Day v. Industrial Commission

65 Ohio Law. Abs. 5, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 405
CourtButler County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 25, 1951
DocketNo. 66135
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Ohio Law. Abs. 5 (Day v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Butler County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Industrial Commission, 65 Ohio Law. Abs. 5, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 405 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By CRAMER, J.

This cause is before this court on appeal from air order of The Industrial Commission of Ohio denying plaintiff’s claim for death benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Ohio, arising out of the death of his wife.

The same was heard by the court, without the intervention [7]*7of a jury, upon the pleadings, re-hearing transcript, and memoranda of counsel.

The facts, about which there is little if any dispute, are substantially as follows:

The decedent, Nancy B. Day, had been for quite a number of years prior to her death, which took place on July 15, 1948, an employee of the P. Lorillard Company. Said decedent for four or five years prior to her death was the duly elected stewardess with the Local C. I. O. Labor Union at her employer’s plant. As such stewardess, among her duties was that of entertaining and settling grievances. A dispute arose between the girls in several of the departments and at the request of management the decedent called a grievance committee meeting for July 15, 1948. The meeting was called for and held during regular working hours and on the premises of the employer. During this meeting it appears that the decedent, who apparently for quite some time prior thereto, was in good health, got excited and engaged in a discussion which placed her under a very high nervous tension. She was described by one who was in attendance at the meeting as becoming angry and “her temper rose and she was flushed in the face.” This witness also testified as follows: “I had seen Mrs. Day excited before but not so much as she was at that meeting.” He also stated that during this meeting the decedent became nervous and seemed “to lose temporary control like a person who would become dazed in some manner, something happened physically, but she got her composure immediately. I know she sat down and more or less dropped. She didn’t sit as we did.”

The decedent collapsed and was carried from the fourth floor down to the second floor to the first aid. She regained consciouness while on the elevator. Her collapse took place less than an hour after the meeting was concluded and after complaining of pains in her head. She became unconscious, then regained consciousness and died about an hour after again losing consciousness.

The death certificate recited the following:

“Disease or condition directly
leading to death Cerebral hemorrhage & heart failure
Antecedent causes due to Hypertension & myocarditis”

The pleadings and the evidence here raise for determination the question whether plaintiff’s decedent suffered an accidental injury in the course of and arising out of her employment which resulted in her death.

Since it seems to be undisputed in the evidence that the [8]*8cause of decedent’s death was cerebral hemorrhage and heart failure, the question is probably narrowed to whether the experience which it is claimed she underwent at the plant of her employer at the meeting aforesaid, preceding her death, proximately caused the cerebral hemorrhage. If it did. and it constituted an accidental injury, as that term has been defined, sustained in the course of and arising out of her employment, then the death is compensable.

Thus we are brought to a determination as to what is required, under the law, to constitute an accidental injury so as to be compensable.

In the case of Malone v. Industrial Commission, 140 Oh St, page 292, the court found it necessary to restate the rule to be followed in determining the essentials of such injury, under §1465-68 GC, as amended, effective July 10, 1937. Judge Hart stated the following:

“To restate the rule under the present statute, the term ‘injury’ as used in the Workmen’s Compensation Act, comprehends a physical or traumatic damage or harm, accidenta) in its origin and character in the sense of being the result of a sudden mishap occurring by chance, unexpectedly and not in the usual course of events, at a particular time and place.”

He further declared as follows:

“This court is still committed to the proposition that a compensable injury under the Workmen’s Compensation Act must be accidental and traumatic in character.”

The Malone case supra is authority also for the following definition of traumatic injury, for it was stated therein as follows (page 302):

“A traumatic injury is one produced by any sudden, violent attack upon the tissues or organs of a- living Dudy producing a wound, tear or abnormal condition thereon or therein.”

It is our opinion that under the foregoing definition, “any injury” (the term used in §1465-68 GC) includes mental strain. We feel that this conclusion is warranted even though Judge Taft in the case of McNees v. Cincinnati Street Railway Company, 152 Oh St, 269; 40 O. O., 318, at page 320 of the Ohio Opinions Report, made the following observation:

“It might be argued that the term ‘any injury’ might be interpreted to include the word ‘strain.’ . However, such an argument with respect to the word ‘excitement’ would appear to be clearly unreasonable.”

The fact that Mrs. Day voluntarily subjected herself to engaging in a heated discussion and argument in the meeting does not prevent an injurious result to herself, if sustained'as a proximate result thereof, from being considered an acci[9]*9dental injury within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, if, of course it otherwise qualifies as such m the characteristics or essential elements thereof. For it has been held that

“When, in connection with an intentional act on the pnrt of a workman which precedes an injury to him, from an unforeseen, unexpected and unusual incident which produces the injury, or from which the injury results, it is accidental in character and result.”

See Malone v. Industrial Commission supra and cases cited in 7 A. L. R., 1132-1133.

In the case of Connelly v. Hunt Furniture Co., 240 N Y., 83, 147 N. E., 366, 39 A. L. R., 867, — referred to in the Malone case by Judge Hart — Judge Cardoza said:

“The range of accidents would be reduced, indeed, to vanishing dimensions if we were to take out of the category every case in which the physical movement had been willed without adverting to the consequences.”

While the decedent in this case voluntarily engaged in the heated and exciting discussion and argument at the meeting, the cerebral hemorrhage she suffered, if it was proximateiy caused by such experience, would not be the usual and expected result, but the unusual and unexpected result of sucn activities and would therefore be accidental.

We now take up the matter of whether that which Nancy Day experienced at this grievance meeting occurred in the course of and arising out of her employment with the named employer. One is in the course of his employment if he is in the performance of some required duty done directly or incidentally in the service of his employer.

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Related

Matter of Connelly v. Hunt Furniture Co.
147 N.E. 366 (New York Court of Appeals, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 Ohio Law. Abs. 5, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-industrial-commission-ohctcomplbutler-1951.