Franklin County Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission

153 N.E. 608, 322 Ill. 555
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 16891. Judgment reversed and additional award set aside.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 608 (Franklin County Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin County Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, 153 N.E. 608, 322 Ill. 555 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Tony Chestnut filed an application for compensation with the Industrial Commission on July 28, 1922, in which he charged that on June 2, 1921, while employed by the Franklin County Mining Company, he suffered an injury to his leg. The parties stipulated that on June 2, 1921, they were operating under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation act; that on that day Tony Chestnut was employed by the Franklin County Mining Company and received an injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment; that notice of the accident was given and demand for compensation made within the time required by the act; that the earnings of the applicant for the year preceding the injury were $1248 and that his average weekly wage was $24; that he was a single man; that first aid, medical, surgical and hospital services had been furnished by the employer and that it had paid the applicant $574 in compensation. On September 8, 1922, the arbitrator awarded him $12 per week for 66 weeks, the period of temporary total incapacity for work, and the further sum of $12 per week for 43¾ weeks, in accordance with paragraph (e) of section 8 of the act as amended, because the injuries sustained caused twenty-five per cent permanent loss of the use of the left leg. Neither party sought a review of the arbitrator’s award. Subsequently, on September 25, 1923, Chestnut filed with the Industrial Commission his petition for a review of the arbitrator’s 'award, alleging that since it was made his disability had recurred and increased. A hearing was held on that petition, and on May 7, 1924, the commission by its decision found that the petitioner’s disability had recurred and increased since the arbitrator’s award and that as a result he had sustained the permanent loss, of the use of fifty per cent of the left leg. Additional compensation at the rate of $12 per week for 87½ weeks was awarded. On review by writ of certiorari the circuit court of Franklin county confirmed the commission’s decision. The company’s petition for a writ of error from this court was allowed, and the record is here for review.

The original hearing before the arbitrator occurred on September 8, 1922. Chestnut testified that while he was loading coal for the Franklin County Mining Company on June 2, 1921, a bar on a machine struck his left leg, about four inches below the knee, and broke both bones; that he had been treated by two physicians for five months and eight days following the injury; that his leg pained him constantly; that he could not walk over two or three blocks, or stand on his leg for ten minutes, or run; that his leg was crooked and weak and became progressively worse; that he had not worked since the accident and that he was unable to work. A physician called by the claimant testified that the tibia had a compound fracture; that an ex-ostosis had been thrown out, which caused the leg to be weak; that nature might absorb some, but not much, of the callus; that the motion in the ankle and knee joints seemed to be good but that the leg was crooked, and that in his opinion there was permanent disability.

Two physicians were called by the plaintiff in error on the hearing before the arbitrator. One testified that X-ray pictures which he had taken on the day of the accident disclosed a compound, comminuted fracture of the left tibia in the upper third and a transverse fracture of the fibula in the same region. He made another X-ray examination on September 2, 1922, which showed that the union was solid and that the absorption of callus had just begun. In his opinion there was a good functional recovery. The other physician, who had treated the claimant immediately after he was injured and occasionally thereafter, found the same fractures. His last examination, made on June 2, 1923, two years after the accident, disclosed a good, firm, bonjr union, and while there was some lateral deformity in •the leg at the junction of the two fragments, the claimant was, in the physician’s opinion, able to work at that time.

The hearing on the petition for review alleging the recurrence and increase of the claimant’s disability was held by the commission on April 15, 1924. Chestnut testified that the pain in his leg extended from the ankle to the hip; that he was compelled to rest after walking two or three blocks; that he could not run or lift anything because it hurt him, and that his leg was growing worse. He admitted on cross-examination that at the time of the arbitrator’s hearing he could neither run nor lift and that he had not tried to do any work since that time.

Dr. O. L. Walter testified that on September 20, 1923, he made a physical and X-ray examination of the claimant’s left leg; that the examination disclosed a healed fracture, with considerable angulation and deformity about the junction of the upper with the middle third, and a shortening of the leg by half an inch or more, owing to the overlapping deformity of the broken bone ends; that the deformity and shortening affected the functional use of the leg and caused a limp and a tilting of the pelvis to compensate for the shortening; that in time the tilting of the pelvis would cause a bending of the spine and have a decided effect upon it; that the deformity and angulation caused a strain upon the knee and ankle joints, and that as the claimant’s age advanced his leg would become more impaired, functionally. Dr. Walter made another examination on April 15, 1924, which, he said, showed the claimant’s leg to be in about the same condition as it was when he first examined it on September 20, 1923. On cross-examination Dr. Walter testified that fractures usually improve ; that in the instant case there was a complete recovery, with the exception of a scar and a callus, which were permanent; that there was no direct injury to the left knee or ankle and that the functional recovery of the leg was complete.

Dr. Edgar Austin, who was the claimant’s attending physician from the time of the accident and who testified before the arbitrator, made his last examination on January 30, 1924. He testified that he then found the general appearance of the claimant good and the tone of his muscles in normal condition, but that the left leg at the point of the fracture, owing to excessive bone formation, was larger than the right leg; that there was a slight angulation in the left leg, and that it was about three-eighths of an inch shorter than the right leg but of the same length as it was at the time of the hearing before the arbitrator; that in the left.leg there was a puffiness just below the external malleolus; that there was a good, firm, bony union; that at the time of the first hearing there were sharp, roughened areas of bone, caused by the comminution of the bone at the time of the injury but which at the time of the hearing on review had been markedly absorbed and smoothed off, and that the callus, from the external examination made, did not seem to be as large as on the former hearing.

Dr. J. B.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 608, 322 Ill. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-county-mining-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1926.