Millaley v. City of Grand Rapids

203 N.W. 651, 231 Mich. 10, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 575
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1925
DocketDocket No. 124.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 651 (Millaley v. City of Grand Rapids) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millaley v. City of Grand Rapids, 203 N.W. 651, 231 Mich. 10, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 575 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This is a proceeding by certiorari in which defendant seeks reversal of an award by the department of labor and industry to plaintiff, as widow of Dennis Millaley, for his claimed accidental death while in the service of the defendant city as a policeman. The deputy commissioner who conducted the arbitration proceedings found plaintiff was not entitled to compensation, but on her appeal to the full board an order was made by two of the commissioners reversing the deputy’s decision and awarding her compensation “at the rate of $10 per week for a period of 300 weeks, less 13 weeks and 2 days, for which compensation was paid to deceased during his lifetime,” $501.67 of which was found then due and ordered paid forthwith. Defendant’s grounds for denying plaintiff’s right to compensation are summarized as follows:

“1. Because any claim on the part of the claimant in this case is barred by the limitation provided by section 15, part 2, of the workmen’s compensation act, as amended by Act No. 64 of the Public Acts of 1919 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1922, § 5445), in that the claim is not made until more than two years after the date the injury was received.
“2. Because no claim was made against the city within six years from the date of the recovery of deceased from the first injury claimed, or from the date of the final settlement of all claims against the city, and because the same is barred under the general statute of limitations (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 12323).
“3. Because said Dennis Millaley was at the time of his injury a police constable and captain of police, an officer of the city of Grand Rapids and not an employee within the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act.
“4. Because the accident mentioned was not the *13 cause of the injury complained of in this case, it being claimed that the blood poisoning that resulted from the accident resulted in the injury now complained of, but not the accident itself.”

Dennis Millaley died February 13, 1923, when approximately 65 years of age, survived by plaintiff and their three grown children. The death certificate furnished by the physician who attended him in his last illness stated the cause of his death was “arteriosclerosis, general myocarditis degenerative.”

Deceased was a member of the police force of the city of Grand Rapids for 38 years prior to January 23, 1922, at which time he was retired on a pension of $50 per month which was regularly paid him by defendant until his' death. , With the exception of an illness from blood poisoning in 1916 incapacitating; him for duty for nearly three months, he was regularly on duty during the 38 years of his active service on the police force. He entered the service as police constable in 1884 and by promotion attained the rank of police captain in 1908, in which position he served on night duty from that time until his retirement. His hours of duty were from 6 p. m. to 3 a. m. During the night of March 27, 1916, while engaged in making an arrest, he sustained a bruise or abrasion of his left shin. On his return to police headquarters, he called the attention of the police matron to the abrasion. She took her “first aid kit” and dressed the injury. It did not then disqualify him for duty and he thereafter continued on active duty without loss of time until May 5, 1916, when it was found blood poisoning had developed. The physician with whom he had consulted sent him to a hospital and called another physician in consultation. They found a serious condition with abscesses formed along his leg. An anaesthetic was administered and the abscesses were opened in five different places. He remained in the hospital for about *14 two weeks and was then taken to his home where the physicians attended him until another abscess developed near the groin which they relieved by opening under an anesthetic. His regular physician visited him thereafter until about August 7, 1916, when he had sufficiently recovered to return to active duty at police headquarters although yet lame. He at first used crutches and rode in an automobile to and from the police station. Plaintiff testified he first used crutches and then a cane, saying “I should judge in all, the crutches and cane, six weeks.” After returning to duty he visited his physician’s office a few times. The latter said:

“I would see him, sometimes every day, on duty. I don’t remember how many times he called at the office after that; it was only for a little while, so to speak; he got well; he didn’t call at the office, but I would see him on the street and so on.”

On September 15, 1916, deceased gave notice to the city under the employers’ liability law of claim for compensation for injury received while in its employ and on the same date a “report” of the accident was made by, or for the employer “City of Grand Rapids, Board of Police and Fire Commissioners,” signed by H. W. Nelson, as “Secretary Board of Police and Fire Commissioners.” These papers were received by the industrial accident board on September 16, 1916. An agreement for compensation between the parties was entered into, signed by “Dennis Millaley” and “Board of Police and Fire Commissioners, by H. W. Nelson,” under which Millaley received full pay for all lost time and payment of the hospital and physicians’ bills. Settlement receipt and final report of the accident followed. The final report to the industrial accident board was made November 10, 1916, and showed, amongst other things—

“Date of final payment — October 25, 1916. Date *15 of accident — March 27, 1916, but worked until May 5, 1916. > Date of return to work — August 7, 1916.”

The compensation proceedings were in customary form on blanks required by the board to be .used, the printed instructions advising that “incomplete or indefinite reports will be returned for correction. * * * Incomplete reports will not be accepted.” The final report bears an indorsement or memorandum “(completed).” This settlement was made after deceased had resumed his duties and been on active service for some time. He remained on active duty as police captain for over six years thereafter. The police matron testified that when he first returned he was lame and used a cane, she did not remember how long but he got well and attended to his duties as usual, apparently cured of all his troubles, and from that time on he worked there for five or six years.

After the adjustment of his claim in full and final report in 1916 no further claim or complaint to defendant was made that Millaley was yet injuriously affected in any way as a result of that accident until after his death, when plaintiff began this proceeding claiming that the hardening of his arteries of which he died in 1923 was caused by the blood poisoning which resulted from the injury to his shin in 1916. She produced expert opinion testimony of physicians to the effect that although the symptoms of blood poisoning might be gone the attack of it which he underwent “would leave a residual effect,” tending to lower his mental and physical capacity, which “might be the sequela of an infection of this kind,” through which the cause of his death might be traced to blood poisoning which resulted from the accident. Upon that ultimate theory the conclusions of the medical experts were conflicting.

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Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 651, 231 Mich. 10, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millaley-v-city-of-grand-rapids-mich-1925.