Miller v. Acme White Lead & Color Works

164 N.W. 432, 198 Mich. 435, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 901
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1917
DocketDocket No. 20
StatusPublished

This text of 164 N.W. 432 (Miller v. Acme White Lead & Color Works) 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
Miller v. Acme White Lead & Color Works, 164 N.W. 432, 198 Mich. 435, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 901 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

As plaintiff in certiorari says, there is a single point involved in this case, and states the point as “whether or not the testimony was sufficient and legally competent to justify an award to the claimant by the committee on arbitration, and thereafter an affirmance of said award by the industrial accident board.”

Claimant’s decedent received an injury to his foot June 5, 1916, when a wagon wheel passed over it, or struck it. Such injury as he then received was acci[436]*436dental, and the injury arose out of and in the course of his employment. The nature and extent of the injury is, however, uncertain, growing out of the fact, I assume, that because counsel for the employer admitted there was an injury to the foot “as described in the report of the accident, and therefore they need produce no proof on that as there is no question about it,” more detailed evidence was not produced. The report was that a truck which he "had just finished loading, in turning around, backed over his foot, and the foot was bruised. On the other hand, the claimant, in giving notice to the employer, stated the nature of the injury as follows:

“Whilst loading company’s truck, the horses shied, and wheel of truck crushed his right foot.. Blood poisoning caused his heart failure.”

A physician who saw the injured man June 6th, 7th, and 8th testified that when he first saw him it was evident that first aid had been given to him. He did not examine the injury then. The second time, June 7th, he was complaining of distress in his chest and could not keep quiet, the foot was bothering him and pained him. Then he opened the bandage, and found that the foot “was bruised or crushed more or less.” Because he thought his heart was palpitating, and of other symptoms, he gave the patient digitalis and bromide. Among other subjective symptoms was delirium, which the doctor describes as “vague in his ideas and thoughts, and then, if you would call his attention to it, why, he was all right.” The record is not clear, but it is understood as meaning that the doctor found high blood pressure and some hardening of the arteries. On June 8th he advised him to go to a hospital, and he went to one, where he died June 16th. The doctor who saw him June 6th, 7th, and 8th never saw him again; except by hearsay knows nothing about the progress of the trouble, the death of the injured [437]*437man, or the cause of death. It is upon the testimony of this physician that claimant must rely to support the conclusion of the board that claimant’s decedent died as a result of the injury.

Before examining it further, reference is made to the only other medical testimony in the case and the only other testimony which assumes to give details from which a conclusion as to the cause of death can be drawn. It is the testimony of the physician who performed the autopsy upon the direction of the coroner, and who never had seen the patient alive. He testified that the coroner told him to be careful in his examination because there was a history of an injury, and that “he may have died from injury.” He found, he says, a large bedsore on the dead man’s back, slight abrasion of the right elbow, the right foot discolored and swollen, and some abrasions of the right foot. Internally he found a hardened liver, hypertrophy of the heart and myocarditis, with a lesion of the mitral valve. He reported death from myocarditis. Describing conditions as he found them in greater detail, he said there was a thickening of the mitral valve, with discoloration, the muscle walls of the heart thin, and a fibroid change in the muscle, deposit of little white spots throughout the muscles of the heart, tending to weaken the heart muscle — conditions due to organic trouble. He described myocarditis as follows:

“Myocarditis is a condition of the heart which really means weakened condition of the heart muscle, usually found as a rule in patients past 40; comes on late in life. May be 'traceable to alcoholism, to hard work, and possibly to syphilis and acute infectious disease, whereby certain organisms are lodged in the heart muscle; sometimes due to valvular disease and hardening of the arteries; sometimes due to a hereditary condition. Sometimes we find families who develop hardening of the arteries very early in life, and that.condition very often causes myocarditis. Now, in myocarditis we have an injured heart, a flabby heart; the heart [438]*438muscle thins, and a fibrous connective tissue is deposited in the muscles, in place of the muscle tissue, and thereby weakens the heart.”

He looked for and found no blood clots, and was unable, he.said, to trace the trouble from which the man died to the injury he received. Referring to the injury to the foot, he testified:

“Of course, there would be some change in the foot, because I didn’t see him until the 16th, and repair had evidently started to take place, and the foot was in a better condition then than it was when Dr. Jaeger first examined the condition. '
“Q. There undoubtedly was some pain to that foot?
“A. Yes.
“Q. There undoubtedly was some fever connected with it?
“A. It was possible.
“Q. Would those conditions have anything to do with weakening the condition of the heart; would it be apt to make it worse?
“A. As I said before, it might aggravate the condition a little.”
“Mr. Vandeveer: Would that be great or slight, Doctor?
“A. Oh, I would not say it would be very great.
“Q. Well, it wouldn’t need to be very great to kill a person if the heart was in bad shape, would it? Sometimes a slight aggravation there will—
“A. That is possible. A slight change might have produced his death.
“Q. A slight aggravation in. this case would have caused that, wouldn’t it?
“A- Possibly; yes, sir.”

The testimony of this witness was read over to, or was read by, the physician who first examined.the injured man, before which time he was told that myocarditis had been given as the cause of the patient's death. He had suggested as a cause of death an em-bolus, thrombus, blood clot, and suggested no other cause.' Upon that subject he gave considerable testimony. Some of it is here set out:

[439]*439“If an embolus — in other words, I had better put that so you can understand it — an embolus is a clot of blood. For instance, if a clot of matter which may become dislodged from the source of the infection where the primary injury was may have been taken up into the blood stream, pass through the heart and into the coronary arteries, and become lodged in there, and in that way stop the flow of blood by blocking it up. It in itself would form an infection. Of course, there are other things that might cause myocarditis, such as syphilis and tuberculosis, but it is usually from some infected source.
“Q. Was this man suffering from syphilis or tuberculosis?
“A. No, sir; not that I could tell. I have no evidence of that.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 N.W. 432, 198 Mich. 435, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-acme-white-lead-color-works-mich-1917.