DuFraine v. Department of Labor & Industries

40 P.2d 987, 180 Wash. 504, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 479
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1935
DocketNo. 24837. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 987 (DuFraine v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DuFraine v. Department of Labor & Industries, 40 P.2d 987, 180 Wash. 504, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 479 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

This is an appeal by the department of labor and industries from a judgment of the superior court of Cowlitz county reversing an order of the *505 joint board of the department rejecting the claim of respondent for compensation under the workmen’s compensation act. The joint board rejected the claim for the reason that the condition for which respondent claimed compensation was not the result of an accident occurring in the course of her employment. For convenience, we will hereafter refer to the appellant as the department and to the respondent as claimant.

Claimant testified before the joint board, in substance, as follows: In the early part of September, 1931, she was employed by the Longview Fiber Company. Her work was to fold cardboard boxes and put them on a carrier. As she folded the boxes, she would stack them in a pile on a table at which she worked, and then lift the pile onto the carrier. In stacking the boxes on the carrier, she would sometimes have to reach quite high, dependent upon the height of the stack.

On the day of her alleged injury, a pile of boxes she was putting on the carrier slipped back, and she was struck on the right side of the abdomen, just over the gall bladder. The accident happened about eleven o’clock in the forenoon. She told Mr. Page, the superintendent of the plant, that her side hurt and she would like to get a medical order to the doctor. He asked her if her hurt was so bad that she had to go home; if not, he would like to have her work the rest of the day as he was short of help. She remained at her work the rest of the day.

The Longview Fiber Company had a contract with the Longview Memorial Hospital for medical services for its employees, and maintained a nurse at the plant. When this nurse was off during the noon hour, the telephone operator issued any medical orders required. A medical order was given to claimant during the noon hour by the telephone operator. The order had en *506 dorsed on it a reference to Dr. Coffin, who treated the company employees at the hospital, and she called on him either that evening or on the next day, the ninth, as his records show. Dr. Coffin diagnosed her condition as gall bladder trouble resulting from strain, and prescribed treatment and gave her some medicine for immediate relief.

She continued treatment with Dr. Coffin for one or two months, without any improvement in her condition. A large lump developed on her side, accompanied by considerable pain, and she did not work after the date of the hurt. She was not certain of the date, but the company’s records show that the last day she worked was the eighth of September. She made no claim to the department for compensation, explaining that she did not do so because Dr. Coffin said her condition was not compensable under the act.

She was operated on by Dr. C. J. Sells, of Long-view, on July 5, 1932. By that time the lump on her side had attained the size of a man’s fist. Dr. Sells diagnosed her trouble as a hematoma, or blood clot developing into a large abscess around the rectus muscle. He performed a successful operation, and she had completely recovered her health at the time the claim was heard by the joint board.

Iris Haley, testifying on behalf of claimant, said that she was working with claimant at the plant on the day of the alleged injury. Claimant told her that she had hurt her side, and showed her the hurt in the ladies’ rest room. The witness described the hurt as a discolored mark about the size of a dollar, but she did not notice whether there was any swelling. She saw the hurt afterwards, in December, and said it had swollen quite a bit.

Ethel Moore, testifying for claimant, said she had worked for the fiber company the year before, but at *507 the time of the accident was not employed there; that claimant told her she had been hurt the day of the accident. She did not see the hurt when claimant first told her of it, but felt it through claimant’s sweater. Later in the evening, she saw the hurt and found it swollen and inflamed. She visited back and forth with claimant and saw the hurt frequently thereafter; claimant, she said, did no work except light housework and taking care of herself. She accompanied claimant to the hospital at the time of the operation.

It was stipulated that a Mrs. Hogarty, if called as a witness by claimant, would testify that, on the evening of the injury, claimant had been taken by Mrs. Hogarty in her car to the office of Dr. Coffin in Long-view ; that she was present at the time he made a brief examination of claimant; that she heard him inform claimant that she was suffering from gall bladder trouble as the result of strain; that she saw claimant on numerous occasions afterwards and saw the injured area to the right of the abdomen just under the ribs.

Dr. C. J. Sells, a surgeon called by claimant, testified that she consulted him about the lump .on her side. His examination at that time showed a tumorous mass in the right rectus muscle just over the gall bladder area. The mass was a little larger than a man’s fist, and seemed firmly attached. He diagnosed it as some form of tumorous mass in or on the muscle or in the sheath of the rectus muscle, and that he believed it was a hematoma or large blood clot and advised an operation. He performed an operation on July 5, 1932, at the Longview General Hospital, Dr. Christian-son assisting. Describing the operation, he said:

“We cut down to the sheath of the rectus muscle. We then opened the sheath of the rectus and about six to eight ounces of thick pus escaped, which was *508 sealed within this sheath. The rectus muscle was quite thin or atrophied where the pus was laid. Just below the muscle was perhaps about two ounces more of pus and several dark, almost black, masses of blood clots. . . . Q. In your opinion, as a medical man, finding” the abscess — • Pardon me, did you state you found some blood clots there? A. Yes, there was some old black blood, as the remainder of what had been a large blood clot. There was only probably two ounces of black blood at the time of the operation. Q. Doctor, in your opinion, as a physician and surgeon, what would be the cause of the presence of that old blood from blood clots ? A. It is my opinion it is either due to a ripping of the muscle or strain, or a possible blow over the abdomen at that point that was the cause of the blood clot forming. Q. Would, in your opinion, there be any other normal cause for that except one of those two? A. I don’t believe so. Q. Doctor, from your examination and your experience as a physician •and surgeon, was the reasonable conclusion that the abscess that formed there was the result of some strain or traumatic condition? A. No. The hematoma, the blood clot, was the result of some kind of an injury to the body and the abscess was the result of the old hematoma finally breaking down. Q. In other words, the final abscess was related, as a matter of fact, to the original injury then through the presence of a blood clot. Is that your view? A. I suppose that would be the way to put it.”

On cross-examination:

‘ ‘ Q. What extent of trauma or how severe must the trauma be before it will cause a hematoma? A.

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Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 987, 180 Wash. 504, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dufraine-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1935.