Horn v. Industrial Accident Commission

276 P.2d 673, 128 Cal. App. 2d 837, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1547
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1954
DocketCiv. 8661
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 673 (Horn v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horn v. Industrial Accident Commission, 276 P.2d 673, 128 Cal. App. 2d 837, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1547 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

Petitioner Horn filed an application for adjustment of claim before the respondent commission. His application, made upon a form supplied by the commission, alleged that, while employed as a city fireman on September 12, 1953, by the city of Stockton, he sustained injuries arising out of and in the course of his employment, as follows: “Had pain in Chest Wall while working, resulting in Myocardial Infarction.” The evidence showed that petitioner was employed as a city fireman beginning May 25, 1924. He had worked as a hoseman, as a driver of the fire chief’s ear, and in the fire alarm office where he received alarms and participated in sending out the indicated men and equipment. In November, 1940, he suffered a heart attack and was absent from work for about 60 days. On his return he was assigned to what was apparently the lighter duty of driving and caring for the fire chief’s car. On September 17, 1953, he left work, and reported to the emergency hospital. He was examined by Dr. John T. McNally and told to go back to work. On September 28th he was examined by Dr. Virgil Gianelli, whose report was introduced in evidence. Substantially it was as follows: Petitioner complained of a burning substernal pain and shortness of breath on exertion. He said it first occurred September 12th when it awakened him and since that time he had had seven spells of pain, mostly during the night, lasting from 10 minutes to one hour, the most severe occurring three days before Dr. Gianelli’s examination. His past history showed that 12 years before he had been awakened by the same type of pain at 3 o’clock in the morning and that there had been a diagnosis then of myocardial infarction. At that time he was confined to bed for 60 days. Dr. Gianelli found him to be a middle-aged, slightly obese male, weighing 192 pounds stripped, temperature 98.6, lungs clear to auscultation, blood pressure 130/90, pulse 80, no heart murmurs audible, no varicosities of extremities, blood count and urinalysis well within normal limits. We quote the following from the report:

“The important finding was on the exercise electrocardiogram when we followed Masters technique to detect coronary *839 artery insufficiency. Using the two step method, patient complained of shortness of breath and the same burning sensation in the anterior chest area after forty such steps. Electrocardiogram run at that moment showed an ST depression in Standard Lead 1 of 2 mm, as well as in the Precordial Unipolor Leads, 2 through 6, the greatest depression occurring in V4, where there the ST depression measured 3 mm.”

Dr. Gianelli found that petitioner was then subject to an impending myocardial infarction and accordingly adopted prophylactic treatment consisting of hospitalization and medical treatment designed to thin the blood and prevent the formation of embolisms. The doctor stated that under this treatment petitioner was improving. Hospitalization lasted about two weeks and thereafter, since petitioner again complained to the doctor that he suffered the same discomfort when walking a block or so and stated that if he took nitroglycerine he got relief, he was put on an implementary program of dicumeral. Dr. Gianelli testified that the coronary insufficiency from which he found petitioner to be suffering was normally a degenerative disease which might worsen with the passage of time. When asked if a man’s work and environment might have something to do with the cause of this disease, the doctor stated that in his personal opinion the cause was unknown and henee he could not, as a medical witness, answer the question. He said, however, that responding to fires and strenuous activity over a long period of time, that is, for many years, would have a precipitating effect on the disease. He said that strain or excitement could precipitate an attack, but an attack so precipitated would occur soon after the strain. For example, he said that “stress today would not cause a heart attack two years from now.” He said further than any emotion or physical strain was apt to precipitate a heart attack if the subject had a coronary heart disease. He said that when he examined petitioner he found him suffering from coronary insufficiency .and believed, because of the increasing frequency of his pain, that a coronary infarction was impending. Describing the coronary insufficiency which he found, the doctor testified as follows:

“A coronary artery is an artery that furnishes blood to the heart muscle, and normally, the amount of blood that any given artery can furnish is adequate for normal or average activity that human beings are subjected to and an insufficiency would be a situation in which said artery would be *840 incapable of furnishing that given amount of blood in a given period of time to properly nourish the muscle of the heart.”

Petitioner testified that he left the department September 28, 1953, because of his heart; that although he had improved he still had chest pains after excitement or exertion; that back in 1946, when he transferred to the alarm office, he had heart pains and shortness of breath on running or going upstairs. An assistant department chief testified as a witness for petitioner that there was considerable excitement in handling the work in the alarm office and that it was often referred to in the language of the firemen as “a squirrel cage”; that petitioner had complained of chest pains as far back as 1941 when he had his first attack; that in 1946 or 1947 he and petitioner had responded to a four-alarm fire and that petitioner had then complained to his captain that when an alarm came in he would have pains and depressed feelings; that he had complained about pains in his chest before he went off the job in September. A captain testified that for 14 to 16 months he had noticed that petitioner was slowing down; that at times he would ask the captain to take over; that during the last week of his employment he complained “I can’t take it,” and when he made these complaints would put his hand on his chest; that such incidents occurred from time to time and sometimes occurred on emergency calls; that on September 12, 1953, when he complained to the captain while on duty, his breath was very short and rapid.

Labor Code, section 3600, provides that liability for compensation exists against an employer for any injury sustained by his employee, arising out of and in the course of his employment where both employer and employee are subject to the compensation provisions of the code. With respect to members of city fire departments, section 3212 provides that the term “injury” includes “heart trouble” which develops or manifests itself during a period while such member is in the service of such department, and that such “heart trouble” so developing or manifesting itself shall in such eases “be presumed to arise out of and in the course of employment.” This presumption is declared to be disputable but the code provides that unless it is controverted by other evidence the commission is bound to find in accordance with it.

When petitioner had presented to the commission the foregoing evidence he had amply shown that heart trouble *841 had manifested itself, not once, but on many occasions during the period of his employment as a member of the Stockton City Fire Department. He had shown by the testimony of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 673, 128 Cal. App. 2d 837, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1954.