Quinn v. Henry Becker & Son, Inc.

21 A.2d 617, 19 N.J. Misc. 508, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 76
CourtNew Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau
DecidedJuly 28, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 617 (Quinn v. Henry Becker & Son, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinn v. Henry Becker & Son, Inc., 21 A.2d 617, 19 N.J. Misc. 508, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 76 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

[509]*509*******

There appears to be no dispute with respect to the employment of the petitioner by the respondent on the dates of the respective occurrences, nor is there any serious controversy that he met with an accident that arose out of and in the course of his employment with the respondent, Henry Becker & Son, Inc., on December 14th, 1937. The primary question presented for determination is whether the petitioner’s disability, the extent of which does not find any substantia] difference of medical opinion, is due to said accident or whether the incident of July 17th, 1939, if it is to be legally construed as an accident within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, is to be charged with the resultant disability. Ordinarily, the same employee and employer being involved, it would be of only academic importance to decide this question. However, separate compensation carriers, who were respectively on the risk on the two aforementioned dates, have been joined in the two petitions as party respondents, and it thus becomes essential in order to adequately adjudicate the rights and obligations of all the parties here involved, to resolve that issue.

The evidence discloses without dispute that on December 14th, 1937, the petitioner was engaged in his regular work with the respondent as a driver of a milk truck. At about 8:00 A. M. that morning, while descending from his truck carrying a case of milk, he missed his step and fell, striking and injuring his right hand. The petitioner’s hand became swollen, caused him considerable pain, and subsequently the injured member showed some ecehymosis. Ho was directed to the New Jersey Manufacturers’ Hospital Association, where X-rays were taken and medical treatment was administered until December 22d, 1937. At first, petitioner’s hand was bandaged and later a leather strap was applied to his wrist which he has worn regularly since. He returned to work with the aid of a helper for about ten days and thereafter performed his usual duties without assistance. The testimony indicated, however, that during the interval between December 14th, 1937, and July 17th, 1939, the hand would become stiff on occasions and that he suffered a considerable weakness [510]*510and loss of power in that member, so much so that objects did from time to time slip out of his fingers. Moreover, he also experienced difficulty in grasping objects.

On July 17th, 1939, during the course of his employment with respondent, the petitioner, while attempting to pick up several empty milk bottles, suddenly felt his right hand “give out,” after which further medical treatment was required. Upon reporting said incident to his employer, he was again directed by the respondent to the New Jersey Manufacturers' Hospital pursuant to the terms of his compensation policy with the New Jersey Manufacturers' Casualty Insurance Go. in force on December 14th, 1937. The physicians in that hospital took an X-ray of petitioner’s hand, and then refused to treat the petitioner, claiming that the said injury was not due to or associated with the accident of December 14th, 1937. The respondent thereupon referred the employee to the Géneral Accident F. & L. Assurance Corp. under the terms of compensation policy in force on July 17th, 1939. This carrier, after an investigation and a physical examination by its physician, Dr. L. A. Cahill, refused to consider the injury as compensable as the result of an accident under the terms of its policy and contended that the condition was due to the accident of December 14th, 1937.

The petitioner was thus refused medical treatment by both insurance carriers, and the respondent, mindful of the statutory duty of the employer to furnish medical treatment to an injured employee, assumed that burden, and directed him to several hospitals, as well as physicians and specialists, who rendered various and extended medical services in an endeavor to relieve him of the disability from which he was suffering and restore normal function to the injured member. The respondent also undertook to and did pay compensation during the period of temporary disability from October 22d, 1939, to February 26th, 1940, a period of 24 weeks, at the compensation rate of $20 per week. Furthermore, the employer, at the termination of the fiscal year, reimbursed the petitioner for the difference between Ms compensation and his full wages. This excess is tó be considered as a voluntary payment on the part of the respondent.

[511]*511Ill short, we are confronted with two incidents, wherein a direct trauma was inflicted upon the petitioner’s right hand and wrist when he fell, and the other, also called “giving away” and generalized weakness of the same wrist while in the performance of an act similar in every respect to the work which he had been accustomed to do, namely the carrying of several milk bottles. As to the latter occurrence, there appears to be no accompanying untoward event or unusual exertion or effort. There is no question in my mind that the petitioner did sustain a compensable accident on December 14th, 1937. The undisputed fact that he fell on that date while carrying a case of milk and injured his wrist and hand following which he was treated by the New Jersey Manufacturers’ Casualty Insurance Co. at its hospital, in Newark, New Jersey, for that injury, and that thereafter he was obliged to wear a leather strap or support for liis wrist continually', renders this conclusion inescapable. It seems fairly evident from the testimony that the petitioner’s right hand, thus rendered weakened by the accident aforesaid, continued in that state up to the time of occurrence on July 17th, 1939. This is demonstrated by the necessity of his wearing a leather strap or support on that member in order to he able to perform the work required of him by the respondent. Without taking into consideration at this point the medical evidence, there is nothing in the testimony relating to the occurrence of July 17th, 1939, yvhich is capable of being construed an accident within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. There was no unusual incident, no fall, nor striking of the member against any object, or for that matter any untoward event which took place on the latter date. There was nothing which could reasonably justify that occurrence as the cause of tin; fracture of the scofoid bone. It was not different in any respect from his ordinary usual work which he had been accustomed to perform. He was merely in the act of picking up some milk bottles in the ordinary and accustomed manner, when his wrist and hand “gave out.”

The medical testimony leaves no doubt in my mind that the petitioner’s hand at the time of the incident of July 17th, 1939, was in a weakened condition. This was undoubtedly [512]*512due to the accident of December 14th, 1937. X-rays taken subsequent to July 17th, 1939, disclose an ununited fracture of the scofoid bone of the right wrist which was medically described as an old fracture of long standing. This fact alone in my opinion is persuasive of the thought that the occurrence of July 17th, 1939, did not cause that fracture. But more compelling is the medical testimony that the activities of the petitioner on July 17th, 1939, as described by the witness, could not, by any stretch of the imagination, produce the fracture found to exist. Only a direct trauma such as a specific striking the scofoid bone or the hand being bent backwards forcefully or some other violent occurrence could cause such a fracture. The incident of July 17th, 1939, could hardly have produced such a condition.

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Bluebook (online)
21 A.2d 617, 19 N.J. Misc. 508, 1941 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-henry-becker-son-inc-njlaborcomp-1941.