Industrial Commission v. Nelson

186 N.E. 735, 127 Ohio St. 41, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 316
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1933
Docket23859
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 735 (Industrial Commission v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Commission v. Nelson, 186 N.E. 735, 127 Ohio St. 41, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 316 (Ohio 1933).

Opinion

Matthias, J.

This case comes into this court from the Court of Appeals of Stark county upon the allow *42 anee of motion for certification of the record. That court found that the court of common pleas had erroneously directed a verdict in favor of the Industrial Commission and against Ruth Smith Nelson, the plaintiff in that court, who was seeking an award of compensation upon appeal from the action of the Industrial Commission, which had disallowed her claim. The verdict was directed by the court of common pleas at the close of plaintiff’s case upon the ground that the injury sustained by the husband of the claimant, resulting in his death, did not arise out of his employment, and for that reason there could be no award to her from the workmen’s compensation fund.

The facts are not in controversy. The plaintiff’s husband, while in the course of his regular and usual employment, was seized with an epileptic fit which caused him to fall. His head struck the corner of the iron or steel base of a large spot welding machine, at which he was then working, which caused a concussion of the brain and resulted in his death the following day. These facts were conceded by counsel for the Industrial Commission in his statement of the case. A motion by plaintiff for a directed verdict in her favor, based upon such statement, was overruled. The question of law presented by these facts is whether such injury is compensable under the Workmen’s Compensation Law.

The injury was sustained in the course of the workman’s employment. Did it arise out of his employment? It is well settled that the workmen’s compensation fund does not and cannot cover any injury which has its cause outside of and disconnected with the employment, although the employee may at the time have been engaged in the work of his employer in the usual way. Fassig v. State, ex rel. Turner, Atty. Genl., 95 Ohio St., 232, 116 N. E., 104. It was essential also that the employment have some causal connection with the injury, either through its activities, its condi *43 tions, or its environments. Industrial Commission v. Weigandt, 102 Ohio St., 1, 130 N. E., 38; Grabler Mfg. Co. v. Wrobel, 125 Ohio St., 265, 181 N. E., 97. These decisions provide the test that must be applied.

The contention of counsel for the Industrial Commission rests upon the view that, by reason of the physical infirmity of the workman which caused him to fall, the injury which he sustained as a result of the fall into or against the machine with which he was working was an injury which had its source outside of and disconnected with the employment, and that his employment had no causal connection with the resulting injury.

The weight of authority is contrary to this view. If the injured workman fell from a scaffold or ladder or stair, or into the hold of a ship, even though the fall was induced by a fit or seizure or other idiopathic condition of the workman, there is practical accord upon the proposition that the resulting injury arose out of the employment. Good reason will not support any distinction between the numerous decisions supporting recovery in such cases and the instant case.

In Bow’s Case, 231 Mass., 348, 121 N. E., 19, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts had before it a suit under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of that state. Exemption was claimed on behalf of the Industrial Board upon the ground that the workman had suffered a physical collapse by reason of which he fell into the machinery with which he was working. That court held that the cause of the fall was the remote cause, and that the dominant and proximate cause of his death was the fall itself, which placed the body of the employee in such relation to the revolving parts of the machine as to cause his death, citing other supporting Massachusetts cases, and announced its conclusion that the injury arose out of and in the course of the employment.

In a more recent ease, the same court had before it *44 a situation more nearly in point. Cusick’s Case, 260 Mass., 421, 157 N. E., 596. An employee fell upon a stairs during the course of his employment and sustained injuries from which he died. It was held that his death was compensable under the Workmen’s Compensation Act notwithstanding the fall occurred during an attack of epilepsy. The workman died from a fracture of the skull resulting from the fall. The court held that, if the employee was not subject to epilepsy, and fell down stairs during the course of his employment, the dependents could recover compensation, and it reasoned that the fact that he suffered from epilepsy should not bar recovery, since the protection of the statute is not limited to employees who are in good health, and' that the condition of health has no more to do with the question than the lack of ordinary care, or the employer’s freedom from simple negligence. Supporting its conclusion, the court quotes from another of its decisions, Madden’s Case, 222 Mass., 487, 111 N. E., 379, L. R. A., 1916D, 1000, as follows: “It is the injury arising out of the employment and not out of disease of the employee for which compensation is to be made. Yet it is the hazard of the employment acting upon the particular employee in his condition of health and not what that hazard would be if acting upon a healthy employee or upon the average employee. The act makes no distinction between wise or foolish, skilled or inexperienced, healthy or diseased employees. All who rightly are describable as employees come within the act.”

A similar question was before the Supreme Court of Connecticut in the case of Gonier v. Chase Companies, Inc., 97 Conn., 46, 115 A., 677, 19 A. L. R., 83. The very concise question presented there was whether the death of the workman resulting from a fall from staging about eleven feet above the surface, caused by temporary unconsciousness due to disease, constituted an injury arising out of his employment. In the con *45 sideration of the question that court reviews numerous eases, as a result of which it announces its conclusion, “that the danger of falling and the liability of resulting injury was a risk arising out of the conditions of his employment; that the proximate cause of the injury was the fall, and of the fall, the indigestion. ’ ’

In a case before the Supreme Court of Illinois, Rockford Hotel Co. v. Industrial Commission, 300 Ill., 87, 132 N. E., 759, 19 A. L. R., 80, it was contended that an epileptic fit caused the workman to fall into a pit of hot cinders, and, though so severely burned that he afterwards died, it was urged that the seizure was the direct cause of the injury, and that it therefore did not arise out of his employment.

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Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 735, 127 Ohio St. 41, 127 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-commission-v-nelson-ohio-1933.