Vonnegut Hardware Co. v. Rose

120 N.E. 608, 68 Ind. App. 385, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 80
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1918
DocketNo. 10,320
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 120 N.E. 608 (Vonnegut Hardware Co. v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vonnegut Hardware Co. v. Rose, 120 N.E. 608, 68 Ind. App. 385, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 80 (Ind. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Hottel, J.

Appellees, Lena D. Bose and Georgia Bose, are respectively widow and daughter of Louis I. Bose, now deceased. On June 16, 1917, said Louis was alive and in the employ of appellant Vonnegut Hardware Company. On said day, while so employed and in the discharge of his duties connected therewith, he was taken sick, and so informed the foreman [387]*387under whom he was working. He thereupon went home. A few days later he was sent to the hospital. It there developed that he had hernia. He died* on September 2, 1917. On February 2, 1918, appellees as the sole dependents of said deceased, filed with the Industrial Board their application in the usual form for compensation. A trial before Samuel R. Artman, a member of said board, on February 19, 1918, resulted in a finding and award for appellants. A review of the full board was had on March 28, 1918, which resulted in a finding and award by a majority of said board (said Artman not joining therein) in favor of appellees. This latter finding pertinent to the questions herein discussed is in substance as follows: On June 16, 1917, one Louis I. Rose was in the employment of appellant Vonnegut Hardware Company at an average weekly wage of $10 as a general laborer or roustabout in said appellant’s hardware store in the city of Indianapolis. Decedent’s duties required him to keep the aisles clear, and to move the boxes and barrels out of the aisles when they were placed therein by others. On some occasions the boxes and barrels were extremely heavy. On June 16, 1917, while engaged in the discharge of his duties, decedent moved a barrel weighing about 125 pounds, and in moving said barrel accidently ruptured himself, producing a right inguinal hernia. Decedent informed the foreman of his injury immediately after it occurred and went home. On June 19 following appellant provided decedent with an attending physician and, on June 27, caused him to be taken to the Methodist Hospital in said city, where he remained for about ten days, at the expiration of which he returned home, and later resumed his [388]*388work and worked for two weeks. At the expiration of two weeks, because of Ms disability resulting from Ms‘injury, decedent discontinued work, and soon thereafter was again taken to the hospital by his employer, where he died on September 2, 1917. On September 7,1917, appellant made a written demand upon appellees for permission to exume the body of said decedent and hold an autopsy thereon, which demand was refused by appellee Lena D. Bose. Decedent left surviving him as his sole and only dependents the appellees who were living with him at the time of his injury and at the time of his death, and were wholly dependent upon him and were supported by him. From the date of his injury until his death, or eleven weeks, appellant paid decedent full wages* and during that period decedent earned wages for two weeks only. On June 16, 1917, appellant association was the insurance carrier of appellant company.

1. From the award rendered on this finding appellants appeal and- assign as error that it is contrary to law. Under this assignment it is first contended that said finding is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and in support of this contention it is insisted in effect that since the amendment of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Acts 1917 p. 155, §8020q2 et seq. Burns’ Supp. 1918), which permits both the sufficiency of the facts found and the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding to be challenged by an assignment of error that the award of the full board is contrary to law, this court is given authority to weigh the evidence; that in view of the fact that the member who heard the evidence found for appellants, and that the award from which the [389]*389appeal is prosecuted is made by tbe other two members alone, this court should exercise the discretion and power authorized by said amendment, weigh the evidence, and render judgment accordingly.

Appellants concede, and properly so, that prior to the passing of the amendment of 1917 this court had held that it had no power to weigh evidence. It is insisted, however, that said question has not been expressly passed uppn by the court. As affecting this contention it is sufficient to say that there is nothing in said amendment of 1917 that can be said to indicate any intent on the part of the legislature to give to the appellate tribunal power to weigh evidence in such- cases. The amendment clearly was intended merely to furnish a method of challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, the same as furnished by a like ground in a motion for new trial in the ordinary civil case. The courts had so long and so frequently held that a like reason in a motion for a new trial did not authorize the weighing of the evidence, but merely tendered to the appellate tribunal the question of whether there was any evidence to support each of the elements of the cause of action essential to recovery, that the legislature could not have been ignorant of such holdings, and must have intended a like meaning of the language used in said amendment. It is argued, however, that in any event the evidence fails to support the-finding, in that it shows among other things that the appellants asked for an operation on decedent before his death, that such operation would in all probability have saved his life, and that such operation was refused by decedent and appellees. It is sufficient to say that the evidence on this branch of the case is conflicting. The physician furnished by [390]*390appellant testified that on Thursday before the deceased died on Sunday he told Mr. Rose that there was “no chance of him getting well in his present condition. The only thing was to operate. That was the only chance to save him was to do the operation and see where the bowel was strangulated.” When asked if he made any statement concerning the operation to Mrs. Rose he answered: “Yes I did. They were there * * * They refused the operation.” The widow denied the request testified to by Dr. Fosler, but said that Dr. Sowders told her on Thursday that he would like to have an operation; that she went over and waited until four o’clock, and Dr. Fosler did not come; that Dr. Sowder then told her on Saturday morning at the hospital that “he could not help my husband any more. That was (what) Dr. Sowders say, so what was the use of having an operation * * * I believe he knew what he said. ’ ’ The son testified that the only times anything was said to him about an operation was on two occasions: The first was at the doctor’s office, when he told him in substance that his father had a very sore • appendix; that he had no doubt but that he had appendicitis. This was the day before the point of rupture was discovered; that the following day he switched from what he said, and said that “he knew for a certainty — that in fact he did not have appendicitis; that the rupture had been discovered at the hospital, and that not the appendix was the trouble; that he would put a truss on for the rupture, that he would have no further trouble after he had reduced the present strangulation.” The other conversation was with Dr. Fosler on Friday preceding the father’s death on Sunday, and he then did not say that an [391]*391operation was necessary to save Ms life, bnt said be did not know whether it wonld save it.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.E. 608, 68 Ind. App. 385, 1918 Ind. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vonnegut-hardware-co-v-rose-indctapp-1918.