Swift & Co. v. Industrial Commission

134 N.E. 9, 302 Ill. 38
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 1922
DocketNo. 14227
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 134 N.E. 9 (Swift & Co. 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
Swift & Co. v. Industrial Commission, 134 N.E. 9, 302 Ill. 38 (Ill. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

It is agreed by the parties that Henry Springer, the claimant, was an employee of plaintiff in error, Swift & Co., at East St. Louis, on October 21, 1918, and on that date received an injury which arose out of and in the course of the employment, of which' plaintiff in error had notice, and that demand for compensation was made within the time required by law, and that the employer and employee were both under the Workmen’s Compensation act. The claimant is a single man, having no children under the age of sixteen years, and his average wage for the year preceding his injury was $1248, or $24 a week., After a hearing the arbitrator found that the claimant had been furnished by plaintiff in error first aid, medical, surgical and hospital services, and that he was entitled to receive from the company $12 per week for three weeks, that being the period of temporary total incapacity for work, and the further sum of $12 per week for a period of fifty weeks, as provided by paragraph (<?) of section 8 of the Workmen’s Compensation act as amended, as the injuries sustained caused a permanent partial loss of thirty-three and one-third per cent of the use of the left hand. Thereafter, on review before the Industrial Commission, the award of the arbitrator was confirmed, and on review in the circuit court of St. Clair county that finding was also affirmed by that court, and this writ of error has been sued out to review the record.

Springer had been working for Swift & Co. for about three weeks when he was injured by a steam hammer descending against a piece of iron which he held in his left hand, which knocked the iron in such manner as to cut or tear his palm. He testified that immediately he had the hand dressed by Dr. Shannon, who had just come to the State and had not yet received his Illinois license but was acting under the company’s surgeon at its plant and appears to have received his license later. After this treatment by Shannon claimant attempted to continue work, but stated he had no grip in the hand and the injury hurt him so that he reported at the office and went home, staying at home for a few days but going to the Swift plant for several treatments by Shannon. Claimant testified that three or four days later he was taken sick with the “flu” and called in his regular family physician, Dr. Culbertson, to treat him for that trouble, and also showed him the hand, which was swollen and contained pus, and that the hand was treated by Dr. Culbertson; that he was then confined to his bed about three weeks, during which time his hand was swollen and pained him badly; that the doctor put some salve on the hand and made seven or eight calls; that the doctor then told him that some of the bones of the hand had been fractured; that he went back to work about three weeks after the injury and worked on a bolt hammer four or five days, during which time his hand bothered him and he could not lift any weight or grip anything tightly; that he had to quit on account of the pain, which was also sufficient to cause him to lose sleep. The evidence- tends to show that there was some talk between claimant and his foreman as to the kind of work he should do after the injury, and he was given at first a different kind of work, but he asked to go back to the kind of work he was engaged in before the injury but the foreman told him he had all the men needed for that work; that he then quit work with Swift & Co. and took a temporary position as organizer for the Brotherhood of Trainmen and later obtained a position as guard at the Joliet prison, for which he received $80 a month and board, which would be considered more than he received from plaintiff in error at the time of the injury. Claimant testified that he had temporarily tried blacksmith work since his employment at the Joliet prison and found that when he worked a little his left hand would get numb and have no feeling; that the pain in the hand was accentuated by cold weather. He testified that he had sustained from the injury from seventy to seventy-five per cent loss of the use of the left hand, although there was only a slight scar now showing on the hand.

Dr. Culbertson, the claimant’s family physician, testified that he examined the claimant shortly after the injury and found the hand swollen, — possibly as large again as normal, — and extensive bruising of the palmar surface; that the injury was not so much a cut as a tear over the tendons of the second and third fingers and from a half to three-quarters of an inch long; that it was not deep but the tissues were quite bruised and there was some pus for a few days; that he thought there was a fracture of the second metacarpal bone but was not positive, but there was an enlargement of the bone; that he treated claimant for two or three weeks, attempting to prevent stiffening of the hand ; that there was quite an extensive stiffening, which gradually improved, and he considered there was about fifty per cent of disability in the left hand for an occupation such as blacksmith and about twenty-five per cent for all occupations requiring the use of that hand; that it was difficult to say if the injury would be permanent; that in his judgment the hand would get a good deal better, and the extent and rapidity of the recovery would depend largely upon the use claimant gave it and might require several years; that witness was not sure whether there had been a fracture of the bones; that he could find no evidence of fracture at the time he testified; that the motion of the hand was limited some, but there was nothing to show on the surface of the skin that claimant was injured.

A physician in the employ of plaintiff in error, Dr. Wiggins, testified that he examined claimant’s hand about seven months after the injury and found a small scar; that he complained of a tender spot when he pressed upon it, but that he found the claimant could flex his fingers upon the palm of the hand and there was no agglutination of the tendons; that he complained of pain in the back of his hand, but. witness could find no evidence of injury there, no evidence of a fractured bone, no callous, and nothing to indicate loss of use of any portion of the hand, and in his opinion there was one hundred per cent efficiency of that hand.

Dr. Winning, a surgeon in the permanent employ of the plaintiff in error, testified that he examined claimant about six months after the injury and concluded the disability was not enough to keep the claimant from working, if he wished; that there was no evidence of a fractured bone, no callous, no agglutination of the tendons, and only a slight scar left.

The medical director for the Industrial Commission, who examined the claimant by agreement of both parties, at the suggestion of the commission caused to be made an X-ray examination of the hand. He found no deformity in the bones of the wrist and no fracture, and gave it as his opinion that while there was a tender spot in the claimant’s left thumb, which in his judgment was due to the catching of a filament of the sensory nerve in the scar, that condition could be relieved by making an incision in the scar and releasing the filament of nerve, and there would be no permanent disability of the hand remaining.

It is manifest from the evidence in the record that there is no certain testimony found upon which the Industrial Commission could properly find that there was a permanent partial loss, to an appreciable extent, of the use of the left hand.

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Bluebook (online)
134 N.E. 9, 302 Ill. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swift-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1922.