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 N.W.2d 897 (Coombs v. Kirsch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coombs v. Kirsch Co., 2 N.W.2d 897, 301 Mich. 1, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 513 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

This appeal involves an award by the department of labor and industry. Walter Coombs, plaintiff, 27 years of age, was employed as a punch-press operator by defendant, Kirsch Company. About August 28, 1940, he suffered a hernia which occurred while he was pushing a truck load of steel. He reported to his foreman on the same day and was sent by the company to a doctor who *3 reported that he believed plaintiff could hold his hernia satisfactorily with a truss. Defendant furnished a truss and plaintiff returned to work at his same job. He worked one day when he was taken ill with a flare-up or recurrence of Malta fever, a disease from which plaintiff had suffered prior to his employment by defendant and about which defendant knew at the time of plaintiff’s employment. Plaintiff was out of work for about six weeks on account of this illness and upon return to work resumed his former employment which was that of a punch-press operator and in which he was also required to move heavy objects at certain times. After he had worked a week, he asked for lighter work, and at this time defendant offered him an immediate operation for hernia which plaintiff refused because of his recent serious illness. Plaintiff continued on the same job until February 25, 1941. On several occasions plaintiff . asked for lighter work, but no different work was offered or provided for plaintiff. On February 25,1941, plaintiff pushed a barrel of brackets and after this job was completed he felt weak and turned in his time at 1 o’clock in the afternoon.

Plaintiff filed an application for compensation and operative correction because of the hernia. The application was amended to bring it under the occupational disease part of the compensation act. (Act No. 10, pt. 7, § 2, Pub. Acts 1912 [1st Ex. Sess.], as added by Act No. 61, Pub. Acts 1937 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 8485-2, Stat. Ann. 1941 Cum. Supp. §17.221]). Defendant denied liability upon the grounds that plaintiff had no compensable disability; and that plaintiff refused to submit to an operation when such an operation would not have been attended with danger to life or health. The deputy commissioner found that plaintiff suffered *4 from an occupational disease hernia and allowed plaintiff’s claim for total disability from February 26, 1941, until further order of the department. Defendant appealed to the department which affirmed the deputy’s award.

Defendant appeals and contends that plaintiff forfeited his right to compensation because he refused an operation for hernia, when such operation was recommended by his own doctor.

The rule is well established in this State that, “ ‘If the operation is not attended with danger to life or health, or extraordinary suffering, and if, according to the best medical or surgical opinion, the operation offers a reasonable prospect of restoration or relief from the incapacity from which the workman is suffering, then he must either submit to the operation or release his employers from the obligation to maintain him.’ ’’’ Kolbas v. American Boston Mining Co., 275 Mich. 616, and cases cited therein; Pritchard v. Ford Motor Co., 276 Mich. 246.

The record in this case contains medical testimony as to plaintiff’s general physical condition. He has a history of an acute attack of Malta fever, also known as undulant fever, four or five years prior to the occurrence of the hernia, and one severe recurrent attack just after the hernia occurred. At the time of the physical examination for hernia in August, 1940, he had cryptic tonsils and lack of mobility of the lumbar and sacro spine. Other conditions were evident at the time of an examination in February, 1941, i.e., hemoglobin was 50 per cent., tenderness over the gall bladder, and lack of normal utility of the chest wall. His chest expansion was one inch. All doctors testifying agreed that plaintiff is a less than normal operative risk.

*5 Dr. Fred B. Eeed testified as follows:

“Q. Is it your opinion that an operation at this time would injure this man’s life?
“A. At the time of the examination on the 24th of February (1941) it was my opinion that it would injure his life.
“Q. Have you seen anything in your examination of the man today to change your opinion?
“A. The man certainly is in better physical condition today than he was on the 24th, due to the fact he has not been working and exerting himself.
I would still say, if he were my own private patient,
I would rather see the Malta fever cleared up before I operated.
“Q. Is it your opinion, to give him any of those anesthetics you have mentioned, would injure his life?
“A. From the standpoint of a physician and surgeon, who has charge of his own anesthetics, we like to see the patient who has got good blood aeration, and a man does not have good aeration if he has a chest expansion of one inch, his oxygen combining power with his blood are lessened, because he could not get the air in, and under these circumstances the use of general anesthetic for major operation should be avoided wherever possible.
“Q. In other words you would not recommend it ?
“A. _ I would not recommend him as a good sur-, gical risk today. ’ ’

We have in mind that plaintiff asked for operative correction in his application for compensation; and that at the hearing defendant offered to pay for a hernia operation when it is pronounced safe to have it done. It is our opinion that the record sustains the finding of the department that: “It was not only inadvisable, but also dangerous, for plaintiff to undergo an operation for the hernia.” *6 There is also medical testimony in the record that plaintiff’s condition is such that, in the opinion of one doctor, his risk in an operation will always be about the same amount; and that the risk involved in an operation in September, 1940, would have been no greater than it will be for some time in the future. The record sustains the department’s holding that plaintiff did not waive his right to compensation because he refused an operation.

Defendant next contends that the department was in error in not finding what percentage of plaintiff’s disability is caused by the hernia and by the Malta fever under section 8, part 7 of the compensation act (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 8485-8, Stat. Ann. 1941 Cum. Supp. § 17.227), which provides:

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.W.2d 897, 301 Mich. 1, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coombs-v-kirsch-co-mich-1942.