Denver & R. G. W. R. System v. Industrial Commission

243 P. 800, 66 Utah 494
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
DocketNo. 4315
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 243 P. 800 (Denver & R. G. W. R. System v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver & R. G. W. R. System v. Industrial Commission, 243 P. 800, 66 Utah 494 (Utah 1926).

Opinion

CHERRY, J.

This is a review of proceedings by the Industrial Commission under tbe Workmen’s Compensation Act (Comp. Laws 1917. §§ 3061-3165), in which an award of compensation was made to Clifford James Houston for disability resulting from an accidental injury sustained by him while employed by tbe Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad Company. The fact of disability and that the employé sustained an injury in the course of his employment are not drawn in question. The subject of controversy is whether the disability resulted from the injury, and the legal question presented is whether the finding of the commission that the injury caused the disability is supported by substantial evidence.

[496]*496The injury sustained by the employe was an accidental blow on his right knee by a hammer. The disability was on account of an osteomyelitis of the left hip joint, which, in simpler words, means that parts of the bones constituting the hip joint have been eaten away by virulent bacteria. The causal connection between the injury and the disability is the subject of opposing contentions. The evidence in relation to one important fact was in direct conflict, and the opinions of the numerous medical experts showed wide variation: The evidence on behalf of the employé was to the effect that the ailment in his left hip appeared after the development of an abscess in his knee. The employer offered evidence to the contrary. This conflict explains much of the disagreement in the opinions of the medical experts. In this review we are not concerned with the credence or weight of evidence, but are limited to the inquiry of whether the record presents substantial competent evidence which supports the award. Although disputed in some respects, as above stated, the record contains evidence that the employé, while at work on or about May 15, 1924, accidentally struck himself on the right knee with a large hammer. The blow made a bruise, but did not cause any visible abrasion of the skin. He suffered pain, and his knee became discolored, swollen, and tender. He continued his work, but in a few days was compelled to quit on account of increased suffering from his injury. A few days later a doctor was called, who diagnosed the trouble as rheumatism, and prescribed treatment accordingly. About two weeks later, there being no improvement, another doctor was called, and the two doctors, after consultation, ordered the patient to the hospital. At the hospital an abscess at the knee with the presence of bacteria was discovered. Shortly thereafter the trouble in his left hip first made its appearance. An examination disclosed the presence in his hip of the same kind of bacteria previously found in the abscess at the knee. The infection of the hip developed into a very serious ailment which resulted in total disability of the employé. An additional fact in the case, to which some of the expert witnesses attached importance, was that some two or three months before the accident [497]*497tbe employe bad suffered from two boils on. bis body, but which bad entirely healed up and disappeared several weeks before tbe accident in question.

Upon the hypothesis of the foregoing facts, several medical experts expressed opinions couched in technical terms, but to the general effect that the infection in the hip was caused by the injury to the knee. Explanations and support for these opinions, based upon medical science and knowledge, were advanced by the experts.

Contrary opinions were expressed by numerous other medical experts who attributed the hip infection to the boils from which the employé had previously suffered. Several of these witnesses, however, more or less predicated their opinions upon the assumption that the hip infection of the employe preceded in point of the time the abscess in the knee.

The principal contention made here in opposition to the award is that the conclusion that the disability resulted from the injury is not supported by substantial evidence, but rests upon mere conjecture; and that the facts in the case present a situation “where two inferences are possible, one involving liability, and one involving nonliability,” in which case according to Spring Canyon Coal Co. v. Ind. Com., 201 P. 173, 58 Utah, 608, the trier of the facts is not permitted to choose the inference involving liability. Other eases cited and relied upon in this connection are Patton v. T. & P. Ry. Co., 21 S. Ct. 275, 179 U. S. 658, 45 L. Ed. 361; Tremelling v. S. P. R. R. Co., 170 P. 80, 51 Utah, 189; Chaudier v. S. & C. L. Co., 173 N. W. 198, 206 Mich. 433, 5 A. L. R. 1673.

It is readily conceded that the finding of a material fact cannot rest upon mere conjecture, and that in certain cases, where two or more inferences are equally probable or consistent with the evidence, the trier of fact may not arbitrarily adopt one which results in liability in preference to others which do not. But the application of the rule to the case under consideration would be extending the doctrine far beyond its proper limits, and further than any of the eases cited go. In neither of the cases cited was there any evidence directly relating or pointing to the particular fact to be [498]*498proved — no satisfactory foundation in tbe testimony for tbe particular conclusion contended for. In Spring Canyon Coal Co. v. Ind. Com., supra, it was beld tbat tbe fact that an employé was killed by an insane fellow employe without more appearing, did not justify tbe inference tbat tbe fellow employe’s act was directed against deceased “because of bis employment. ’ ’

In Patton v. T. & P. Ry. Co., supra, a negligence case depending upon how an engine step became loose, it was beld tbat from tbe fact tbat tbe step was loose it could not be inferred, without other proof pointing to tbat conclusion, tbat the condition of tbe step resulted from negligence, when tbe testimony left tbe matter uncertain and showed “tbat any one of half a dozen things may have brought about tbe injury, for some of which tbe employer is responsible, and for some of which be is not. * * *”

In Tremelling v. S. P. R. R. Co., supra, a negligence case depending upon whether a brabeman found lying dead by a railroad track bad been killed while riding on a freight train, which moved past a freight car standing on a side track, by coming in contact with tbe car on tbe side track, where tbe evidence was wholly undisputed, and it was just as probable tbat be did not come in contact with tbe freight cars as tbat be did, tbe court beld:

“If the probabilities are equally balanced that the accident was produced by a cause for which the defendant is responsible or by one for which he is not, the plaintiff must fail.”

In Chaudier v. S. & C. L. Co., supra, an award bad been made under tbe Workman’s Compensation Act for tbe death of one employed to remove wood ashes from tbe pit of a furnace, who was afterwards found at bis home in a comatose condition with a cupful of ashes in bis stomach, the lye from which killed him. Upon review, a divided court (five to three) held that upon tbe established facts tbe inference tbat the ashes and lye were taken into tbe stomach of tbe decedent with suicidal intent is at least as reasonable as tbat they found entrance to tbe stomach accidentally, and vacated tbe award.

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243 P. 800, 66 Utah 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-r-g-w-r-system-v-industrial-commission-utah-1926.