Federal Tin Co. v. Hoffman

165 A. 323, 164 Md. 431, 1933 Md. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 21, 1933
Docket[No. 30, January Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 165 A. 323 (Federal Tin Co. v. Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Tin Co. v. Hoffman, 165 A. 323, 164 Md. 431, 1933 Md. LEXIS 52 (Md. 1933).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Joseph Leo Hoffman, the claimant and appellee, on May 16th, 1931, was working for the Federal Tin Company, In■corporated, self-insurer, the appellant. At the hearing before the Industrial Accident Commission, the claimant was represented by counsel and the employer by Mr. Hughes, an insurance adjuster. In the claim filed on July 15th, 1931, the claimant stated that he was injured in knees and arm by stumbling over scrap tin that was on the floor. Dr. O’Conner, the company’s physician, in his report, stated that the injury consisted of contusion of both knees and sprain of right shoulder; that the treatment was “hot boric acid compresses, massage”; that claimant was not then, June 5th, 1931, able- *433 to attend to any part of present or any other occupation; that injury had not resulted in any permanent disability; that disability was likely to last about three weeks from date of accident; that patient stated he tripped over some tin and injured both knees and right shoulder. The case was heard by the commission on November 4th, 1931, on the following issues: (1) Whether the claimant received an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment; (2) whether the disability of the claimant is the result of an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment; (3) whether the disability of the claimant as the result of an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment extended beyond the three days after the beginning of such disability; (4) average weekly wage.

The commission found for the claimant on the first issue; for the employer on the second issue; on the third issue, that the disability did not extend beyond the waiting period; and en the fourth issue, that the average weekly wage was $22.25. And the commission disallowed the claim. The claimant testified before the commission that on May 16th, 1931, at about ten minutes to 12 at night he tried to go to the toilet and tripped over some tin and fell down on his left knee and turned over on his right knee and hit his shoulder; that a man picked him up and asked if he felt bad, and witness replied, “No, I guess I can go back to work; and I went to work and it got worse all the time, so I worked on it for two weeks”; that he got worse all the time during the two weeks he was working; that he was in pain; that Dr. O’Conner attended him for two weeks and told him what to do and he did it; that the doctor came Tuesday and told him he might go to work the next day, and witness told him his leg and shoulder was giving him a lot of pain, and the doctor said, “Go down and see Mr. Holley, and I went down and saw Mr. Holley and he told me to go to work on the seventh floor. * * * I stayed up on the seventh floor for half an hour and the pain was so great in my left knee and right arm I could not stand the pain and I told Mr. Holley, and he told me to go home”; that witness went home on a street car, and when he *434 got off the car near his home the pain in his arm was so great he could not hold himself up with the cane which he was using at that time; that he was picked up and carried home by two men; that Dr. O’Conner took him to Mercy Hospital, where he stayed two weeks and did not get any better; that after he went home he was attended by Dr. Lichtenberg and Dr. Seliger; that Dr. Seliger gave him a blood and throat examination and sent him to the Hebrew Hospital, where he stayed two weeks under Dr. Seliger’s care; that prior to the date of the accident he worked every day, never lost a minute; that he had been working for the appellant for seven years; that he never suffered any pain in his leg and arm, was able to walk all right, walked four miles several times; that before the accident witness had a slow walk but did not stagger so far as he knew; that in his opinion he was a healthy man; that his trouble at the time of the hearing was in his left knee and right arm, so that he could not do anything; that before the accident he worked from 1 o’clock in the evening until 1.30 the next morning at forty cents an hour.

On cross-examination witness said he went to St. Joseph’s Hospital three years before to be treated for his slow walk; that he was at St. Joseph’s only three or four days, as he did not have money to pay; that after he left there he had no trouble walking, only a slow movement; that from that time he walked four miles any time without suffering any pain; that he was in the habit of walking from his home to the Federal Tin Company, which was four miles one way, and suffered no trouble or pain; that sometimes he walked both ways, whenever he ran short of money.

Dr. Seliger testified that he examined the claimant in September, 1931, at the request of Dr. Lichtenberg; that he obtained a history from claimant in which he stated he was feeling all right, able to work until May 16th, while working for the Federal Tin Company ((he tripped over a pile of debris and landed on both knees, twisting himself, tearing his right shoulder and back)). The witness continued with the history he obtained from claimant. Witness then stated what the neurological examination revealed. “At that time I made *435 impression of ataxic spastic paraplegin, meaning inability to co-ordinate his movements which causes him to walk as be does, spastic meaning stiffness. It is the stiff type of paraplegin, which means paralysis of the lower extremities. At that time I recommended him to the hospital for study.” The witness then stated the various disturbances in the body that can cause these conditions, and testified that tests made at the' hospital on claimant for each of these disturbances showed that they did not exist in him. ((“It was then my opinion that Mr. Hoffman had been predisposed to a slow progressive degenerative disease which was lighted up and accelerated by the injury.”)) It was my opinion, further, that Mr. Hoffman at the present time is permanently disabled.”

On erossrexamination by Mr. .Hughes, the representative of the employer, the witness further described at length the condition and symptoms that he found, stating that from his examination he found no fracture, dislocation, or bone pathology shown and saw no evidence on any part of the body that was injured. Then there were the following questions and answers on cross-examination: “Q. (By Mr. Hughes) Doctor, what disease does the man have? A.'He has ataxic spastic paraplegia, slowly progressive disease of the nervous system. Q. ‘Could the condition you found in his mouth and teeth cause this condition? A. Teeth sometimes predispose to it but in my opinion it is more of a constitutional defect, ( (something that has; been in his nervous system which would have gone on without any manifestations if it was not for the injury. He might have gone on the rest of his life with a little drag in his walking but here we have a man working all right, walking fairly well except a little slowness and then the injury, and then the man gets to the point he cannot use his extremities any more. From what I said it is my opinion he was predisposed. He might have gone on without any serious symptoms had it not been for the injury. Q. Can you tell us, in layman’s language, how this accident could have lighted this up? A. Yes, any type of injury can give you bleeding if you have a congenital defect of vessels and *436

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Bluebook (online)
165 A. 323, 164 Md. 431, 1933 Md. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-tin-co-v-hoffman-md-1933.