Knoxville Knitting Mills Co. v. Galyon

148 Tenn. 228
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 148 Tenn. 228 (Knoxville Knitting Mills Co. v. Galyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knoxville Knitting Mills Co. v. Galyon, 148 Tenn. 228 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

• The undisputed facts show that the defendant in error, while in the employ of the plaintiff in error, lost his left hand; that nineteen years prior thereto, and while not in the employ of the plaintiff in error, the defendant in error had a part of three fingers on his left hand severed. He seeks in this case to recover for the loss of his left hand.

The plaintiff in error contends that the value of the three fingers, previously lost, should be deducted.

Thé trial court declined to make any deduction, and in such refusal he was correct.

Section 20 of our Workmen’s Compensation Act (Pub. Acts 1919, chapter 123) is as follows:

“Be it further enacted, if an employee has previously sustained a permanent injury elsewhere than in the employment in which he sustains a subsequent permanent injury, he shall be entitled to compensation only for the [230]*230disability that would have resulted from the latter accident if the earlier injury had not existed, and such earlier injury shall not be considered in estimating the compensation on the basis of either a total or partial disability, to which the employee may be entitled under this act.”

This provision of the act is plain and unambiguous and expressly forbids any such deduction as is here contended for. Independent of the above statutory provision the weight of authority is against such deduction.

In Industrial Com. v. State Fund, 71 Colo., 109, 203 Pac., 216, the court said:

“The remaining question is whether claimant became •totally . . . blind by the accident at the Camp Bird mine when, as matter of fact, he was practically sightless in the right eye prior to such employment. There is nothing in our compensation statute requiring employees to be physically perfect in order to come within its provisions. Claimant, for practical ‘purposes, was blind in one eye when he entered the service of the Camp Bird Company. This, however, did not prevent him from doing the work which he was employed to do. His wages were the same as his fellow employees with perfect vision; the Camp Bird Company paid the same compensation insurance premium for him as for workmen with normal sight; no penalty whatsoever attached to him because he was practically sightless in one eye. When he lost the sight of his remaining eye in an accident arising out of "and in the course of his employment we are of opinion that he became totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of our Compensation Act.”

In Matter of Schwab v. Emporium Forestry Co., 216 [231]*231N. Y., 712, 111 N. E., 1099, an award for total disability was affirmed under the following facts, stated in the opinion, to wit:

“The claimant suffered an injury on July 6, 1914, while in the employ of the Emporium Forestry Company, the injury resulting in the loss of his right hand at the wrist. Many years before, in some way not disclosed by the record, the claimant had lost his left hand, not, however, while engaged in the same employment, nor while working for the said Emporium Forestry Company. The question at issue was: ‘Shall the claimant be awarded as for total permanent disability, as provided in subdivision 1 of section 15 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, or for permanent partial disability for a period of two hundred and forty-four weeks as provided in subdivision 3 of said section 15?’ ”

In Branconnier’s Case, 223 Mass., 273, 111 N. E., 792, the court, speaking through Chief Justice Rugg, Said: “The employee, a man who in 1910 had lost one eye, met with an injury in 1915 arising out of and in the course of his employment for a subscriber under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, whereby he lost the sight of his remaining eye. The question presented is Avhether there was error in refusing to rule as matter of law that the total incapacity of the employee could not be attributed to the injury of 1915, because made up in part of the result of a previous accident.

“The denial of this request was right. The employee, when he entered the service of the subscriber, had that degree of capacity which enabled him to do the work for which he was hired. That was his capacity. It was an [232]*232impaired, capacity as compared with the normal capacity .of a healthy man in the possession of all his faculties. But nevertheless, it was the employee’s capacity. It enabled him to earn the wages which he received. He became an ‘employee’ under the act and thereby entitled to all the benefits conferred upon those coming within that description. The act affords a fixed compensation of a limited time ‘While incapacity for work resulting from the injury is total.’ St. 1911, chapter 751, Part II, section 9, It establishes no other standard. It fixes no method for dividing the effect of the injury and attributing a part of it to the employment and another par.t to some preexisting condition, and it gives no indication that the legislature intended any such division. The total capacity of this employee was not so great as it would have been if he had had two sound eyes. His total, capacity was thus only a part of that of the normal man. But that capacity, which was all he had, has been transformed into a total incapacity by reason of the injury. That result has come to him entirely through the injury. In principle this case is concluded by the reasoning and the decision of Madden’s Case, 222 Mass., 487, where the subject of-pre-existing infirmities of the employee, as bearing upon the right and extent of compensation under the act, was discussed at large. Brightman’s Case, 220 Mass., 17.

“This conclusion is in harmony with Ball v. William Hunt & Sons, Ltd. (1912), A. C., 496; Lee v. William Baird & Co., Ltd., 45 Sc. L. R., 717, and Schwab v. Emporium Forestry Co., 167 App. Div. (N. Y.), 614. The statute under consideration in Weaver v. Maxwell Motor Co., 186 Mich., 588, appears to have been so different as [233]*233perhaps not to' make that decision inconsistent with our view. But if, and so far as it is inconsistent, we are constrained not to folloAV it.”

A case exactly in point is that of Mark Manufacturing Co. v. Industrial Commission, 286 Ill. 620, 122 N. E., 84, in which the court said: “Where, as a result of an injury, an employee has permanently lost the use of one hand, he is entitled to compensation for the loss at the rate fixed by statute; and the facts that one finger had been previously injured and partly amputated and that he might have recovered for that injury do not reduce the amount of compensation to which he is entitled.”

The court further said: “Though the defendant in error had previously lost a part of one finger he had the use of his hand, with a capacity somewhat reduced by reason of the defect. The fact that his hand was not perfect did not render its loss any less complete. As the result of his injury he has totally lost the use of the hand which he previously had, and under the statute he is entitled to compensation for that loss. (Wabash Railway Co. v. Industrial Com. ante, p. 194; In re Branconnier, 223 Mass., 273; Schwab v. Emporium Forestry Co., 216 N.

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148 Tenn. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knoxville-knitting-mills-co-v-galyon-tenn-1923.