Ruegamer v. Haynes Stellite Company

167 N.E.2d 725, 130 Ind. App. 695, 1960 Ind. App. LEXIS 140
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1960
Docket19,222
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 N.E.2d 725 (Ruegamer v. Haynes Stellite Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruegamer v. Haynes Stellite Company, 167 N.E.2d 725, 130 Ind. App. 695, 1960 Ind. App. LEXIS 140 (Ind. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Myers, J.

This is an appeal from an award by the Full Industrial Board of Indiana (hereinafter called the Board) wherein it determined that Joseph D. Ruegamer, appellant herein, did not sustain an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment with appellee, and denied appellant’s claim for compensation.

These proceedings were initiated by appellant filing an Application of Injured Employe to the Industrial Board for the Adjustment of Claim for Compensation, which Application is known as Form No. 9. In it he alleged that he had received personal injuries as the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment with appellee on April 28, 1956.

The hearing took place before a Single Hearing Member of the Board in Kokomo on October 22, 1957. Evidence taken from the record reveals that appellant was a man 53 years of age and had worked for the appellee since July 24, 1952. He was making an average weekly wage in excess of $55 per week. His job was the operation of a sandblast machine. On April 28, 1956, his machine broke down and he was transferred to a cleaning table or scabbing bench. This job involved the cleaning or scabbing of burrs off freshly-cast gears. These gears had been previously deposited in a large metal pan. It was customary for two men to lift the pan and place it upon the table so that the gears would be available for cleaning. The pan full of gears weighed from 200 to 300 pounds. The gears themselves weighed from one-fourth to one-half pound each.

*698 Appellant testified that after he had been transferred to the scabbing- bench on April 28, 1956, he and a fellow-worker, Frank Gordon, lifted a full pan of gears weighing about 300 pounds from the floor and set it on the table. As they did so, he said that “something snapped” and it felt like “a million needles going through my body.” From then on he did not know what happened. He said he “blacked out.” Five lay witnesses who were fellow-workers described the incident, including Frank Gordon. They said that he was working at the bench when he started shaking, became rigid, his eyes rolled back, he got cold and frothed at the mouth. He was taken to the dispensary on a stretcher where a nurse said his color was ashen, pale and blue; that his facial muscles were twitching, as were his hands and arms. She testified that she inserted a tong-ue plate in his mouth to prevent him from swallowing his tongue.

Appellant testified that he remembered nothing after lifting the pan. He stated that he had one previous “blackout” on February 8, 1956, while pouring gravity metal in the foundry. He had lifted a heavy pouring pot containing molten metal about chin-high when he “blacked out.” He was taken to First Aid then and later drove his car home. A day or so afterward he returned to work.

Following the April 28, 1956, incident he did not return to work. The back of his neck, right arm, and down into his right leg were “practically paralyzed.” He claimed to have constant headaches and loss of shoulder motion with progressive pain. There was demonstrable weakness of his right hand and he was unable to lift it to feed himself properly. He was placed under the care of specialists and spent several weeks in a hospital in Kokomo for observation pur *699 poses, and later in a hospital in Cincinnati. At the time of the hearing a doctor declared he was 40 per cent, impaired as a whole.

Three physicians testified on behalf of appellant, being Dr. E. T. Stahl, an orthopedic specialist, Dr. Earl Applegate, and Dr. Frank II. Mayfield, a specialist in neurological surgery of Cincinnati. They were all of the opinion that appellant’s disability was primarily a conversion hysteria. Dr. Mayfield defined the term as a “psychogenic or functional illness” or words “usually used to describe an illness in which a psycho fear or anxiety is converted into a somatic or organic disability.” He further stated that in the process which led up to the fainting spell, or that followed the fainting spell, appellant had sustained a neck strain which was painful. Upon this was superimposed an anxiety or state of fear of impending death or disability that led to a conversion hysteria which disabled him.

Two physicians testified on behalf of appellee. They were Dr. John Robert Van Kirk, appellant’s family doctor, and Dr. John Heatherington, a neuro-psychiatrist of Indianapolis. They agreed that appellant experienced an epileptic or convulsive seizure on the date of the accident. Dr. Van Kirk had examined him at his home afterward, because he had gotten sick at work, “as he had said, he had a spell.” On examination he noticed that appellant had chewed his tongue. This doctor had been attending appellant since 1950, and testified that appellant had had similar episodes dating back to August, 1951. In fact, Dr. Van Kirk stated at the hearing that appellant had seizures in his office on April 30, 1956. In the doctor’s opinion, there was no relationship between lifting the pan of castings and having a convulsion — it was only a “coincidence.”

On the basis of this hearing, and the evidence pre *700 sented therein, the Hearing Member found in favor of appellee and against appellant, deciding that appellant did not sustain an accidental injury in the course of his employment.

The Full Board reviewed the evidence and heard arguments of counsel. It sustained the Hearing Member’s decision and entered a final award accordingly.

Appellant’s assignment of error is that the award is contrary to law.

In Points One to Four of Argument in his brief, appellant states that the award must be sustained by substantial evidence, and that appellee’s evidence fails to meet this rule; that the appellant sustained an accidental injury, being a strain, arising out of the course of his employment, which resulted in a nervous condition or a conversion hysteria; that such is a valid basis for allowing workmen’s compensation benefits; that there is no competent evidence to support the Board’s finding that any affliction appellant may have had was due to causes unrelated to his employment.

These Points of Argument appear to pertain to the sufficiency of the evidence. It has been held that an assignment of error that the award is contrary to the evidence presents no question where the judgment is negative. As Judge Crumpacker said:

“. . . the case is now before us upon an assignment of errors which, in purport, charges (1) that the award is contrary to law, and (2) that the award is contrary to the evidence. The latter assignment presents no question as it has long been settled law in this state that where a judgement is negative an examination into the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding upon which such judgment rests can avail the appellant nothing. . . .
*701 “The major question presented by the first assignment is whether the evidence in support of the appellant’s claim is so conclusive in character that a finding against him could have been arrived at only through exercise of improper considerations. Our decision on this question rests upon the application of one or the other of two principles of law which have become ingrained in our jurisprudence.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E.2d 725, 130 Ind. App. 695, 1960 Ind. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruegamer-v-haynes-stellite-company-indctapp-1960.