Deines Bros. v. Industrial Commission

242 P.2d 600, 125 Colo. 258, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 10, 1952
Docket16774
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 242 P.2d 600 (Deines Bros. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deines Bros. v. Industrial Commission, 242 P.2d 600, 125 Colo. 258, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 306 (Colo. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

*259 This is an industrial commission case. It commenced when William F. Hancock, to whom we hereinafter refer as claimant, filed his workmen’s notice and claim for compensation because of injury to his right eye. He described himself as truck driver for his employer, Deines Brothers, Inc., of Loveland,"dealers in lumber and building materials, and stated that on Saturday, July 2, 1949, he first noticed his eye was bothering him while eating lunch at his home. Upon his return to work, he made a delivery “and then started to put an end in a floorless building” at the lumber yard; but his eye began watering and hurting, “So I finally had to come home and then later the same day saw a doctor. I had cleaned rubbish and old forms out of the building during the forenoon.” He repo: ted his condition to the son of the president of the company on that afternoon. He was able to return to work August 15th.

His explanation to the referee of the commission as to how the injury might have happened reads, that he “was putting up the end of a building, putting two by fours for nailing boards on and the wind was blowing from the south and it must have blown a sliver off the board into my eye.” He quit work about three o’clock in the afternoon, and went to Dr. Tretheway, in Loveland, a little after four o’clock. He was under Dr. Tretheway’s care for about a week. He further testified that as a result of this injury to his eye, he has only partial vision at the present time. In answer to the question, “How much can you see with it?” he said, “Just light.” He was eating lunch at home when he first noticed his eye bothering him, but he did not know when he got that something in his eye.

. January 20, 1950, after the hearing, the referee denied the claim, “for the reason that the claimant failed to establish that his injury and subsequent eye condition resulted from an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.”

Claimant then filed his petition to review the referee’s *260 unfavorable ruling. As a result, the Industrial Commission granted a further hearing “to permit the parties to introduce further testimony.”

At this hearing claimant, unmarried, in addition to testifying concerning the circumstances of the accident, as set forth in the previous hearing, testified that he had not worked the previous day, Friday, but “had driven to Denver and back;” that while in Denver he had spent his time in the State Museum. He further testified that he had worked for his employer on the preceding Wednesday and Thursday; that the work he had been doing for his employer was mostly clean-up, off and on pounding nails with a hammer; that he did not go to the saws. Once or twice a day he held the lumber while Mr. Deines ripped it, taking it away from the saw as he ripped it, but does not remember whether he did any of that on Thursday. He was not working with heavy lumber or big nails, but just clean-up lumber. He also testified that he had not been doing anything of an active or violent nature, where he might have gotten anything into his eye, except his work; that his home is the first house west of the lumber yard; that he had done nothing around his home before he had his lunch; that he did no work around his home with a hammer or tools all that week; that he worked eight hours a day at the lumber yard and did not work any other place; that most of his work consisted of driving a truck. He went to Denver in his own car, and stated that he did not have the windows open; that he did not stop and do anything with his car on his trip to Denver; that he had no reason to rub his eyes; never did rub his eyes with his hands, but he had done so with his handkerchief, and did so on Saturday, July 2, 1949, when he first felt something in his eye. He further testified that he did not touch his eyes with his sleeve or arm for two or three days before he noticed this trouble in his eye; that he has no grass or bushes around his home; works a little around the house; but did not at the time of the trouble with his eye. His *261 house is gas heated—just a stove. No basement in his house. “Q. Do you own your own automobile. A. Yes sir. Q. Do you do any work on it yourself? A. It ain’t worth it.” He stated that he stays at home at night.

Henry A. Deines testified that claimant was a general helper around the lumber yard, keeping up the premises in his spare time when he wasn’t delivering lumber; that July 2, 1949, he made some deliveries, and when he caught up with them he was put to work closing in the end of the building; that he did not work the previous Saturday, but did work on the previous Wednesday and Thursday; that his work on Wednesday was just regular routine. Deines also testified he first heard about the injury sometime in the afternoon of July 2.

Dr. Tretheway testified that he was a graduate of the Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surgery, and duly licensed to practice osteopathy and surgery in Colorado; that he had examined Mr. Hancock on July 2; that he “had a foreign body lodged in the cornea of the right eye, almost centrally located, so near the center that we can call it centrally located, at least, a small amount toward the upper outer corner of the cornea;” that there was some destruction of tissue around the foreign body at the time; that under a local anesthetic he used an instrument to remove the foreign body. It was through the first three layers of the cornea of the eye. The thickness of the cornea is a little less than an eighth of an inch. “In Mr. Hancock’s case' this foreign body had pierced the outer three layers of the cornea which includes the very sensitive and thin ' epithelial layer, through the tough fibrotic second layer and into what they call the substantia propria. * * * There are five layers in all. * * * the foreign body definitely was in this central, thick layer * * * probably two millimeters in depth.” He further testified that to penetrate in that way it would have been necessary that the foreign body be driven in with force, that it could not be introduced *262 by a casual rubbing of the eye or the wind blowing it in; that there was infection and its presence indicated that probably the lesion had occurred to the cornea three days before. “Usually these men come in on the third day, when the infection starts, at least.” He added that it would have been possible for the foreign matter to have been imbedded in the cornea without Hancock’s knowledge; that it doesn’t necessarily cause irritation to the eyelids; that is the time that the eye starts to get red and hurt them and really bother them; that he is not a specialist in the treatment of eyes, although he does a great deal of eye, nose and throat work. He further stated that he had been doing eye work for five years. In answer to the question as to when the foreign body entered the eye, he stated that he had no way of knowing positively when anything hits anyone in the eye. In answer to the referee’s question as to how large this foreign body was, he said it was very small. “Q. Were you able to determine what type of foreign body it was? A. I thought it was a piece of wood, but I wasn’t sure. It wasn’t a hot piece of metal, as I so customarily see in my practice, like a sliver off a welding machine or a grinder.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P.2d 600, 125 Colo. 258, 1952 Colo. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deines-bros-v-industrial-commission-colo-1952.