Matter of Grammici v. . Zinn

114 N.E. 397, 219 N.Y. 322, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 828
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 114 N.E. 397 (Matter of Grammici v. . Zinn) 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 Grammici v. . Zinn, 114 N.E. 397, 219 N.Y. 322, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 828 (N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

Collin, J.

The claimant was awarded compensation at the rate of $5.77 weekly for a period of 244 weeks, for the equivalent of the loss of a hand. The Appellate Division by a decision not unanimous affirmed the award.

The Workmen’s Compensation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 67), in subdivision 3 of section 15, provides three rates of compensation relating to the hand. -The compensation shall he sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of the average weekly wages and shall.he paid to the employee for (1) the loss of a thumb, sixty weeks; the loss of a first finger, forty-six weeks; the loss of a second finger, thirty weeks; the loss of a third finger, twenty-five weeks; the loss of a fourth finger, fifteen weeks; the loss of the first *324 phalange of the thumb or finger shall be considered to be equal to the loss of one-half of such thumb or finger, and compensation shall be one-half of the specified amount; the loss of more than one phalange shall be considered as the loss of the entire thumb or finger; (2) the loss of a hand, two hundred and forty-four weeks; (3) permanent loss of the use of a hand shall be considered as the equivalent of the loss of such hand. The commission originally awarded one hundred and eight and one-half weeks in accordance with the first rate. Subsequently this determination was vacated and the third rate of two hundred and forty-four weeks was awarded. The appellants assert and argue that, under the facts, the first rate should have been awarded.

Under conditions making the Compensation Law applicable to the injuries, the claimant lost the first, second and third fingers and the first phalange of the fourth finger of his right hand. The evidence of the appellants tended to prove that neither the hand nor the use of it was lost. The evidence came from two physicians and three laymen. There was no contradiction of it unless the statement of a physician that the hand is useless in his vocation,” and that of another physician: “from vocation point of view, I consider this deformity equivalent to the loss of the use of a hand, ” constitute contradiction. In those statements, there was no contradiction. The fact, if it existed, that the injuries barred the claimant from the employment or the particular occupation or vocation he was engaged in when he received them does not, in and of itself, tend to prove that the hand or the use of it was lost. It is not within the letter or spirit of the law or the legislative intention that an injury to a limb or member of an employee incapacitating him for the particular employment should establish that he was incapacitated for employment permitting or involving the use of the limb or member as injured. It is a matter of common observation and knowledge that a *325 hand, arm, foot or leg incompetent, through injury, for certain employments is competent and useful for other employments, The expressions, “loss” and “loss of the use,” as used in the law, should be given their unrestricted and ordinary meaning. In the case at bar, the hand, or the use of it, was not lost, provided it could fulfill, in a degree fair and worth considering, in any employment for which the claimant was physically and mentally fitted or adaptive, its normal and natural functions. In case the hand was destroyed by amputation, directly or indirectly caused by the injuries, to such an extent that it could not thus fulfill its natural functions, it was, within the purview of the law, lost. (Sneck v. Travelers Ins. Co., 88 Hun, 94; affd., on opinion below, 156 N. Y. 669.) While the loss of a hand necessarily involves the loss of the use of it, the loss of the use of a hand does not involve the actual loss of the hand as a physical member — a distinction the law recognizes and observes. The question here was whether the first or second rate of compensation should be awarded. The uncohtradicted evidence established that the hand was not lost and that the first rate should be awarded.

The order appealed from should be reversed and the original award of one hundred eight and one-half weeks reinstated and affirmed, with costs to the appellants against the commission.

Hiscock, Chase and Cuddeback, JJ., concur; Hogan and Cardozo, JJ., dissent; Willard Bartlett, Ch. J., not voting.

Order reversed, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.E. 397, 219 N.Y. 322, 1916 N.Y. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-grammici-v-zinn-ny-1916.