Troxell v. Shirk

196 A. 899, 130 Pa. Super. 40, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 13, 1937
DocketAppeal, 131
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 196 A. 899 (Troxell v. Shirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Troxell v. Shirk, 196 A. 899, 130 Pa. Super. 40, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal is by an employer and its insurance carrier from a judgment of the court below entered upon an award of compensation to the claimant, under the provisions of Section 306(c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 2, 1915, P. L. 736, as finally amended April 13, 1927, P. L. 186, 77 PS §513, at the rate of $8.66 per week for the definite period of 125 weeks for the permanent loss of the use of her left eye.

Claimant was employed as a chambermaid at Hotel Hamilton and averred in her petition that on October 26, 1935, her left eye became sore from what was subsequently found to be a gonococcic infection; loss of the use of the member followed within three or four days. The answer of the employer and carrier was, in substance, that her disability was “not the result of any accident occurring during the course of claimant’s employment.” On that date claimant’s eye, in her own language, “started to get stiff and later on it started to water.” Thinking the trouble was due to a cold, she went to her physician the following day and was referred by him to Dr. John R. Mench, an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist, who diagnosed her trouble as “a case of gonococcic infection of the left eye.”

The theory upon which the claim was presented and prosecuted and the award finally made, was that the source from which the gonococcus was carried to claimant’s eye was soiled and infected bed linens and towels handled by her in the course of the performance of her duties in cleaning rooms and preparing them for occupancy by new guests of the hotel.

The question of law to be determined by us is whether there is upon this record any legally competent evidence *42 to support the ultimate finding of the board that the loss of the use of claimant’s eye resulted from “an accident in the course of her employment.” If so, the exceptions to the award were properly dismissed by the court below. Appellants offered no testimony before the referee, but contended claimant had not successfully carried the burden imposed upon her by the statute of showing, by legally competent evidence, that the infection ivas attributable to some undesigned unexpected and untoward, circumstance which happened while she was at Avork and was outside of the usual course of events.

There was competent and uncontroverted evidence of these facts: Claimant, a married woman sixty-one years of age, had been employed for more than a year as a chambermaid on the sixth floor of the hotel, returning to her own home by trolley each evening. She described her duties as “straightening out the rooms and making up the beds and putting them in order to be occupied.” In the course of this employment, she was, “at times,” obliged “to handle” linens soiled with “blood stains, splotches, and sometimes all yellow,” which she gathered together and “put in a room where they were sent to the laundry.” She did not undertake to fix any definite time (with relation to the date of October 26, 1935, or any other date) Avhen she handled soiled linens or towels. She stated it was also her duty “to clean up the urinals and toilets” and that on two or three occasions she found articles used to prevent conception or disease, Avhich she gathered up and discarded. The relative dates of these occasions were not fixed. Claimant also testified she had not visited any public toilet rooms or had any guests in her home. Mrs. Blanche Schadler, another maid who worked with claimant, also testified that “now and then” it was necessary to handle “stiff sheets and toAvels,” but that she did not know what was on them.

*43 There was competent medical testimony by Dr. Mench and Dr. J. J. Wenner, a pathologist, that the loss of the sight of the eye was dne to a gonococcic infection of the conjunctival sac, which destroyed the cornea; that, as neither claimant nor her husband had any general gonorrheal infection, “freshly secreted and moist pus” containing gonococci not more than twenty-four hours old must have been carried from some outside source to her eye “by some instrument or by her hands or something of that sort”; and that the infection developed in the eye within four or five days after the introduction of the germs. These are the only basic facts established by the evidence.

The referee disallowed compensation on the ground that “claimant’s condition ......was not due to any untoward or unforeseen happening which occurred in the course of her employment.” Upon claimant’s appeal to it, the board set aside this finding and substituted its own findings to the effect that the mere entering of the gonococcic germs into claimant’s eye was, in and of itself, such “a mishap, unexpected, undesigned, or untoward event, outside the usual course of her work,” as to constitute an “accident” within the meaning of the statute. McCauley v. Imperial Woolen Co. et al., 261 Pa. 312, 104 A. 617, was cited by the board and by the court below as authority for that proposition.

Appreciating that this finding of an “accidental” injury would not sustain an award unless it was also shown, in behalf of claimant, that the germs entered during the course of her employment at the hotel, the board then treated the opinions of her medical experts that she had rubbed her eye with infected bed linen or an infected towel, handled during her employment, as evidence competent to sustain the necessary additional finding that the germs entered during the course of her employment. Whether the opinions claimant’s experts undertook to express upon that question had any evi *44 dential value is one of the questions in this case and will be considered later.

Addressing ourselves to the issue whether this record contains any competent evidence that claimant suffered an “accident” within the meaning of the statute, it may be observed that the finding by the board upon this branch of the case goes beyond any of our appellate decisions. The competent medical evidence establishes only that at some time during the four or five days preceding October 26, 1935, and from some external source, the gonococcic germs were carried to, and entered, claimant’s eye. Xeither the lay nor medical evidence fixes' the time or circumstances of their entrance. Unless, therefore, the mere entry amounted to “violence to the physical structure of [her] body” claimant has failed to establish one of the fundamental propositions essential to her case.

In the recent, and in some respects comparable, case of Easton v. Elk Tanning Company, 129 Pa. Superior Ct. 535, 195 A. 648, this court considered a similar contention. We there pointed out that in dealing with deaths or injuries from an infection, and whether the infection developed from germs Avithin the body or entering from without, the resulting death or injury is not compensable in the absence of proof of an “accident” within the meaning of the statute. Reference was there made to Micale v. Light and S. W. Ins. Fund, 105 Pa. Superior Ct. 399, 161 A. 600, and McCauley v. Imperial Woolen Co., supra, in both of which cases it Avas held that death or injury from a germ infection in order to be compensable must be shown to have been a sudden development from some abrupt violence to the external or internal physical structure of the body. Here, the evidence shows that the germs entered from the outside of claimant’s body.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A. 899, 130 Pa. Super. 40, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/troxell-v-shirk-pasuperct-1937.