Finch v. Ford Motor Co.

32 N.W.2d 712, 321 Mich. 469, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 498
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1948
DocketDocket No. 22, Calendar No. 43,912.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 32 N.W.2d 712 (Finch v. Ford Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finch v. Ford Motor Co., 32 N.W.2d 712, 321 Mich. 469, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 498 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Plaintiff worked continuously in the foundry department of the Ford Motor Company from 1931 to 1945, during which period he was subjected at various times to smoke, fumes and dust. He worked at various jobs, all of which the employer classifies as common labor, including removing hot steel castings from a furnace, chipping castings with an air hammer, cleaning out soaking pits, cleaning out open hearth furnaces, grinding castings on an emery wheel, and working on an operation called “shakeout” in which he had to remove sand and slag from crankshaft castings. At times plaintiff became sick and found it difficult to continue his work. On two occasions he went to Hot Springs, Arkansas, for mineral-bath treatments upon the advice of his physician, who had diagnosed his ailment as rheumatic arthritis. His deteriorating physical condition was apparently never attributed to the pneumoconiosis which it was later discovered he had contracted.

Considerable animosity had arisen between plaintiff and his foreman, and serious altercations ensued. On one occasion plaintiff refused to do work assigned to him on the ground that his back hurt him. He was sent to the medical department and it was recommended that he be assigned to moderate work for two weeks. He was also charged with serious violations of various company rules. He was discharged on August 1, 1945, for having struck the foreman in the course of an argument over his refusal to do work which he states he did not feel physically able to do. Defendant company had good reason to feel not at all friendly toward plaintiff, and *472 it has vigorously contested his claim for compensation.

Between August 1, 1945, and August 13, 1946, plaintiff was unemployed. He stated in his testimony that he did not seek work during that period because he was not feeling well. On the latter date he applied for and obtained work at another automobile factory as a common laborer in its crankshaft department. He was given a physical examination when he entered his new employment, and a chest X-ray taken at that time disclosed that he was afflicted with pneumoconiosis. For that reason his new employer discharged him on September 18, 1946. As far as the record shows, plaintiff had had no difficulty in doing the work assigned to him during this short period of employment.

On October 1, 1946, plaintiff served notice of injury and claim for compensation upon defendant, and on October 4, filed his application for hearing and adjustment of claim. Hearing was had before a deputy commissioner of the compensation commission, and on December 4,1946, an award was entered stating that plaintiff had received a personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment by defendant on or about August 1, 1945, that his weekly wage was $50, and his occupation was common laborer, and that he was entitled to receive compensation at $21 per week for total disability from August 2, 1945, less the period of five weeks when he worked for another employer. It further stated that plaintiff was still totally disabled and entitled to receive compensation at the rate of $21 per week until the further order of the commission, but in an amount not to exceed the aggregate sum of $2,375. Hpon appeal the award was affirmed by the compensation commission of the department of labor and industry. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court.

*473 Defendant does not question the finding that plaintiff received a personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment by it. The record fully substantiates such finding. Defendant contends, however, that the compensation commission erred as a matter of law in holding that plaintiff is suffering a compensable disability, that plaintiff is at most, only partially disabled from a dust disease and the workmen’s compensation act does not provide for compensation for such disability, and that defendant did not have notice or knowledge of the alleged injury within the statutory period, and the claim was not timely made.

Defendant argues that there is not sufficient evidence in the case to establish the fact that plaintiff has a compensable disability. It points to the medical testimony to the effect that plaintiff’s pneumoconiotic condition is not of a disabling nature inasmuch as plaintiff can do work in a dustless environment. However, even defendant’s medical expert stated, when asked whether plaintiff had a disability in the field of common labor on jobs where he would not be exposed to dust:

“Well, there is one thing he can’t do. That is, if they have to do heavy lifting or rapid motion. Of course, this man weighs 232 pounds, and a man weighing that much hasn’t got 100 per cent, breathing capacity. That is true of any heavyweight.”

The record further shows that plaintiff was discharged by his last employer because of his pneumoconiosis even though he was not exposed to a dust hazard in his job and had performed his work well. Plaintiff testified as to pains he had, spitting up of blood, et cetera. There was testimony to uphold the finding of the commission as to the fact of disability, and, for this reason, we must affirm it.

Defendant stresses the case of Gathard v. Campbell, Wyant & Cannon Foundry Co., 320 Mich. 180, *474 where we upheld an award of the commission denying claimant compensation. She was sensitive to soluble oils used in the machine shop where she worked at common labor. The facts were radically different from those in the instant case, and we upheld the commission’s findings. The instant case follows more nearly Flanigan v. Reo Motors, Inc., 300 Mich. 359; Stewart v. Lakey Foundry & Machine Co., 311 Mich. 463; Thomas v. Continental Motors Corp., 315 Mich. 27; and Gerlesits v. Lakey Foundry & Machine Co., 319 Mich. 229.

The next question raised is whether the commission erred in granting compensation for a dust disease where, defendant contends, plaintiff was only partially disabled. The act provides, part 7, § 4:

“Compensation shall not be payable for partial disability due to silicosis or other dust disease.”

We believe that the commission was correct in holding that plaintiff was totally disabled. Section 1 of part 7 of the act, as amended in 1943, defines “disability” to mean “the state of being disabled from earning full wages at the work in which the employee was last subjected to the conditions resulting in disability.” We feel that plaintiff is disabled within the meaning of this definition. In Stewart v. Lakey Foundry & Machine Co., supra, we held that it was not necessary that a claimant be totally disabled from performing any work, but that the test was whether he was able to earn full wages at the work at which he was employed when last subjected to the conditions resulting in disability. To like effect see Thomas v. Continental Motors Corp., supra, and Syrjala v. Castile Mining Co., 316 *475 Mich. 125.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.W.2d 712, 321 Mich. 469, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finch-v-ford-motor-co-mich-1948.