Sanitary District v. Industrial Commission

175 N.E. 372, 343 Ill. 236
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 20126. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 175 N.E. 372 (Sanitary District 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
Sanitary District v. Industrial Commission, 175 N.E. 372, 343 Ill. 236 (Ill. 1931).

Opinions

Defendant in error, Rutherford B. English, on March 12, 1929, made application to the Industrial Commission for an award against plaintiff in error, the Sanitary District of Chicago, for personal injuries. The arbitrator found that he was entitled to $14 per week for 267 weeks, $12 for one week, and a pension of $25 per month for life. The award was confirmed by the Industrial Commission and by the circuit court of Cook county, and the case comes to this court on a writ of error. *Page 238

Several grounds of reversal are urged, but it will be necessary to consider only one of them, namely, whether or not the award is sustained by the evidence.

English was forty-nine years of age. He had been a locomotive fireman for about four years, a clothing cutter for about twenty years, a painter for seven or eight years and had been in the navy. With the exception of a few months he had been in the employ of the sanitary district since April, 1924. Most of that time he received $300 per month, but after January, 1928, he received $325 per month, and he was paid until June 7, 1928. On May 25, 1927, and for about two weeks prior thereto, he and other men had been repairing and painting a yacht belonging to the sanitary district, located at Thirty-first street and Western avenue. On the latter date he was standing in a flat-bottom boat at the stern of the yacht, painting a name on the vessel. The wind blew the boat in which he was standing and he fell into the water. He was a good swimmer and had been in the water the day before. He was in the water about a half minute when two fellow-workmen pulled him out. The day was fairly warm. He was taken into the cabin of the yacht, where there was a lighted cook stove. His wet clothes were taken off, he put on dry clothes, his wet clothes were dried in about an hour and a half, and he was taken home. He claims that as a result of the fall into the water he received such an injury and shock as totally incapacitated him and now confines him to his home and to his bed a greater portion of the time. After he got home he complained of having swallowed some water, and he complained of pains in his stomach, of shaking, trembling and feeling chilly. In the fall he received a slight cut on his right leg. Dr. Goodman dressed the leg the day after the injury and gave him an injection of typhoid serum. Dr. Griffith, his family physician, looked after him after that time. He returned to his work in about a week and continued in various employment until November, 1927, when *Page 239 he quit work and did not work for the district after that time. He claims he was not able to work after November, 1927. In June, 1928, while putting a screen in a window in his house he fell out of the window, struck his head against a stone window ledge and made a wound which had to be closed with five or six stitches. On September 21, 1927, he went to the Mayo Hospital for three days. During the summer of 1928 he visited a doctor in St. Louis.

Dr. Griffith testified that he had been the family physician for English for about fifteen years. He treated him for mal-nutrition. The case was diagnosed as lead poisoning, evidenced by discoloration of the gums. He was anaemic and nervous and had tremor of the hands six months before the accident. His weight at that time was between 135 and 140 pounds. Years before his weight had been 155 to 160 pounds. The doctor saw the patient once each month at his office. The treatment was for the purpose of building up the blood and curing the tremor. The patient did not respond to the treatment and his condition became progressively worse. He became chronically tired and nervous, which condition continued during the six months. The doctor testified that English called at his office a week or ten days after the accident. At that time he was run down, highly nervous, anaemic, had neuritis, and the doctor immuned him for typhoid fever. The doctor was not able to determine what caused this condition. He took English to a hospital and had a urine analysis and blood count. He told him he ought to have a Wasserman test, but he left the hospital the next night, before the test was made.

Dr. Scott, a specialist in treatment of traumatic cases, testified that he examined English on March 11, 1929, at his home. He found a marked increase in the deep reflexes bi-laterally and the patient was highly emotional and had an ataxic gait. A hypothetical question was put to the doctor *Page 240 covering many of the facts above stated, and he was asked whether he had an opinion, with a reasonable degree of medical certainty, as to whether there was a causal relationship between the accident of May 25, 1927, and the ill-being as stated in the hypothetical question. An objection to the question was overruled. His answer was that there might or could be a direct causal connection between the accident and the condition described in the hypothetical question. He testified that his answer was based on the conditions stated in the question and he made a personal diagnosis of the case. He found no sign of a syphilitic condition. On cross-examination he testified that he got a history of the case from English from the time of the accident to the date of the examination; that he did not say anything about having been sick or under a doctor's care before the accident; that he said he was a little nervous before that time; that he did not tell the doctor his blood count was low or that he was anæmic before the accident but did say he was nervous. He told the witness he had been able to carry on strenuous work for six months before the accident. The doctor got the history of the case from Dr. Griffith.

Dr. Stevens testified that on March 14, 1929, he made an examination of English at his home and told of the conditions which he found at that time. He was asked a hypothetical question substantially the same as the question put to Dr. Scott, and his reply was that there could be a causal relation between the facts as outlined in the hypothetical question and English's present condition. He testified that from the fact, as he had been informed, that English's decline began after the accident, the submerging in the water of the canal could, with reasonable medical certainty, aggravate a pre-existing nervous tension and increase it to a point where eventually he became disabled. On cross-examination he testified that English did not tell him he had a tremor of the hands before the accident or that he *Page 241 was anæmic or that he felt tired prior to the accident; that he said he felt highly nervous, upset and uneasy, and that he had difficulty in doing his work as he felt he should do it. The doctor testified that the ataxic gait might be due to syphilis, and a spinal test would be the means of determining whether or not English had syphilis, and if it was positive it would be conclusive; that a period of immersion in the water would make a difference if the temperature of the water was below the temperature of the air; that the fact that English fell out of the window and sustained an injury was not stated in the hypothetical question and he did not take that fact into consideration in his answer. He testified that he suggested that English take a test for syphilis; that the fact that Dr. Griffith sent him to a laboratory a year before and that the man left the laboratory before the test was made would be important in making a complete diagnosis.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
175 N.E. 372, 343 Ill. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanitary-district-v-industrial-commission-ill-1931.