Great American Indemnity Co. v. Industrial Commission

11 N.E.2d 9, 367 Ill. 241
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1937
DocketNo. 24089. Judgment reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 9 (Great American Indemnity 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
Great American Indemnity Co. v. Industrial Commission, 11 N.E.2d 9, 367 Ill. 241 (Ill. 1937).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the court:

James L. Burden, the claimant, an attorney, claim adjuster and investigator employed by the Great American Indemnity Company, made application to the Industrial Commission for compensation for an injury to and loss of his left eye, alleged to have arisen out of and in the course of his employment. An award by the arbitrator was confirmed by the Industrial Commission, and the superior court of Cook county - confirmed the decision of the Industrial Commission. This court allowed a petition for a writ of error and the proceeding is here for further review.

The evidence presented in support of the claim tended to show that on October 2, 1933, the claimant had visited the municipal court of Chicago on business for his employer, the Great American Indemnity Company. He was returning to his office and, at or about 10:30 o’clock in the morning, while walking at Madison and La Salle streets, he got a foreign substance in his eye. Irritation followed and he visited a doctor who removed a particle from the eye. Treatment was thereafter administered but the eye became worse and the claimant was ordered to a hospital. The eye continued to grow worse and on November 2, 1933, was removed.

On behalf of the employer there was testimony that, when the claimant entered the hospital on October 4, he stated that on the previous Saturday night (September 30) he got something in his eye while at the Century of Progress; that the next day the eye was inflamed and on Monday, the second day, it began to pain him; that he saw a physician who directed him to use hot applications on his eye. In pursuance of the statements of the claimant made to an interne, a hospital record was made which recited the foregoing and other facts with reference to the claimant’s eye. The claimant denied that he made a statement at the hospital or elsewhere that he got something in his eye at the Century of Progress, but only that he had noticed a twitching of the eye at that time. The hospital record which recited the foregoing facts with reference to the case disappeared from the desk used by nurses in the corridor of the seventeenth floor where the claimant had his room. The interne who originally prepared the history sheet of the condition of the claimant’s eye, reproduced from memory the substantial parts of the original history, and a new record was substituted for the missing one.

The medical testimony offered concerning the condition of the claimant’s eye was largely that of specialists. One of these, Dr. L. R. Millen, testified that he fitted the claimant with glasses between 1930 and 1932, and at that time the claimant said that his eye would “tear,” twitch and burn occasionally. The doctor was asked a hypothetical question embodying facts substantially the same as those presented on behalf of the claimant, and the inquiry was whether or not, in his opinion, there was a causal connection between the entry of a foreign substance in the eye of the person, supposed in the question, and the subsequent condition which led to the enucleation of the eye, or whatever operative procedure was had. An objection was interposed to the question. The witness was permitted to answer and stated that, in his opinion, there was such a causal connection. On cross-examination, however, the witness admitted that, independently of a foreign substance lodging in the eye, other causes, including infection, could cause the same condition.

On behalf of the employer, Dr. Sydney Walker, an eye specialist, testified that the condition of the claimant’s eye was caused by pneumococcic ulcer; that the claimant came to the office of the witness on October 3, 1933, and stated that a foreign body entered his eye while he was at work. The doctor treated the eye and instructed the claimant to report at his office the following day, which the claimant did. On October 4, when the claimant went to the doctor’s office, the ulcer had spread rapidly and the claimant had an active hypopyon. The case was so severe that the doctor sent the claimant to St. Luke’s hospital for intensive treatment. The ulcer continued to spread and a pan-ophthalmitis developed, and about a week later the doctor enucleated the eye. The doctor testified that the type of ulcer which the claimant had would not develop in twenty-four hours. The doctor expressed the opinion, taking into consideration the appearance of the claimant’s eye the first time the witness saw it, combined with the scientific knowledge the witness possessed as an eye specialist, (having had experience with over three thousand cases of like ulcer) that any foreign body which might have lodged in the claimant’s eye as recently as the day before the witness saw the claimant, could not have had any causal connection with the condition which necessitated the removal of the eye; that such a foreign body entering the eye the day previously could not have caused a deep ulcer in twenty-four hours such as the witness found on October 3; that the incubative period of a pneumococcic ulcer is from three to five days. The doctor testified that, in all his experience, the hypopyon had never developed in twenty-four or thirty hours, and it was his opinion it could not develop in that length of time.

Dr. Earl Vernon, an eye specialist, testified that he had treated two hundred or three hundred cases of pneumococcic ulcer; that such ulcers have definitely recognized characteristics ; that their incubation period is two or three days; that he had never known of a case where the period was as short as twenty-four hours, and in the doctor’s opinion the incubation period could not be limited to so short a time; that two or three days’ time was the incubation period of a pneumococcic ulcer. The witness was asked a hypothetical question, embodying the fact of the entry of a foreign body in the eye at a certain time, the removal of the foreign substance, followed by conditions and symptoms of pneumococcic ulcer, whether the foreign body in the eye would cause the ulcer, and the doctor’s opinion was that it did not do so.

Dr. Stanley J. Giryotas testified that he saw the claimant on October 2, 1933, and at that time removed a foreign body from the cornea of the claimant’s eye, treated the eye, saw the claimant again in the afternoon and found a slight sign of irritation. The history given the witness made little impression upon him. Dr. George N. Beecher, an associate in the office of the previous witness, testified that he casually examined the claimant’s eye at the time in question and found a trivial abrasion on the cornea but nothing to account for the subjective complaints of the claimant.

While there is some evidence that the condition of the claimant’s eye might have been caused by a foreign substance lodging there at the time alleged in the application for compensation, the weight of the evidence, especially of a medical nature, is that the condition found would not have followed so soon upon an accident such as was testified occurred on October 2, 1933. There is substantial evidence that the claimant, himself, gave a history of something entering his eye at the Century of Progress on the Saturday previous to October 2, and that a hospital record was made, based upon those facts. That record disappeared. It is not contended, however, that the employer would have' been liable for such injury, if one occurred at the Century of Progress.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 9, 367 Ill. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-indemnity-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1937.