Darling v. Industrial Accident Commission

154 P.2d 421, 67 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1310
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1944
DocketCiv. No. 14491
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 421 (Darling v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darling v. Industrial Accident Commission, 154 P.2d 421, 67 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1310 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Petitioners, the employer and the insurance carrier of such employer, seek by the instant proceeding to review the findings and an award of death benefits made by the respondent commission on January 5. 1944, in favor of [301]*301the surviving dependent wife and the minor daughter of the deceased employee, Eugene Fernholtz.

Said commission found that the said employee, while employed as a florist on December 22, 1942, by the petitioner Darling, “sustained injury arising out of and occurring in the course of said employment consisting of a right inguinal hernia . . . said injury required a surgical operation, which operation caused a clot to lodge in the employee’s lung, causing an abscess, proximately resulting in his death on May 22, 1943.”

From the evidence adduced at the hearing before the referee, it appears that the operation for the cure of the hernia was performed on February 23, 1943, by Dr. Donald Cass, whose report shows that the patient made ‘ ‘ an uneventful recovery except for a respiratory infection which developed while in the hospital.” The patient reported to Dr. Cass several times after he left the hospital and on April 6th was discharged by Dr. Cass as cured and returned to his work on April 12, 1943. Mrs. Fernholtz testified that her husband terminated his employment at “Darling’s” about a week before his death, for reasons not material here; that so far as appeared to her, he had been in perfect health and made no complaints until he suffered the hernial injury. Three weeks or a month before his death, he told her that while walking he experienced a pain in his upper chest which caught his breath. Sometime later, because of this recurring pain, Mr. Fernholtz again consulted Dr. Cass, as a result of which he told his wife that Dr. Cass said there was nothing wrong with his heart. Dr. Cass reported the date of this visit as May 19, 1943, stating that Mr. Fernholtz complained to him that for several weeks he had experienced pain in his heart on exertion, but that he had insisted it was due to gas. Dr. Cass stated in his report that “He was advised to have an electrocardiographic examination for possible coronary disease, inasmuch as it was indicated that this might be the trouble.” Mrs. Fernholtz further testified that on the evening of May 20, 1943, following his visit to Dr. Cass, her husband was again seized with pain in his upper chest which he again concluded was caused by gas. On the following day, Friday, May 21st, he attended a luncheon of the Rotary Club at the Biltmore Hotel when the pain again recurred and he became very ill. Dr. W. F. Traughber, a physician of twenty-five or [302]*302thirty years’ experience, was present at this luncheon and treated Mr. Fernholtz there and later at his office. When her husband returned home that evening, Mrs. Fernholtz testified that he related what had occurred and advised her that the doctor reported there was nothing wrong with his heart. He was almost immediately seized with the pain and was unable to lie down or rest that night, indicating to his wife that he felt as if he had an olive seed in his upper chest which he was unable to remove by coughing. On Saturday morning, May 22, 1943, Mrs. Fernholtz took her husband to Dr. Traughber’s office where his condition became worse. He had difficulty in breathing and kept coughing and spitting up a yellow-grayish substance which eventually became tinged with blood. Mrs. Fernholtz was unable to secure hospital accommodations for her husband, and took him home that afternoon with a nurse in attendance. . His condition became progressively worse and at 11 o ’clock that night he died.

Dr. Traughbér performed an autopsy in the presence of William T. Stahlmann, an embalmer employed by the Forest Lawn Cemetery Association, and reported his findings and opinion that the death of Mr. Fernholtz resulted from an abscess in the right lung, caused by a blood clot lodging there, which in turn resulted from the operation performed on February 23, 1943.

Mrs. Fernholtz notified Dr. Cass of her husband’s death and subsequently at his request she consented that a second autopsy be performed. This was done by Dr. A. R Camero,, whose findings were to the effect that the death of Mr. Fernholtz resulted from coronary occlusion and heart failure, and was in no way connected with the hernia operation.

The respondent commission adopted the findings and opinion of Dr. Traughbér and made its award of compensation accordingly.

It is here contended that “in reaching its decision of January 5,1944, the respondent commission denied petitioners due process of law.” In this connection petitioners maintain that at the time the members of the respondent commission reached their decision they “had not read ór heard read the record of the testimony taken before the hearing officer on October 5, 1943, nor the exhibits which included all medical reports and reports of the two autopsies.”

When this cause was on calendar for oral presentation to this court on June 26, 1944, permission was granted for' the [303]*303filing of a supplemental return to the writ of review in order to show the situation as it actually existed at the time the case was before the commission.

This supplemental return contains a memorandum of the referee who heard the cause on October 5, 1943, which summarizes the evidence produced at that time. This memorandum was dictated on the day of the hearing. On October 8, 1943, said referee dictated a supplemental memorandum summarizing the medical reports of Dr. Traughber, Dr. Camero, and Dr. Cass, together with a so-called discussion and interpretation of these reports. On October 29, 1943, the referee dictated his memorandum on decision with the following recommendation: “Employee sustained injury a.o.e. and e.o.e., consisting of a right inguinal hernia, which caused temporary total disability from February 22, 1943', to and including April 11, 1943, a period of 5-6/7 after deducting the waiting period of one week, entitling the employee to $25.00 a week during said time, in the total sum of $146.43, which has been paid by the defendants. Earnings, maximum. The employee died on May 22, 1943, as the result of a heart condition, which was neither caused nor aggravated by any injury sustained in the employment. Take nothing award to be submitted for signatures of the Commissioners.” (Italics added.)

On October 13, 1943, said referee addressed a memorandum to the medical department of respondent commission, asking for a review of the “file, our memo and the electrocardiographic tracings, and advise (1) "Whether the tracings show a normal heart, as reported by Dr. Traughber; (2) Whether the diagnosis of Dr. Traughber or Dr. Camero is supported by the reported findings; (3) Whether we are correct in our tentative conclusion that this is purely a heart death; and (4) Assuming this is a purely heart death, did the fact of surgery on February 23, 1943, play any part either in aggravating the heart trouble or in hastening the time of death. ’ ’

Having received reports from Dr. Donald Cass on November 18th and 19th, said referee indited a supplemental memo on decision dated November 26th, in which he quoted from said reports, to wit: “In view of the lapse of time between his surgical treatment and the development of the symptoms, it is still my (Dr. Cass’s) opinion that his coronary disease was in no way related to his operation or to his hernia . . .” and recommended that “Employee sustained injury aoe and [304]

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154 P.2d 421, 67 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darling-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1944.