Dehron v. Clark

191 A. 526, 122 Conn. 592, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 7, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 A. 526 (Dehron v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dehron v. Clark, 191 A. 526, 122 Conn. 592, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 319 (Colo. 1937).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The fundamental question upon this appeal is whether the defendants are liable for the plaintiff’s disability from a psychosis which resulted from operations upon him on November 18th, 1935, for the removal of his appendix, for the repair of an incipient left inguinal hernia, and for the repair of a right inguinal hernia, when the right hernia only was *594 an injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment. The commissioner’s amended finding discloses these undisputed facts material upon this issue: The plaintiff and his employer defendant had accepted the provisions of the Compensation Act, and the latter had insured his full liability with the defendant insurer. The plaintiff was employed as a journeyman plumber at $43.54 per week. On October 25th, 1935, while helping carry a heavy wash tub he felt a severe pain in his right side which he reported to the defendant employer. Pursuant to the employer’s instructions, he thereafter did no further heavy work. Two or three days later the plaintiff’s family physician found him to be suffering from hernia and advised an operation for the repair thereof. November 18th, 1935, a bilateral hernioplasty and an appendectomy were performed at the Bridgeport hospital. Prior thereto the plaintiff’s mentality was normal, but shortly after the operations he developed symptoms of psychosis which gradually grew worse until it became necessary to confine him in a sanatorium. This psychosis resulted from these operations. The plaintiff received an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, which resulted in a right inguinal hernia, and incapacity followed the accident within one week, the plaintiff being unable to do his regular work thereafter.

The commissioner further found that the plaintiff’s psychosis resulted from the operation for the repair of the right hernia, and therefore was a direct result of the accident and injury sustained on October 25th, 1935. The defendants moved that the commissioner correct his finding by striking this out, and substituting therefor, “it is impossible to say which one of the three operations performed . . . November 18th, 1935, caused the psychosis.” The commissioner’s refusal to *595 strike out this finding as “having been found without evidence and being a conclusion not supported by any subordinate facts or evidence,” and to make the requested substitution therefor, embrace the defendants’ reasons of appeal to the Superior Court, and its sustaining of the commissioner’s ruling thereon is the basis of their appeal to this court. The question determinative of the appeal as presented therefore is, are either the subordinate facts found, or the evidence, or both, sufficient to support the finding that the operation for the repair of the right hernia caused the plaintiff’s psychosis?

That the subordinate facts of themselves are not, is patent. First, these simply reveal three distinct operations performed at the time in question, but one of which was related to any injury arising out of and in the course of the plaintiff’s employment. Of the other two, that for the repair of the incipient left hernia, as was conceded in argument, involved an entirely unrelated and separate incision of the plaintiff’s abdomen with the trauma and physical and mental shock necessarily incident thereto, while the appendectomy, though performed through the incision required to repair the right hernia, carried with it at least such trauma and shock as were-, incident to the removal of the appendix. Second, the subordinate facts make clear the plaintiff’s normal mentality before the operations, and the psychosis ensuing shortly thereafter. These amply support the further finding that the psychosis resulted from the operations, but are insufficient to sustain the conclusion that it resulted from that for the repair of the right hernia of itself.

There is no finding that either of the other operations was dictated by proper surgical practice under the circumstances or was in any other sense incidental *596 to the one for the right hernia. Nor is there any that either defendant had approved of them as incident thereto. Obviously a patient’s powers of resistance sufficient to withstand the trauma and shock of a single operation, might be entirely insufficient to withstand those of two additional operations contemporaneously performed. The conclusion predicated upon the subordinate facts found, that the operation for the repair of the right hernia caused the plaintiff’s psychosis, was therefore illogically drawn and unwarranted. Palumbo v. Fuller Co., 99 Conn. 353, 356, 122 Atl. 63.

Nor does the record contain evidence sufficient to support this finding. The question presented on the present record of the causal relation between operation and psychosis, being a topic requiring special experience of an expert, any sufficient evidence thereof is necessarily confined to the expert testimony upon this subject. Slimak v. Foster, 106 Conn. 366, 368, 138 Atl. 153; Bates v. Carroll, 99 Conn. 677, 679, 122 Atl. 652; O’Meara v. Columbian National Life Ins. Co., 119 Conn. 641, 645, 178 Atl. 357; Sickmund v. Connecticut Co., 122 Conn. 375, 189 Atl. 876. This consisted solely of that of Dr. Griffin. While he stated that there is physical and mental shock from an operation in consequence of the insult to the system by the tearing and pulling on organs involved, that the more handling the more trauma, and that the three operations combined produced the psychosis, he further testified that he could not tell which of the three caused it, or how to separate the effect of any one, and that to attempt to do so would be mere speculation. He further stated expressly that he could not say that the operation for the right hernia of itself resulted in the psychosis, for “that is quite in the realm of speculation.” To conclude upon this testimony *597 that the latter operation caused the psychosis would be a mere guess, conjecture, or surmise, and entirely unwarranted by any legally sufficient evidence. Bates v. Carroll, supra; Madore v. New Departure Mfg. Co., 104 Conn. 709, 714, 134 Atl. 259. A mere possibility shown is not enough. General Petroleum Products, Inc. v. Merchants Trust Co., 115 Conn. 50, 58, 160 Atl. 296; Tappan v. Knox, 115 Conn. 508, 515, 162 Atl. 7.

As the court says in a compensation case involving similar essential facts, where the plaintiff when operated upon for an epigastric hernia sustained in his employment was also operated on for an inguinal hernia of independent origin, necessitating as here a separate incision, and the plaintiff died of post-operative shock, “under the plaintiff’s legal contention, therefore, that the post-operative shock of both operations contributed to the death, for one of which the defendant was not responsible, it still remains in the realm of surmise, guess or conjecture whether the accident, which did not affect the inguinal hernia, was the direct cause of the decedent’s death.” Dulac v. Procter & Bowie Co., 120 Me. 324, 331, 114 Atl. 293, 296.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

SAPKO v. State
44 A.3d 827 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2012)
Imbrogno v. Stamford Hospital
612 A.2d 82 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1992)
Squires v. Reynolds
5 A.2d 877 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 A. 526, 122 Conn. 592, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dehron-v-clark-conn-1937.