Owens v. McGovern

131 N.E.2d 729, 309 N.Y. 449, 1956 N.Y. LEXIS 1061
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 131 N.E.2d 729 (Owens v. McGovern) 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
Owens v. McGovern, 131 N.E.2d 729, 309 N.Y. 449, 1956 N.Y. LEXIS 1061 (N.Y. 1956).

Opinions

Desmond, J.

The question of law is this: on the hearing of an application for accidental death benefits from the State Employees’ Retirement System under section 81 of the Civil Service Law based on an allegation that death was caused by a heart attack due to strain and exertion in State employment, and where there is proof of such strain and exertion and of a fatal heart attack, may the State Comptroller deny the application without permitting the applicant to introduce medical evidence of causation? Our answer is “ no ”.

Summarized, petitioner’s proof before the hearing officer was that her husband, forty-five years old, while working as a junior civil engineer for the New York State Department of Public Works, was required as a member of a survey party staking out a proposed right of way to climb up and down a steep slope at the time when the ground was icy and covered with snow, that during that work decedent complained of a chest pain and shortness of breath whereupon he was relieved of those particular duties, but that the next morning he suddenly died of an acute coronary thrombosis. The Comptroller rejected the widow’s claim, holding that her husband’s death was not caused by an “ accident ” within the meaning of section 81 of the Civil Service Law. The Appellate Division affirmed, stating that its reasons therefor were the same as stated by that court in Matter of Odell v. McGovern (283 App. Div. 585, affd. 308 N. Y. 678). The Comptroller, so the Appellate Division wrote,11 acted within the permissible range of his power in rejecting the claim”. In the Odell case (supra), the widow of a State-employed attorney who suffered a heart attack sought this same kind of death benefit from the State Employees’ Retirement System on the theory that the fatal attack was brought on by emotional stress and anxiety caused by his courtroom work in the employ of the State. In the Odell case, the applicant urged that the [452]*452Comptroller had erred in applying a stricter meaning to the word “ accident ” in the State Eetirement System Law than is applied by the courts in this same word in the Workmen’s Compensation Law. The Appellate Division in the Odell case, however, pointed out that the Employees’ Eetirement System statute itself (Civil Service Law, § 85, subd. b) says that a Workmen’s Compensation Board determination on the same facts is not binding on the Comptroller in passing on a claim such as this. In that Odell opinion the Appellate Division referred to Matter of McCadden v. Moore (276 App. Div. 490, affd. 301 N. Y. 760) as being a supposed authority for the application by the Comptroller in these cases of a more restricted meaning of the word “ accident ” than the meaning commonly applied in workmen’s compensation cases. The substance of the Appellate Division’s decision in the present case was, following the same court’s Odell decision (which we later affirmed without passing on the particular point), that the Comptroller was within his rights in holding as fact that the death of this petitioner’s husband was not “ the natural and proximate result of an accident sustained in the performance of duty ’ ’ in the State service (Civil Service Law, § 81, subd. a). The Appellate Division granted leave to appeal to this court, presumably to tender us the question of law as to applicable standards of proof in these Eetirement System accidental death claims where a heart failure is involved.

But it is impossible for us on this appeal to give a complete answer to the question of law discussed in the briefs since, for some reason not completely clear, there is no medical testimony whatever in this record. In the workmen’s compensation heart cases, of which we have had so many, there is usually no question but that the deceased workman underwent strain and exertion in the course of his duties. Ordinarily, too, in such workmen’s compensation cases there is no dispute but that claimant suffered a heart attack while at work or soon after-wards. The question in those cases is usually as to whether the exertion and strain of the work caused the heart attack so as to permit a finding of industrial accident. It is obviously impossible, given the other facts, to make such a causality finding, or to refuse it, without medical opinion proof. As Larson says in his “ Workmen’s Compensation Law ” the basic prob[453]*453lem is medical causality (Vol. 1, § 38.83). The nexus between the work strain and the heart failure cannot be assumed, any more than the trier of the facts can assume that there was no such connection. Consequently, in every workmen’s compensation heart case we have ever seen there was opinion testimony of causation. Whether or not that opinion testimony was directly controverted, it was for the trier of the facts to say whether or not he adopted the conclusion of the expert who testified for claimant. And there is, as we shall show, no essential difference between the proof requirements of workmen’s compensation fatal heart claims and similar claims against the Retirement Fund. But this present record can be read — and in fairness should be read — as containing a ruling by the deputy comptroller that he would not take and did not need medical testimony but would decide the question of accident or no solely on the description already in the record of what decedent had been doing at the time he suffered the alleged strain. Colloquy at the end of the hearing contains a statement by counsel for claimant that he was resting on the testimony already taken, but the rest of what he said at that point makes it plain that he was putting before the deputy comptroller, perhaps not very scientifically, his contention that he was entitled to offer, also, medical testimony of causation. The Comptroller, nevertheless, rejected the testimony and denied the claim.

While a claim of an “ accident ” consisting of heart injury from work strain cannot be sustained without medical testimony it is, of course, possible, theoretically at least, that a finding of “no accident ” could be made without such testimony. If the only testimony as to the work done showed that there was no particular strain or exertion, then, regardless of medical testimony and with or without it, the trier of the facts could, we suppose, say that ordinary, uneventful, placid routine work could not result in an “ accidental ” injury to a worker’s heart within any of the statutes or cases (see 1 Larson on Workmen’s Compensation, §§ 38.64, 38.83). But there had been put into this record testimony of unusually strenuous working conditions and so there should have been an opportunity for claimant to demonstrate by opinion testimony, if she could, that this strain and exertion caused the heart injury.

[454]*454Clearly there was adequate proof here of strenuous outdoor physical work by this forty-five-year-old engineer. In March, 1951, a contractor for a new road in the Bear Mountain area notified the State Engineer that the contractor was moving into a certain area where the State’s survey work had not yet been done and where it was necessary that this survey be made before the contractor’s work should disturb the terrain. Thus it became important that the surveying be done immediately and a survey team was assigned, made up of three junior civil engineers, including this decedent, and three other persons. The operation consisted of driving stakes by the use of sledge hammers and then taking and recording measurements, etc. Decedent was not taking notes but was, with the others, driving the stakes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 N.E.2d 729, 309 N.Y. 449, 1956 N.Y. LEXIS 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-mcgovern-ny-1956.