Saaf v. Duluth Police Pension Relief Assn.

59 N.W.2d 883, 240 Minn. 60, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 24, 1953
Docket36,013
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 59 N.W.2d 883 (Saaf v. Duluth Police Pension Relief Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saaf v. Duluth Police Pension Relief Assn., 59 N.W.2d 883, 240 Minn. 60, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 676 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Appeal by defendant from a judgment awarding plaintiffs certain pension benefits as dependents of a deceased member of the police force of the city of Duluth.

Plaintiffs are the surviving spouse and minor child of Donald Saaf, decedent. They brought this action to recover dependency pension payments from the defendant, the Duluth Police Pension Relief Association. The district court found that plaintiffs were entitled to recover and entered a judgment from which defendant appeals.

The defendant association is operating pursuant to L. 1943, c. 267, which provides that police pension associations such as defendant may pay disability and dependency pensions in such amounts and in such manner as its articles of incorporation, constitution, and bylaws shall designate but not exceeding certain limitations prescribed in the statute. Section 1 of c. 267 provides for the payment ■of a disability pension when a member of such an association “has been permanently disabled physically or mentally because of any injury received or sufered while a duly authorised member of such paid municipal police department so as to render necessary his retirement from active police service.” (Italics supplied.) Section 3 of c. 267 provides that dependency- pensions “shall be paid to any widow, or child under 16 years of age, of any such pensioned and retired member of the police department, or to any widow, or child ■under 16 years of age, of any member who dies while in the service of the police department of any such city, * * *.” (Italics supplied.) The defendant association’s purpose is to provide its members and their widows and children with pensions. The defendant concedes *62 that plaintiffs are entitled to receive a dependency pension if any injury suffered by decedent while a member of the Duluth police force caused him permanent mental or physical disability or if decedent was a member of the defendant association at the time of his death. The trial court made findings that decedent’s permanent disability and resulting death was caused by an injury received while decedent was on duty with the Duluth police department and also that the defendant association was estopped to deny that decedent was a member of the defendant at the time of his death.

We are concerned only with the issues (1) whether the evidence supports a finding that decedent, while a member of the police force, received a physical injury which was a proximate cause of his death and (2) whether upon the evidence the defendant association is estopped to deny that decedent at the time of his death was one of its members.

On March 7, 1947, the decedent, while on active duty as a police officer, was struck a stiff shoulder punch or blow on the right cheek' or jaw by a person who was under the influence of liquor. The blow received had no immediate disabling effect, and decedent continued his work as a police officer during the months following the accident. Early in the summer of 1947 decedent’s partner, who had been with him on the night of March 7, 1947, noticed that decedent’s left eyelid began to flicker and that decedent began to talk about his health, saying that it was good. About the middle of April 1948 decedent was seized with a convulsion. More convulsions followed, and decedent consulted Dr. S. E. Urberg on or about May 2, 1948, who made a diagnosis of a brain tumor. An operation followed for the removal of the tumor on May 17, 1948. Decedent convalesced at home for several months after the operation and then returned to his work as a patrolman on August 18, 1948.

Decedent continued to work until September 28, 1948, when he again was required to leave work because of a convulsive seizure. Bay Keating, then chief of police, suggested that decedent apply for a leave of absence. Keating brought the petition for leave to decedent’s home for him to sign and presented, the signed petition to *63 the civil service board for the city of Duluth. The leave of absence was granted by the board for a period of one year commencing November 3, 1948. Decedent’s wife, Mrs. Euth J. Saaf, testified that when Keating brought the petition to her home for her husband to sign he stated that he would extend the leave if necessary. Therefore, sometime in October 1949, when it became apparent that decedent would not be able to return to work prior to the expiration of his leave of absence on November 3, Mrs. Saaf wrote Keating requesting that the leave be extended if possible. She received an answer from the chief’s office stating that the appointing authority had no power to extend the leave of absence. No application for further leave was ever made to the civil service board. The decedent died on November 18, 1949.

We turn to the first issue which concerns the proximate cause of decedent’s death. There is much medical testimony in the record on the question of whether the brain tumor, which was the immediate cause of decedent’s death, was influenced in its development or aggravated by the blow received on the night of March 7, 1947. The evidence, however, clearly does not sustain a finding that the blow was the originating canse of the tumor. Dr. Urberg, plaintiffs’ medical witness, testified repeatedly that the cause of brain tumors is unknown. He stated that the area of an injury from a blow might provide a favorable situs for the development of a brain tumor and could influence a tumor’s rate of growth. He definitely could not say that the blow could have been an originating cause. On the other hand, Dr. Gordon J. Strewler, while corroborating Dr. Hrberg’s statement that the cause of brain tumors is unknown, testified that it has been definitely ascertained through experimentation that certain things will not cause brain tumors and that an astrocytoma tumor — the type which caused decedent’s death — ■ could not be caused by a trauma or blow on the head.

The question remains, however, whether the evidence sustains a finding that the blow aggravated a latent or pre-existing tumor and accelerated its growth. This question presupposes that the existence of the tumor, at least in latent form, antedated the blow sustained *64 on March 7, 1947. The evidence is wholly speculative- as to the time of its inception. Its inception may have been at a time even prior to 1941 when the decedent was discharged from the navy for medical reasons. 2 For the purpose, however, of deciding the issue of whether the evidence sustains a finding that the blow to decedent’s jaw aggravated a latent tumor and contributed proximately to its development so as to establish a causal connection between the injury to the jaw and the subsequent death, we need only assume that the tumor existed prior to March 7, 1947.

In passing upon the specific evidence regarding aggravation, it is to be noted that we are not here concerned with a case where death is so immediately, directly, or naturally -and probably the proximate result of the injury that any layman of average intelligence, Without the aid of a medical expert, would know from his own knowledge and experience that the injury was the cause of death. 3

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.W.2d 883, 240 Minn. 60, 1953 Minn. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saaf-v-duluth-police-pension-relief-assn-minn-1953.