Johnsen v. Standard Cap & Seal Corp.

198 A. 534, 16 N.J. Misc. 206, 1938 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 17

This text of 198 A. 534 (Johnsen v. Standard Cap & Seal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnsen v. Standard Cap & Seal Corp., 198 A. 534, 16 N.J. Misc. 206, 1938 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 17 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Á formal petition having been filed in the above matter, claiming compensation by the petitioner against the respondent under and by virtue of the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation act of New Jersey, with supplements and amendments thereto, and an answer having been duly filed and the case being noticed for trial, and the parties appearing before me at Jersey City, and testimony being taken in my presence on February 18th, March 9th, March 16th and March 23d, 1938, I find and determine as follows:

1. The petitioner testified that while working for the respondent on February 14th, 1936, he sustained an accident while taking a heavy roll of cardboard from a truck. He was struck in the region of the right groin and felt a sharp pain, and after a few minutes, continued to work and worked approximately an hour and a.half, when he stopped work and went home. He did not go to work the following day, which was Saturday, and when he awoke that day, he noticed, in the region of the right groin, a swollen condition, and felt sharp pain, so that he was unable to arise without great pain. He showed his father the condition, and remained at home that day and Sunday. On the following day, Monday, he [207]*207reported the accident and was sent to the company doctor, who examined and treated him, but a further condition developed so that he was eventually sent to New York, where he was operated upon by Dr. Greenberger at the Manhattan General Hospital. After leaving the hospital, he received treatment from Dr. Greenberger, and when finally discharged from treatment, he returned to the respondent’s plant for work, but was sent to a Dr. Klemes, who, in turn, sent him to the Yorkville Clinic of the New York City board of health for examination. Subsequently, he was sent to the board of health clinic in Bay Bidge for examination, and eventually, on July 12th, 1937, he was sent to the Kingston Avenue Hospital, in Brooklyn, New York. He stated that previous to his accident, he was athletic, active and in good health, and at one time was enrolled in a military camp. He stated that in the spring of 1936, he commenced losing weight, lost his appetite and energy, and perspired easily, and also developed a cough; in the summer, he felt weak in addition to having the other symptoms, so that he would go to the beach in the afternoon and lie in the sun, sleeping, most of the time. Ho stated that in November and December of 1936, he obtained some work before Christmas in a department store in Brooklyn, but did not work steadily, and one day noticed a pain and swelling on the left side of his groin, which seemed to him similar to that which he had on the right side immediately after the accident. He further stated that he again had developed a cough at this time, and when the condition appeared on his life side, he sought medical aid, and eventually, he was sent to the Kingston Avenue Hospital, from which he was discharged on February 10th, 1938. He states that now his appetite and weight are better, and that he does not feel so weak as when he entered the hospital, but he is entered in the Municipal Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Otisville, New York, for treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis which he has, and his right lung is partially collapsed by artificial pneumothorax.

2. All the medical records, including the records of Manhattan General Hospital, Kingston Avenue Hospital, and the [208]*208Yorkville and Bay Ridge clinics of the New York City department of health, together with the X-ray photographs taken in said hospitals and at said clinics, were introduced into evidence by consent.

3. On behalf of petitioner, Dr. George R. Horton testified. He was one of the attending physicians who treated the petitioner at the Kingston Avenue Hospital, and he also testified as an expert urologist. He expressed his opinion that the accident of February 14th, 1936, caused an activation of a dormant tubercular condition, first in the right epididymis, and then spreading to the left seminal vesicle, vas deferens and epididymis, and that the active tubercular condition as it now existed was directly attributable to the accident. He stated that in his opinion, the petitioner had been discharged from the hospital as improved, but was in need of sanitorium treatment.

4. On behalf of petitioner also testified Dr. Israel Kaufman. He also treated petitioner as attending physician at the Kingston Avenue Hospital, and testified as an expert on tuberculosis. He expressed the opinion that prior to the accident, there was a latent or dormant tubercular infection, with a focus in the right lung, and that the trauma of February 14th, 1936, activated the tubercular condition in the right groin, and from there, through the blood stream, the infection spread and activated the pulmonary tuberculosis, causing the existing tuberculosis and disability. He stated that the petitioner had received artificial pneumothorax treatment at the Kingston Avenue Hospital, and that, in his opinion, the pneumothorax treatment should be continued, and that sanitorium treatment was required.

5. Dr. Joseph Koppel also testified on behalf of petitioner. He testified as to his examination, and in answer to a hypothetical question propounded to him, he stated that, in his opinion, the existing tuberculosis was the result of the accident of February 14th, 1936, by activation of a dormant tubercular condition.

6. On behalf of petitioner, lay witnesses testified as to their observance of the petitioner and the condition of health [209]*209previo as to February 14th, 1936, and his decline in health thereafter, during 1936 and 1937.

T. On behalf of respondent, Dr. Watrnan testified as the original attending physician immediately following the accident. Fie testified as to his treatment and his reference of tile case to Dr. Greenberger.

8. Dr. Greenberger testified, on behalf of respondent, as to his examination of the petitioner on April 14th, 1936; that he found a tuberculous epididymitis on the right side, and that he operated upon the petitioner on April 28th, 1936, removing the right epididymis and vas deferens. He also testified that lie treated the petitioner after the operation, and discharged him from treatment in the latter part of July, 1936. He stated that when he discharged the petitioner, the petitioner’s condition was the same as it was previous to the accident, and that there was no activation of any underlying or local condition by the accident.

9. On behalf of the respondent, Dr. Pollack also testified as to an examination made by him, and in answer to a hypothetical question, expressed his opinion that the petitioner had an underlying tubercular condition, with the focus In the right lung. Further answering that question, he testified that it was not a case of haematogenous tuberculosis, and that although the trauma to the particular location of the right groin might have activated a tubercular condition, yet, in his opinion, the generalized tubercular condition was not in any way affected by the accident and has progressed of itself, as a primary condition.

I have carefully considered all the testimony before me, and hereby determine and find as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 A. 534, 16 N.J. Misc. 206, 1938 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnsen-v-standard-cap-seal-corp-njlaborcomp-1938.