Singlaub v. Industrial Accident Commission

262 P. 411, 87 Cal. App. 324, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5749.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 262 P. 411 (Singlaub v. Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singlaub v. Industrial Accident Commission, 262 P. 411, 87 Cal. App. 324, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 104 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

From the evidence submitted to the respondent Commission on the hearing of an application before it for adjustment of a claim for compensation arising from the death of an employee named John J. Singlaub, the general finding was made that “the evidence does not establish that the employee’s death was proximately caused by an injury arising out of the employment.” Based upon such finding, it was ordered that the applicant “take nothing from defendants, ...”

On the ground that in making such finding and award the respondent Commission acted without and in excess of its powers, petitioner prays that such finding and award be annulled by this court.

It appears that Mr. Singlaub was employed as a working foreman in a fish hatchery. He died from a cerebral hemorrhage or what is commonly known as a stroke of apoplexy. According to the testimony of the applicant, who was the widow of the employee, at about 3 o’clock P. M. of No *326 vember 11, 1926, she went to the hatchery where her husband was employed and found that the water used therein was not running properly. Shortly thereafter her husband, “dripping with perspiration and breathing very hard,” came into the hatchery. Within a short time following the appearance of Mr. Singlaub at the hatchery, he seemed to be “all right.” Prior to that time, with the exception of a cold which he contracted in January or February of the same year, the employee was in a most healthy condition. The superintendent of the hatchery testified that in the afternoon of November 11, 1926, the employee was engaged in cleaning dams and intake lines which supplied water for the hatchery. In order to do such work properly, the employee should have turned off the hatchery water supply and turned the domestic water supply into the hatchery supply lines. About an hour before the employee had the fatal seizure he made a mistake in connection with the turning of a valve, with the result that the domestic* water supply was also turned off. On noticing that the water supply was cut off, the superintendent sent a man to get a valve key from the employee so that the water might again be turned into the hatchery. At that time the employee was working at a place approximately 250 to 300 yards from the hatchery. The key was about three and a half or four feet in length, made of iron, and weighed about twenty-one pounds. On being informed that the key was wanted at the hatchery, the employee returned thereto, “walking pretty fast.” He carried the key with him. Under ordinary circumstances, in returning to the hatchery, instead of walking, he would have driven thereto in an automobile truck which was available to him at the time. On arriving at the hatchery the employee “appeared to be normal and about the same as usual.” The superintendent showed him where he had made the mistake in turning the valve and then turned the water in properly, after which the man who had been sent to get the valve key, the superintendent, and the employee went into the hatchery, watched the water come in, and “stayed there talking perhaps ten minutes”-—at which time the superintendent noticed that the water “was running a little muddy,” and thereupon inquired of the employee the cause thereof, who informed the superintendent that “they had turned it in from the *327 line and had not finished cleaning it up there”; whereupon the superintendent told the employee that “he had better shut the water off.” The employee then returned to the intake, carrying the valve key with him. Probably half an hour later the men with whom the employee was working brought him in an automobile back to the hatchery. At that time he sat in the automobile with “a blank stare in his eyes and a kind of grin-like on his face; he said nothing. . . . He had his pipe hanging loose in his mouth, but he did not appear to be making any motion or movement at all.” A doctor testified that cerebral hemorrhage was the cause of the death of the employee; that a few months prior to his decease the witness had examined him and had found that “the radial arteries were palpable at that time; . . . that not more than twenty or twenty-five per cent of the eases of cerebral hemorrhage occur following exertion; many of these accidents occur during sleep and when the subject is absolutely at rest; so physical exertion is only a factor in the production of these things, caused by disease of the radial arteries; ... if there had been a bullet fired through this man’s brain you would know it had been the direct cause of his death, but in this case it is impossible to know what was or would have been under other circumstances inside of this man’s skull, . . . ”; that he believed that the cerebral hemorrhage suffered by the employee “was caused from the fact that he over-exerted himself at that time.” However, that “it would only be a guess” whether the cerebral hemorrhage was caused by overexertion, or by anger, or from overeating, or by any one of other numerous causes; that although if there had been a rupture of a small artery in the brain, the resulting hemorrhage might continue for several hours before the blood clot from the hemorrhage would become large enough to cause a collapse,-—because of the fact that the employee died soon after the seizure, the indications were that the rupture was in a “fair sized vessel”; that after the rupture of the artery in the brain and before the collapse would occur' the pressure would have some tendency to render the subject “muddled” or confused. Another witness testified in substance that after the employee had returned from the hatchery to the intake, he noticed the employee “staggering a little bit, and he staggered there a little while, and *328 he kept getting worse and he started to fall,” but was then supported and eared for by the witness and another man until he was taken by them in an automobile back to the hatchery.

It is unquestioned law that where the death of an employee may be traced to two causes, first, to that of a primary disease, and secondly, to overexertion in the work in behalf of his employer in which the employee is engaged at the time of his death, the employer or his insurer is liable. In other words, notwithstanding the previous diseased condition of the employee and in the natural consequence of which the inevitable death of the employee will ensue, if satisfactorily established that the demise of the employee, though primarily caused by his idiopathic condition, nevertheless was superinduced by overexertion of the employee arising out of his employment, the liability of the employer is fixed. As is said in Eastman Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 186 Cal. 587, 594 [200 Pac. 17] : “If the disability, although arising from a chronic heart trouble, was brought on by any strain or excitement incident to the employment, the industrial liability still exists. Acceleration or aggravation of the pre-existing disease is an injury in the occupation causing the acceleration. (Citing cases.) ”

In the case of Knock v. Industrial Acc. Com., 200 Cal. 456 [253 Pac. 712], the case of Patrick v. Earn Co., 119 Me. 510 [13 A. L. E. 427, 111 Atl. 912], is cited with approval.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 411, 87 Cal. App. 324, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singlaub-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1927.