Valier Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission

150 N.E. 651, 320 Ill. 69
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 16623. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 N.E. 651 (Valier Coal 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
Valier Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission, 150 N.E. 651, 320 Ill. 69 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Sam Collins filed with the Industrial Commission an application for the adjustment of his claim, which he charged arose out of an accidental injury suffered on January 11, 1923, while employed by the Valier Coal Company. On the hearing before the arbitrator it was stipulated that the parties were subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation act. The arbitrator found that Collins was not entitled to compensation because notice of the accident had not been given within the time prescribed by the act and his condition was not the result of the accident. On review the Industrial Commission found that notice had been given and demand for compensation had been made within the time required, and awarded compensation at the rate of $16 per week for 265 weeks, $10 for an additional week, and thereafter a pension for life at the rate of $28.33M Per month for the reason that the injury sustained resulted in complete and permanent disability to work. The decision of the Industrial Commission was affirmed by the circuit court. On the petition of the company this court granted a writ of error for a further review.

On January 11, 1923, Sam Collins was forty-seven years of age, married, and had two children under the age of sixteen years. He resided at Valier, in Franklin county, and had been a miner for about thirty years. He testified before the arbitrator that on the day in question he was engaged, with eleven other men, in putting up a steel I-beam, about two feet wide and twenty-five feet long, in the west motor pit of the company’s mine, when a sharp pain struck him, which affected his left side and chest, caused a throbbing in his neck and made him sick; that he worked the rest of the day but not at hard labor, and continued to work in the mine until the 24th day of January, when the pain grew worse and he quit his employment; that at the time of the hearing it was difficult to breathe, his neck continued to throb, his heart beat rapidly, exertion weakened him, part of the time he could not sleep, and he was unable to perform any kind of physical work, although, accompanied by another person, he drove an automobile; that he said nothing to anybody connected with the mine about his injury until a couple of months after the accident; that he filed his claim with the check-weighman of plaintiff in error early in May, 1923; that about a week later he inquired of Thomas W. Frazier, the company’s chief clerk, whether there was any compensation for him and was answered in the negative, and that although his son told him that he had notified the company of the accident, not deeming the notice sufficient he served upon plaintiff in error on June 8, 1923, a written notice of the accident.

Harry Collins, son of defendant in error, testified that his father told him on January 25, 1923, to notify the mine of his injury;' that he, the son, saw the manager on the next day and informed him that his father had been injured on the nth of the same month while lifting an I-beam in the motor pit on the west side of the mine; that his father quit on the 24th of January and did not know when he would return to work. The son further testified that his father was in good health prior to the accident.

Four physicians testified in Collins’ behalf, Drs. Roy W. Harrell and Frederick Greenebaum before the arbitrator, and Drs. H. H. Turner and Nathaniel H. Adams before the Industrial Commission on review. They all found an aneurysm, or an enlarged condition of the aorta, which they variously said might be caused by syphilis, gout, rheumatic or diseased conditions of the blood vessels, arteriosclerosis, valvular disease of the heart, chronic alcoholism, chronic Bright’s disease, or a strain. Three of the physicians stated that with an aneurysm there is danger that physical exertion may be followed by a rupture and result in sudden death.

Collins consulted Dr. Harrell on April 27, 1923. He told the doctor that his condition had troubled him for a considerable period but he did not say that he had been hurt in the mine. Dr. Harrell was unable to state what caused Collins’ condition, but believed him capable of doing light work which involved no exertion. Dr. Greenebaum, upon whom Collins called in April or May, 1923, made a physical, X-ray and laboratory examination of him. He testified that his examination did not reveal any arteriosclerosis except what would naturally be expected in a man of Collins’ years, and he found no evidence of syphilis or of chronic Bright’s disease. Dr. Greenebaum could not give the cause of Collins’ condition but admitted that it might have been of one or two years’ standing, and that Collins was able to do light work. Dr. Turner examined Collins on April 15, 1924. He found his blood pressure low, his pulse rapid and his heart normal in size and position and its movements regular. He also found an aneurysm, which by exercise, such as walking up and down stairs, would increase the frequency of heart action. In his opinion Collins was not able to perform physical labor, although he did not know what caused his condition. Dr. Adams testified that on April 16, 1924, he found a slight indication of the enlargement of Collins’ heart, but that it should have been greater to compensate for the impaired condition of the aneurysm. He said that if a blood vessel is diseased a strain is more apt to produce an aneurysm than if the heart and blood vessels are normal.

On behalf of plaintiff in error Dr. J. B. Moore testified before the arbitrator that he treated many men injured in the mines; that Collins came to him of his own accord and stated that he had been ailing about two months; that his trouble began with a pain about the right second rib, that he was short of breath, had lost weight, was somewhat constipated, had no appetite and that his throat had been sore, but he did not say that he had been injured in the mine. Dr. Moore further testified that he examined Collins on January 30 and June 2, 1923; that he found no symptoms indicating aneurysm; that there was no evidence of a disability resulting from any injury on the nth of January, 1923, and that in his opinion Collins was able to work and do timbering in the coal mine. Dr. Gilmore, also called by plaintiff in error, testified that he made an X-ray examination of Collins on June 2, 1923; that it showed the arch of the aorta slightly more prominent than is usual, but that this condition was of no significance nor accompanied by definite physical signs.

On rebuttal Collins denied that he told Dr. Moore that he had been ailing two months. Before the commission he testified that he never had syphilis or any other venereal disease. T. J. McDonald, his brother-in-law, testified that prior to the accident Collins was able to do the heavy work about the mine but that since that time he did the lightest part of the work.

On May 19, 1924, plaintiff in error served upon Collins a written request to submit, at its expense, to an examination by Dr. T. J. Sullivan, Jr., at the Mercy Hospital, in Chicago, on any day during the week beginning on that day, and if such time and place were not reasonably convenient he was requested immediately to notify plaintiff in error at what time and place it would be convenient for him to submit to such examination. Collins refused. On the second of June following, plaintiff in error served him with another notice in the same form, requesting that he submit, at the company’s expense, to an examination by Dr. Francis R.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E. 651, 320 Ill. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valier-coal-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1926.