Matter of Connelly v. Hunt Furniture Co.

147 N.E. 366, 240 N.Y. 83, 39 A.L.R. 867, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 703
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 147 N.E. 366 (Matter of Connelly v. Hunt Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Connelly v. Hunt Furniture Co., 147 N.E. 366, 240 N.Y. 83, 39 A.L.R. 867, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 703 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Cardozo, J.

Claimant's son, Harry Connelly, was employed by an undertaker as an embalmer’s helper. In the line of his duty, he handled a corpse, which by reason of the amputation of a leg had become greatly *85 decayed and was full of gangrenous matter. Some of this matter entered a little cut in his hand, and later spread to his neck when he scratched a pimple with the infected finger. General blood poisoning set in, and caused his death. His dependent mother obtained an award for death benefits. The Appellate Division reversed, and dismissed the claim.

“ ‘ Injury ’ and ' personal injury ’ mean only accidental injuries arising out of and in the course of employment and such disease or infection as may naturally and unavoidably result therefrom ” (Workmen’s Compensation Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 67], § 2, subd. 7). A trifling scratch was turned into a deadly wound by contact with a poisonous substance. We think the injection of the poison was itself an accidental injury within the meaning of the statute. More than this, the contact had its occasion in the performance of the servant’s duties. There was thus not merely an accident, but one due to the employment. We attempt no scientifically exact discrimination between accident and disease or between disease and injury. None perhaps is possible, for the two concepts are not always exclusive, the one of the other, but often overlap. The tests to be applied are those of common understanding as revealed in common speech (Lewis v. Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, 224 N. Y. 18, 21; cf. Van Vechten v. Am. E. F. Ins. Co., 239 N. Y. 303, 307). We have little doubt that common understanding would envisage this mishap as an accident, and that common speech would so describe it. Germs may indeed be inhaled through the nose or mouth, or absorbed into the system through normal channels of entry. In such cases their inroads will seldom, if ever, be assignable to a determinate or single act, identified in space or time (Matter of Jeffreyes v. Sager Co., 198 App. Div. 446; 233 N. Y. 535). For this as well as for the reason that the absorption is incidental to a bodily process both natural and normal, their action presents itself to the mind as a *86 disease. and not an accident. Our mental attitude is different when the channel of infection is abnormal or traumatic, a lesion or a cut. If these become dangerous or deadly by contact with infected matter, we think and speak of what has happened as something catastrophic or extraordinary, a mishap or an accident (cf. Lewis v. Ocean A. & G. Corp., supra, at p. 21), though very likely a disease also. “A common sense appraisement of everyday forms of speech and modes of thought must tell us when to stop ” (Bird v. St. Paul F. & M. Ins. Co., 224 N. Y. 47, 51).

If Connelly’s death was the outcome of an accident,. as we think indisputably it was, only a strained and artificial terminology would refuse to identify the accident with the pernicious contact and its incidents, and confine that description to the scratch or the abrasion, which had an origin unknown. On the contrary, when a scratch or abrasion is of itself trivial or innocent, the average thought, if driven to a choice between the successive phases .of the casualty, would find the larger measure of misadventure in the poisonous infection. The choice, however, is one that is needless and" misleading. The whole group of events, beginning with the cut and ending with death, was an accident, not in one of its phases, but in all of them. If any of those phases had its origin in causes engendered by the employment, the act supplies a remedy.

We think this reading of the statute is well supported by authority. The earlier cases on the subject are decisions by the House of Lords. Brintons, Ltd., v. Turvey (1905 A: C. 230) held that there was an “ injury by accident,” where a bacillus passed from wool to the eye of a workman, and infected him with anthrax. That judgment, in some of its aspects, was quoted with approval by this court in Lewis v. Ocean Accident & G. Corp. (supra) where the controversy had to do, however, not with a claim under the statute, but with a policy of insurance. There was reiteration and extension of the *87 ruling in Innes v. Kynoch (1919 A. C. 765), a case identical in its essentials with the one before us now. An abrasion of the knee, the origin of which was unknown, became infected in the course of work, and a remedy was Sustained. In our own court, Horrigan v. Post Standard Co. (224 N. Y. 620) was a case where a workman who had cut one of his fingers was poisoned through an infection suffered while cleaning out a urinal, and Hart v. Wilson & Co. (227 N. Y. 554), a case where a puller of wool, suffering from eczema of the hands, became a sufferer from tetanus as the result of germs which entered the system through the cracks in his skin. Matter of Jeffreyes v. Sager Co. (198 App. Div. 446; affd., on opinion below, 233 N. Y. 535) is cited to the contrary, but it differs in important features. There the employee of a photographer, who dipped her hand in a developing solution many times a day for more than a week, was poisoned and lost a finger through the gradual action of the chemicals. The claim was disallowed. The contacts were voluntary, and the process of absorption was through channels of entry both natural and normal. More important, however, the injuries resulted from no occurrence which is referable to any particular moment of time which is definite ” (198 App. Div. 447). The ensuing injuries were thought to be an occupational disease.

We make little progress when, viewing infection as an isolated concept, and ignoring its channels of attack or the manner of its coming, we say, upon the authority of science, that infection is a disease. It may be this, and yet an accident too. This is distinctly recognized in section 48 of the statute, if it might otherwise be doubtful; Sunstroke, strictly speaking, is a disease, but the suddenness of its approach and its catastrophic nature have caused it to be classified as an accident (Ismay, Imrie & Co. v. Williamson, 1908 A. C. 437, 441; Gallagher v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 163 App. Div. 556; 221 N. Y. 664; Matter of Murray v. Cummings Construction Co., *88 232 N. Y. 507). Tuberculosis is a disease, yet if it results from the sudden inhalation of poisonous fumes, it may also be an accident (Matter of O’Dell v. Adirondack Electric Power Co. 223 N. Y. 686). A like ruling has been made where some extreme and exceptional exposure has induced pneumonia or rheumatism (Coyle v. Watson, Ltd., 1915, A. C. 1; Glasgow Coal Co., Ltd., v. Welsh, 1916, 2 A. C. 1, 10).

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.E. 366, 240 N.Y. 83, 39 A.L.R. 867, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-connelly-v-hunt-furniture-co-ny-1925.