Daniels v. Essex Mountain Sanatorium

21 A.2d 868, 19 N.J. Misc. 565, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 85

This text of 21 A.2d 868 (Daniels v. Essex Mountain Sanatorium) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. Essex Mountain Sanatorium, 21 A.2d 868, 19 N.J. Misc. 565, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 85 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

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The petitioner was the first witness produced on her own behalf, and she testified that on August 15th, 1938, she felt a smarting sensation on her temple right near the eye, went to the mirror and looked at it and found a red spot at the point where she felt the smarting sensation. She testified that this was the first information that she had that there was anything wrong with her skin. The witness stated she first went to Dr. Ormsby, one of the resident physicians at the Sanatorium, but that she did not remember, even approximately, when that was although she does remember distinctly the date of the appearance of the lesion. She further testified that she saw Dr. Paul Keller making his rounds in the hospital and spoke to him relative to the skin condition. He referred her to a Dr. IST. B. Heller for treatment. After being treated by Dr. Heller, the petitioner stated that she saw Dr. Keller who is chief medical examiner for the carrier on his rounds at the hospital and she told him that she was not satisfied with Dr. Heller’s treatment, so he referred her to [566]*566Dr. Frank J. McCauley. She states that she was treated by Dr. McCauley for three or four months and that a biopsy was done; that she was not treated by Dr. Ormsby until after the biopsy and treatment by Dr. McCauley. Dr. Ormsby, to whom she went of her own volition, gave her gold and sodium bismuth treatment. She continued on with the work and then subsequently on one occasion she temporarily lost the vision of her left eye. Becoming alarmed she reported to Dr. Harmon and he recommended Dr. Pfahler of Philadelphia. The petitioner went to see Dr. Pfahler of Philadelphia and was treated by him after he called in a Dr. Gilmore.

Tests were’ made and a biopsy performed and the doctors diagnosed her facial condition as a tuberculosis of the skin. The petitioner stated that she paid the bills of Dr. Pfahler and Dr. Gilmore. . •

The petitioner testified that prior to the appearance of the lesion of August 15th, 1938, which is in question here, that so far as her health was concerned “I have always béen very well as far as I can remember back,” and in answer to the question “what was the condition of your skin prior to the accident?” she answered “my skin was perfect.”

Cross-examination of this witness revealed these facts, which were later properly proved by the production of the witnesses who made the records: That on October 13th, 1932, she had a series of barium meal X-rays which disclosed a chronic .retentive appendix; that beginning with June 22d, 1933, she was treated for five consecutive treatments for a “dermatitis vesicularis.” On April 4th, 1931, an X-ray was taken which showed a chronic fibrosis at the apices of the lung; that she received twenty-two treatments beginning February 24th, 1936, with the Alpine lamp for the purpose of general toning up of her system and that beginning March 26th, 1936, she received three treatments for a skin eruption on the left side of the forehead; that on January 20th, 1937, she received general Alpine treatments for general tonic treatment; that on April 5th, 1937, she received ultra short wave therapy for a back condition, which was again repeated up until April 8th, 1937; that thereafter, on April 11th, 1940, she was X-rayed for a pelvic disorder and prior thereto [567]*567for a gastro intestinal complaint and that she was X-rayed again in December, 1939, for an ankle condition. Despite the fact that these occurrences were proved by the production of the records of the hospital plus the testimony of the persons who made the records the petitioner on cross-examination attempted to dispose of them in the following manner: She remembered the barium meal X-rays which disclosed the chronic retentive appendix but denied the treatment for a dermatitis vesiculares in June, 1933, and denied any X-rays taken on April 4th, 1931, which showed a fibrosis at the apices of the lung, did not recall the twenty-two treatments from February 23cl, 1936, with the Alpine lamp and did not remember the March 26th, 1936, occasion when she received three treatments for a skin eruption but later stated that she might have had a food rash or strawberry rash. She stated she did not remember the general Alpine lamp treatment on January 20th, 1937, and she stated emphatically that she did not receive the ultra short wave therapy from April ofch to April 8th, 1937, to her back, denied any X-rays or examinations for gastro intestinal upset and denied being X-rayed on April 11th, 1940, for a pelvic disorder, admitted the X-ray for her ankle condition in December, 1939.

The petitioner testified that the second facial lesion in 1938 appeared approximately two or three weeks after the first lesion. The witness again admitted that she had paid carfare to and from Philadelphia, for the consultation of Dr. Gilmore as well as and also the bill of Dr. Pfahler.

Dr. Samuel B. Greenwood was produced as an X-ray-specialist by the petitioner and stated that the effect of X-rays is cumulative, and this doctor stated that you can recognize an X-ray burn because it is a burn. He stated “it would require such an enormous amount of that (indirect radiation) I doubt it very much,” (that it would burn the operator). When this witness was recalled at a later session he stated that he does not know how much radiation the petitioner would get in the position in which he assumed she was when the X-rays were being taken; in other words, he does not know how much radiation she received as the result of the indirect rays from the X-ray machine.

[568]*568Dr. Anthony Daniel Crecca, a resident physician at the Sanatorium, was called on behalf of the petitioner, and stated that at various tim'es the petitioner would question him regarding one phase or another as to her complaints. Dr. Crecca stated that “as far as I was concerned, this girl had a granulomatous lesion of the skin, which very likely was tuber*eulosis.” He later stated that in his opinion from the original appearance of it he thought it' was an X-ray burn and that while on some occasions he saw the petitioner in the room where Dr. Harmon was operating the X-ray machine and the petitioner was placing the subjects in position to be X-rayed, that “she was certainly right in line or at least in line with some of the rays that were going by her.” This doctor also stated “I would say here that within the period of a few hours the repeated exposure of the patient to the X-ray would cause a burn or injury, whereas over a period of weeks the similar exposure may not.” This doctor stated he was in the room four or five times. He stated further that he did not know what type of tube was in use at or about the time of July, 1938, and admitted in that regard “anything that I would say would be a guess.” This witness claims to be able to remember that he saw the petitioner within a week after the appearance of the lesion, although the petitioner herself cannot tell how long after the appearance of her lesion it was that she first saw this doctor. The doctor stated he made no notation as to the date he saw her as it did not mean anything to him, neither does he remember what was said at the time by the petitioner as to how long it was after she first noticed the lesion.

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21 A.2d 868, 19 N.J. Misc. 565, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-essex-mountain-sanatorium-njlaborcomp-1941.