Mercep v. State Industrial Accident Commission

118 P.2d 1061, 167 Or. 460, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 30
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 P.2d 1061 (Mercep v. State Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercep v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 118 P.2d 1061, 167 Or. 460, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 30 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This appeal is prosecuted by the defendant, State Industrial Accident Commission, from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Matilda Mercep, based on the verdict of a jury awarding the plaintiff compensation on account of the death of her husband, Matt Mercep.

The defendant assigns error in the admission into evidence of certain statements made by the deceased *462 a short time before his death. They were admitted as dying declarations. The defendant contended in the court below, and contends here, that the evidence was hearsay. The question was raised on the trial by objections to the evidence, motion to strike the testimony from the record, and motion for a directed verdict.

Mercep died on July 4, 1939. The alleged dying declarations were made while he was sick in a hospital in Hillsboro following an operation for hernia. Two or three days before his death he made the following statement to a friend, John Sarabacha:

“He cleaned up a place for cutting for falling timber, that is all he said. There was a limb on the way and he picked that limb and threw it to one side; he says he stepped, when he grabbed that limb, and he stepped on a windfall and his foot slipped; as quick as his foot slipped and threw the limb, just like a pain, pain him right in his stomach. ’ ’

He told his wife while in the hospital:

“He clean out brush and lift a chunk and slipped to the side, he got the pain.”

The precise date of this statement is not shown. Mrs. Mercep saw her husband four times while he was in the hospital, the first time on June 21, the last on ¡June 29. It was on one of these occasions that the statement was made.

Apart from one contention of the defendant, which we find it unnecessary to pass upon, it was a legitimate deduction from this evidence and other facts disclosed that the accident described, which arose out of and in the course of Mercep’s employment, was the proximate cause of hernia and subsequently of his death. On the other hand, plaintiff concedes that without the statements in question there is no proof of accidental injury and her case fails.

*463 Decision of the question requires examination of the whole of the testimony.

Matt Mercep was a logger employed by Alder Creek Lumber Co. in Washington county. Prior to June 7, 1939, he had no disability. On that day he complained to a fellow worker of pain in the lower right side. On June 9 he consulted a physician to whom he made the same complaint. On June 19 he was admitted to Jones hospital in Hillsboro, and the next day was operated on for hernia. He ran a fairly normal course until about the eleventh day after the operation when he developed a thrombophlebitis in the iliac vein on the left side, which caused severe pain. On July 4 he left the hospital against the advice of the attending physician and the manager of the hospital, having first signed a writing relieving them of responsibility for his act. He was taken to his home, a distance of about nine miles, in an automobile. As he entered the house he collapsed, and ten minutes later died. The undisputed immediate cause of death was a blood clot or clots which lodged in the pulmonary artery and blocked the circulation of the lungs. It is explained in the medical testimony that a thrombus is a clot of blood which forms in a vessel during life, while an embolus is that same clot of blood, or a portion of it, which becomes detached and is carried through the circulatory system to some point where its caliber or diameter is greater than the vessel in which it finds itself and where it lodges. If that is a vital spot death ensues. The cause of death in this case is known as pulmonary embolism.

•The medical testimony is further agreed that the embolism which caused death had its origin in the thrombus or blood clot which had formed before death *464 in the decedent’s iliac veins, the region in which phlebitis or inflammation of the veins had developed.

There is no testimony that thrombus, located as this one was, could in and of itself cause death. It has in it the potentialities of death on account of the danger that it may break loose and start on its journey through the blood stream.

Dr. Warren C. Hunter, a pathologist who performed the autopsy, was of the opinion that Mercep’s getting up was “a most potent factor in the cause of death”. As to whether pulmonary emboli would have resulted had he remained in bed, he said that he did not know.

Dr. Louis K. Poyntz, who assisted at the autopsy as the representative of the plaintiff, conceded that where a man has thrombosis the medical profession recognizes that rest is the cure since there is danger that activity may cause the blood clot to become detached. He also conceded that the thrombus usually absorbs if the patient remains quietly in bed. But he insisted that in this case the clot probably would have broken loose whether Mercep remained in bed or not, explaining that the microscopic examination showed that the clot had softened and that no one could say whether embolism was caused by movement or by the softening process. He thought that a purely speculative question. Dr. Hunter testified that the thrombus had developed before the patient left the hospital, and it was his opinion that the “whole process (i. e., of the embolism) may have occurred in a few minutes time or it could have been a few hours”. Dr. Poyntz testified that there is no way of telling how long it would take the clot to work its way through the vessels and through the blood stream to the pulmonary artery where it lodged.

*465 The medical testimony is further in agreement that enforced rest following the operation for hernia was the probable cause of the thrombus.

Mercep’s attending physician was Dr. Archie Pit-man, who performed the operation. It was his testimony that the patient ran a normal course until the eleventh day after the operation, which would be July 1, when phlebitis set in, and that he was at no time in a critical condition while in the hospital save that the phlebitis was a potent source of danger without quiet and rest.

The hospital chart fails to disclose that Mercep was either in a serious or critical condition while in the hospital. There is a record of gas distress for four days following the operation, and of pain in the chest which Dr. Pitman diagnosed as a mild attack of pleurisy. This subsided, and there was no more pain apparently until the patient began to suffer pain in his left leg, caused by phlebitis, on the eleventh hospital day, which was June 30. In the cross-examination of Dr. Pitman it was brought out by counsel for plaintiff that Mercep was emotional and a hard patient to control. He answered the following question on cross-examination in the affirmative:

“And a person of that nature and temperament suffering from these gas pains and the tightening of the bandages might be driven to the point where you might say he was just crazy, isn’t that true?

Dr. F. J.

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Bluebook (online)
118 P.2d 1061, 167 Or. 460, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercep-v-state-industrial-accident-commission-or-1941.