Parker v. Industrial Commission

5 P.2d 573, 78 Utah 509, 1931 Utah LEXIS 40
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1931
DocketNo. 5126.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 573 (Parker v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Industrial Commission, 5 P.2d 573, 78 Utah 509, 1931 Utah LEXIS 40 (Utah 1931).

Opinions

ELIAS HANSEN, J.

On August 22, 1930, Martha Parker filed an application with the Industrial Commission of Utah whereby she requested that compensation be granted to her and her minor children because of the death of her husband, Wm. J. Parker. She alleged that her husband’s death, which occurred on November 13, 1929, was caused by an accident and injury which he received on October 17, 1929, in the course of his employment by Fred Johnson at his mine in Bingham Canyon, Utah. Hearings were had before the Industrial Commission upon the application, and compensation was denied. Mrs. Parker prosecutes this proceeding to review the action of the commission in denying compensation.

It is admitted by all parties to this proceeding that the applicant and her minor children were dependents of Wm. J. Parker at the time of his alleged injury and death; that Mr. Parker was employed by Fred Johnson at the time in question; that Fred Johnson was an employer of labor subject to the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Comp. Laws 1917, § 3061 et seq., as amended); and that he carried insurance with the state insurance fund at the time of the alleged accident.

This controversy arose over the commission’s findings “that the death of William J. Parker was not the result of an injury sustained on October 17, 1929, while employed by J. Fred Johnson” and “on November 13th, 1929, the said William J. Parker died, the cause of death, as stated in the Death Certificate signed by W. R. Tyndale, M. D., being Staphylococcic Septicemia; Contributory: Broncho Pneumonia.” It is urged on behalf of plaintiff that these findings are contrary to the evidence, and that the evidence produced *511 before the commission was such that the commission was bound to find that Mr. Parker died as a result of an injury which he received in the course of his employment.

We are thus required to examine the evidence which is brought here for review in so far as such evidence sheds light upon whether the deceased was or was not accidentally injured in the course of his employment, and, if so, whether such injury did or did not cause or contribute to his death.

Andrew C. Micholson testified that he was working with Mr. Parker on the day of the alleged injury and prior thereto; that Mr. Parker appeared to be in good health; that, while engaged in hoisting some timber about a week before the accident complained of, Mr. Parker was hit somewhere on the back with a small piece of timber, but that he went on working and did not complain of any injury; that about 2:80 or 3 o’clock p. m. on October 17, 1929, while he and Mr. Parker were engaged in dumping a car which was loaded with waste from the mine, the car slipped and came back, and Mr. Parker said that he got “kinked”; that he immediately sat down and complained of pain in the left groin; that he was pale and appeared to be sick; that he did not do any more work that day and did not return to work thereafter. The evidence shows without conflict that Mr. Parker became sick on the day of the alleged accident, and that he grew progressively worse until his death on November 13, 1929. He remained at his home for a few days, and was then removed to the County Hospital and later to the L. D. S. Hospital. A. J. May testified that he was a partner of Fred Johnson; that he was in charge of the work at Bingham, but the insurance policy was taken in the name of Mr. Johnson; that on October 19, 1929, he was at the mine in Bingham where he saw Mr. Micholson, who informed him that Mr. Parker was not at work but that he was “laid up with rheumatism in his legs”; that Mr. Micholson did not report that Mr. Parker had met with an accident; that a day or two after that Mrs. Parker called Mr. May, who went down to see Mr. Parker who was in terrible pain and very sick; that Mr. Parker then stated *512 that he thought he had strained himself in lifting or dumping a car while working at the mine.

Mrs. Parker testified that prior to October, 17, 1929, Mr. Parker was in good health; that on the evening of that day when he came home he was sick and complained of pain in the back and stated to her that he had strained himself in dumping a car at the mine.

Three doctors testified before the commission.

Dr. W. R. Tyndale testified that he was called on October 26, 1929, to see Mr. Parker in consultation with Dr. Hatch; that they discovered in a few days that Mr. Parker

“had a swollen, tender, left kidney area. He was yelling with pain and had to be under the influence of opiates all the time to relieve the pain. * * * After some days he developed a bronchial pneumonia and died. The autopsy showed that he had a large abscess of the left kidney and that he had bronchial pneumonia with multiple abscesses in the lungs, from which was recovered a pure culture staphylococcus, showing that the pneumonia was due to the same thing that had been in his blood stream and was in his kidney. The history we got was that some weeks before this he had had a boil on his arm. The boil was healed up at the time of this second illness, and that the second illness was due, in the minds of both the patient and his wife, to an injury * * * in the mine.”

Dr. Tyndale further testified that, if Mr. Parker had been hit in the region of the kidney with a timber, such injury may have very easily contributed to produce septicemia ; that the abscesses in the kidney were of longer duration than the abscesses in the lungs; that septicemia may come from boils, but it is not very frequent, and

“that an injury of this sort to a specific organ that is below par, puts that organ still further below par and renders it more liable to infection. If Mr. Parker had a septicemia, which I doubt, then the injury was a deciding influence. I think the injury was of very great moment in his case, because he was apparently quite well before the injury, and was never well after the injury, and he kept on having pain until his death. The autopsy shows a big abscess, and there is no question but that there is a relation between the injury and the death.”

*513 On cross-examination, Dr. Tyndale stated that ordinarily a strain does not injure a kidney, but a strain may be such as to tear some part of the kidney; that, if Mr. Parker slipped and twisted while lifting on a car, it might produce a strain on a kidney, and that there is no doubt but men do hurt the internal organs by lifting. The doctor stated that germs may flow in the blood stream and not be doing any damage, but a patient with septicemia is not able to work. He said:

“It is fair to say this, that if nobody had told me anything about the accident I should have thought that this man could have gone on and died without any accident, but when there is a history of an accident, and a man is unable to work from the time of the accident, then it is quite fair to say that the accident is the predisposing cause in the subsequent chain of effects.”

Dr. Tyndale reported to the state board of health that the cause of Mr. Parker’s death was “Staphylococcic Septicemia; Contributory: Broncho-Pneumonia.”

Dr. L. N. OSsman testified that he made a careful examination of Mr.

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5 P.2d 573, 78 Utah 509, 1931 Utah LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-industrial-commission-utah-1931.