Lundrigan v. City of Los Angeles

186 P.2d 12, 82 Cal. App. 2d 238, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1196
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 4, 1947
DocketCiv. 15730
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 12 (Lundrigan v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Lundrigan v. City of Los Angeles, 186 P.2d 12, 82 Cal. App. 2d 238, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1196 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

WOOD, J.

In this proceeding for a writ of mandate to compel payment of a pension to petitioner as the widow of a member of the Los Angeles Police Department, judgment was in favor of petitioner. Defendants appeal from the judgment on the ground that there was no evidence to sustain findings that there was a causal connection between the death of petitioner’s husband and injuries received by him while performing his duties as a policeman.

Section 183 of the charter of the city of Los Angeles provides that a widow of a member of the police department is entitled to a pension if the husband died “as a result of any injury received during the performance of his duty, or from sickness caused by the discharge of such duty.” Said provision requires that a causal relation, mediate or immediate, must be shown between the duty performed by the decedent and the immediate cause of death. (Platt v. City of Los Angeles, 72 Cal.App.2d 753, 754 [165 P.2d 714].)

Decedent was appointed a member of the police department on June 1, 1927, and continued to be a member of that department until the time of his death, February 24, 1945. During that period of time he received numerous injuries while performing his duties as a patrolman. He died at the age of 44, and the cause of death was carcinoma (a form of cancer) of the right kidney, with metastasis to the regional nodes and to the liver. Petitioner alleged that injuries received by decedent during the course of his employment in 1928, in 1934, and in 1941, were the direct and proximate cause of his death.

Petitioner testified that decedent was injured the first time in 1928 (when he was struck by an automobile), at which time he complained of pains across his back, right side and flank, and she does not remember how long he was off duty; that he was next injured in 1935, when he was struck by an automobile, at which time he complained of headaches and pains in his back and body where he had been hit; that the next injury occurred in November, 1943, when he was struck by an automobile, at which time he complained of pains over his left lung, his heart region, left shoulder and back and said *240 he ached all over; that at that time he was off duty about 24 days and in bed about two-thirds of the time; that from November, 1943, to November, 1944, he complained “a good deal of his back and kidneys and had vomiting spells”; that he entered a hospital November 20, 1944, where he was operated upon and where he remained until January 12, 1945; that he reentered the hospital February 5,1945, where he died on February 24,1945. (She further testified that she obtained a decree of separate maintenance August 11, 1942; that on August 22, 1942, decedent returned to their home and they lived together thereafter except for a period from the latter part of November, 1943, to Christmas Day of that year; that they were separated seven or eight months at the time the decree was granted but she saw him practically every week.)

A witness called on behalf of plaintiff testified that he had known decedent about 23 years; that they were very close friends and he visited decedent in his home about twice a month regularly; that decedent first complained to him of being in pain about 1935; that on several occasions during 1935, he complained to him about having pain in his back; that during 1936, he also complained about having a pain in his back, and on occasions he was lying on the couch with a heating pad on his back; that the next time decedent complained of pain to him was in 1939, when decedent said that his back hurt at times; that that was the last time he saw decedent; that decedent complained only about his back to the witness; that most of his visits to decedent were on Sundays, and he would say decedent was lying down 90 per cent of the times he visited him.

At the close of the testimony of these two witnesses the trial was continued until a later date, pursuant to a previous stipulation, to allow counsel for petitioner and defendants an opportunity to prepare a hypothetical question, which they would stipulate was a proper question, to be submitted to medical experts for study. One month later, and after the medical experts had had an opportunity to study the hypothetical question, the trial was resumed and two physicians were called as witnesses on behalf of petitioner and two on behalf of defendants. The hypothetical question was introduced as plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 and it consisted of:

(1) A résumé of a medical record of the receiving hospital of the city of Los Angeles, which showed decedent’s illnesses and injuries, diagnoses, treatment and time off duty from *241 November 18, 1927, to the time of his death, and which disclosed that among the injuries he had sustained while performing his duties as a policeman were the following:

January 9, 1928—Statement: Dragged by automobile. Diagnosis: Contusion with ecchymosis (black and blue marks), crest of ilium (top of hip bone), right, near anterior superior spine.

January 14,1929—Statement: Condition followed strain of right hip 1/9/28, making an arrest. Diagnosis: Left inguinal hernia.

September 28, 1928—Statement: Scratched by a prisoner. Diagnosis: 5 or 6 abrasions right wrist, volar surface.

October 21, 1930—Statement: Hurt finger on auto fender. Diagnosis: Fracture, distal phalanx, left little finger.

June 10,1931—Statement: Struck hand against auto fender. Diagnosis: Laceration left hand.

May 16, 1932—Statement: Struck by rear of auto. Diagnosis: Contusion, head of right fibula.

June 24, 1933—Statement: While directing traffic struck left hand on door of auto. Diagnosis: Contusion with swelling, dorsum of left hand.

August 20, 1934—Statement: Injured back of right hand and head while directing traffic. Diagnosis: Small hematoma, mid parietal. And contusion and abrasion dorsum right hand.

November 22, 1934—Statement; Left hand twisted and wrenched by steering wheel. Diagnosis: Sprain of left wrist.

April 15, 1935—Statement: Injured right hand pumping flat tire on police automobile. Diagnosis: One-half inch shelving laceration right hand web of thumb.

January 4, 1936—Statement: Handle of passing car door struck left elbow. Diagnosis: Contusion left arm near elbow, contusion ulnar nerve with paresthesis.

November 17, 1936—Statement: Strained back when reaching to get hold of person about to step in front of streetcar. Diagnosis: Lumbago.

December 28, 1936—Statement: Scratched hand on fender while marking tires.

November 5, 1937—Statement: Sprained back going upstairs at Central Station. Diagnosis: Sprain, left lumbar.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 12, 82 Cal. App. 2d 238, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lundrigan-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1947.