Husa v. Department of Labor & Industries

146 P.2d 191, 20 Wash. 2d 114
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1944
DocketNo. 29088.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 146 P.2d 191 (Husa v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Husa v. Department of Labor & Industries, 146 P.2d 191, 20 Wash. 2d 114 (Wash. 1944).

Opinion

*115 Robinson, J. —

This appeal was taken by the department of labor and industries from a judgment rendered upon a. jury verdict, accompanied and supported by the following answers to special interrogatories propounded by the trial court:

“We the jury in the above entitled cause do find as follows:
“Interrogatory No. 1. Has the disability of the plaintiff, if any' been aggravated after January 12, 1938, and before June 10, 1940, as a proximate result of the injury of July, 1937? Answer: Yes.
“Interrogatory No. 2. Has additional disability, if any, resulting from plaintiff’s injury been discovered since the closing of his claim on January 12, 1938? Answer: Yes.
“Interrogatory No. 3. What, if any, stated, in percentage, was the extent of his disability on June 10, 1940, proximately resulting from his injury of July, 1937? Answer: 100%.”

The trial court entered judgment remanding the claim to the department, with instructions to reopen it and proceed in accordance with the jury’s verdict and findings.

The appellant says, in its brief:

“Mr. Husa’s case was for aggravation, and the burden upon him was to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he had an aggravation of the original injury.”

That was his burden in the court below. But in this court, since the case was tried to a jury and the jury found a verdict in his favor, the question of preponderance is no longer involved. If there is in the record competent, substantial, and believable evidence in support of the verdict, the judgment entered ill accordance therewith must be affirmed, for the scope of our review is limited by chapter 184, Laws of 1939, p. 579,- §1, Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), § 7697-2 [P. C. § 3488-21], as construed by Alfredson v. Department of Labor & Industries, 5 Wn. (2d) 648, 105 P. (2d) 37, and many subsequent decisions. It is not for us to say what testimony should be given credence or what evidence should be disbelieved.

There has been transmitted to us, as the statute requires, the complete department claim record, consisting of a *116 great many documents, letters, reports of medical examinations, etc. It is our understanding, however, that all that went to the jury was the testimony taken in the rehearing by Examiner Jackson, acting for the joint board,' together with the exhibits then and there introduced. These exhibits and the testimony so taken, less those portions shown by the statement of facts to have been stricken upon claimant’s trial motions, constitute the record which we are called upon to review.

We shall not attempt a complete statement of the evidence, especially that adduced by the department, for we have arrived at the conclusion that there is competent and substantial evidence in the record which supports the answers which the jury returned to the interrogatories. If that be so, the evidence relied upon by the department, no matter how preponderant or persuasive, is not strictly material to our inquiry. It will, however, be necessary to outline it at least, in order to show the background of the case.

Claimant Husa was born in Norway about fifty-nine years before the date of the hearing, and came to this country about thirty-six years prior to the occurrence of the injury which resulted in his claim. In June, 1937, while employed by the West Fork Logging Company, he plunged headfirst from a tree, a distance of about twelve feet, striking his chest upon a limb which was projecting from the ground. He was paid time loss until January 12, 1938. He claims, however, that he was then unable to go to work, but attempted to do so the following July, and the company would not reemploy him on account of his physical condition. He testified that his condition kept getting worse.

In September, 1938, Husa made a claim, based on aggravation, which was denied. He again petitioned in February, 1940. This petition was denied during the following June, and the claimant then appealed to the joint board, which directed its examiner to take the testimony now under review. At the hearing, claimant claimed to be *117 suffering physically as a result of the injury, in that he had pains in his back and shoulders, and particularly severe and disabling pains in the back of his head, and was at all times dizzy and unable to do any kind of work. The chief difficulty in the case results from the fact that the medical men who have examined him can find no physical conditions which would cause such symptoms. This applies even to the expert who testified in his behalf and upon whose testimony the answers given by the jury must be based.

There was evidence introduced, and upon which the department relies, that the claimant was mentally unbalanced and had delusions long prior to his injury. It is testified that he claimed to have invented the talon fastener and to have discovered the principle which resulted in the invention of the caterpillar tractor. He was also accustomed to talk to his fellow loggers about the lost island of Atlantis, a tale that has been told since Solon, heard it from the Egyptian priests centuries ago, and taken seriously in later times by such men as Montaigne, Buff on, and Voltaire, and even by moderns, when the elaborate and intricate carvings on the Mayan temples were uncovered and found to be almost identical in form and design with those on the temples and monuments of ancient Egypt.

According to the testimony adduced by the department, claimant had a delusion that it was possible to communicate with the dead, having derived this idea from the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg. But that same belief (or delusion, if delusion it is) did not prevent Sir Arthur Conan Doyle from creating Sherlock Holmes or from writing an historical work which has been translated in twelve languages, or Sir Oliver Lodge from being ranked as one of the great physicists of his time. Nor did the fact that Swedenborg believed in such communications prevent him from being ranked as one of the greatest intellectuals of all time. See Encyclopedia Britannica (11th ed.), p. 221. It is said that Samuel Coleridge, Robert Browning, Thomas Carlyle, and Henry Ward Beecher were *118 profoundly influenced by his writing, and it is significant that Emerson, in writing his series of essays on representative men, chose for his subjects Plato, Shakespeare, Montaigne, Goethe, Napoleon, and Swedenborg.

It appears also that claimant’s fellow workmen thought him unbalanced because he was a vegetarian, and also because he sometimes walked in his sleep. Particularly significant in their eyes was his belief in reincarnation. The effect of that in convincing his fellow workmen that he was insane was graphically put by one of them, as follows:

“About the only thing he ever talked about when he talked to any one was something on that order [reincarnation].

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Bluebook (online)
146 P.2d 191, 20 Wash. 2d 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/husa-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1944.