Powers Storage Co. v. Industrial Commission

173 N.E. 70, 340 Ill. 498
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1930
DocketNo. 20231. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 70 (Powers Storage Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers Storage Co. v. Industrial Commission, 173 N.E. 70, 340 Ill. 498 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Cook county confirmed an award of the Industrial Commission on account of an accidental injury in favor of Peter Ballauer of $3750, a pension of $25 a month for life and $81 for medical services, and the employer, the Powers Storage Company, prosecutes this writ of error to reverse the judgment of confirmation.

The occurrence which was the basis of the award happened on May 9, 1928, when Ballauer, while engaged in the work of his employer, suffered a stroke of paralysis. He fell on the cement floor of the room in which he was working, his head striking the floor. He was unable to rise. The only witness of the fall was Henry Mitzelfeld, who was working in the same room and called down the elevator shaft for help. Upon the elevator’s coming up Bah lauer was carried to it, brought down to the ground floor, and was then carried to an automobile and taken to a hospital. The questions argued are whether the fall caused the paralysis or the paralysis caused the fall; if the paralysis caused the fall, what caused the paralysis, and further questions in regard to objective evidence of the injury.

Ballauer began work for the plaintiff in error in 1924 moving furniture. On February 24, 1927, he was injured in the course of his employment while helping in the moving of a piano down some stairs, suffering a strain to his back in the lower lumbar region. As a result of that injury he was in a hospital for two weeks, following which he worked for about six weeks. After that he did not work for about a year. During about three months of that period he was treated by Dr. Beecher, and when he got rid of the symptoms of lame back the doctor concluded he was “back to normal,” though he still had some bad teeth which should have been removed. For the disability resulting from the injury received February 24, 1927, the defendant in error was paid compensation. He went back to work for the plaintiff in error on March 1, 1928, and worked that day, and afterward worked from April 18 to May 5. He was off from May 5 to May 9 because he did not feel well. On May 9 he weighed 165 pounds and was about thirty-eight years of age. He worked that morning with three other men moving pianos without mechanical aids. The first piano weighed between 700 and 800 pounds and was carried by the four men to the third floor, Ballauer carrying the heaviest corner. There was no window in the hallway at the top of the stairs, and Ballauer was out of breath, breathing heavily and felt weak, with all his strength gone. During the rest of the morning the four men moved five other pianos, one weighing 750 pounds, which was carried to the second floor of a flat-building. Ballauer in each instance carried the heavy corner of the piano. Moving these six pianos occupied the forenoon. Ballauer felt all right at dinner and ate a good, hearty meal at a place near the warehouse. When he returned to the warehouse he was told to go to the fourth floor to help Henry Mitzelfeld roll up rugs. He walked to the fourth floor and reported to Mitzelfeld, asking him where the rugs were. Mitzelfeld pointed them out lying against the wall, and Ballauer began to pick them up one at a time, stooping as he did so, and to carry them out on the cement floor and spread them out. He had done this with three or four rugs and went over to pick up another, when he had, as he expressed it, “a funny feeling all over” and fell down. On cross-examination he said that he was dizzy at the time he said he had a funny feeling. Things got black before him. He felt funny all over and then fell down. When he fell he bumped his head. He did not notice anything about his arm or leg before he fell, but as soon as he fell he noticed that they were of no use. No mark was left on the defendant in error’s forehead by reason of its striking the floor — at least no one testified that there was — and Dr. Inman testified that he found no discoloration or evidence of trauma in any respect. Ballauer had been in the room about ten minutes when he fell. Mitzelfeld testified that Ballauer did not handle any of the rugs but when he came into the room started to get the naphthalene pail, got it, and then began to stagger, fell on his side and worked himself toward the wall, calling, “Henry! Help me up! Get my leg up! I can get up if you help me with that leg.” Mitzelfeld illustrated the character of Ballauer’s fall, as stated in the abstract, thus: “I saw Pete fall. Just before he fell he was shaking, and then he keeled over. He went down sideways. He was standing about like this, [demonstrating,] and he got pale, and he started to go like this,” [demonstrating by lying on the floor]. The arbitrator describes the witness’ action by saying, “He shook and fell down, and he was still shaking when he fell down.” The witness demonstrated again, saying : “The minute he came in he walked around like this, and he grabbed a pail and he looked funny, and he staggered like this, and he went along and he went down like this.” He was asked by the arbitrator, “Did his head go against the wall?” and answered, “Yes, he was up against the wall.” Dr. Beecher, at the request of the arbitrator, described the fall as follows: “I would say the witness described a slow falling, of a convulsive type.” And Dr. Inman: “I describe it as convulsive staggering, which appeared as though he was losing control of his limbs, and more of a slumping than a fall; just a collapse; a falling as an article without any support; just a slumping down. He lit on his back and evidently he struck his head against the wall. From the description it would be the back of his head he struck, if anything.” Dr. Beecher was Ballauer’s witness and Inman plaintiff in error’s.

The room was about 50 feet wide by 75 feet long and the windows were all closed. Ballauer testified that as soon as he went in he smelt naphthalene, which is a compound in flake or liquid form, used by sprinkling on the rugs as a moth preventive. The odor was there and a pail of the naphthalene was in the room. When Ballauer smelt the naphthalene “a funny feeling came over” him. Mitzelfeld testified that no naphthalene had been used there on that day. The fact that the paralysis affected the left side showed that the hemorrhage or thrombosis which caused the paralysis was on the right of the brain, and through neurological localization it was deduced that it was in the region of the internal capsule of the right side of the brain. There has been some improvement in Ballauer’s condition, but he remains incapacitated for work and will probably always be so. He is married and has one child, who was seven months old when Ballauer testified.

It may be conceded that the fall and the bump on the head were not of such a character as would ordinarily have produced the hemiplegia from which Ballauer was suffering. Still it does not follow that the paralysis did not arise out of the defendant in error’s employment. Three-fourths of the record in this casé is taken up with the testimony of medical witnesses, and much more than three-fourths of that three-fourths consists of the answers of physicians to long hypothetical questions, framed with reference to presenting the case to the witness most strongly in accordance with the views of the respective counsel. The experts called by the plaintiff in error, in answer to the hypothetical question propounded by its counsel to them, answered that in their opinion there was no causal connection between the facts stated in the hypothetical question and the hemiplegia of the defendant in error.

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173 N.E. 70, 340 Ill. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-storage-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1930.