West Side Coal & Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission

151 N.E. 593, 321 Ill. 61
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1926
DocketNo. 16539. Judgment reversed and award set aside.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 593 (West Side Coal & Mining 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
West Side Coal & Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission, 151 N.E. 593, 321 Ill. 61 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court: This application for compensation was originally filed by Robert Shoemaker against the West Side Coal and Mining Company for an injury occasioned by a hot scale or piece of iron striking him on his lower lip and resulting in a cancer. On a hearing before an arbitrator an award was entered in favor of the applicant. An appeal was perfected to the Industrial Commission, and while the appeal was pending, and before final hearing, the applicant died, and by agreement his widow, Nannie May Shoemaker, and his children, Clyde, Joel, Viola, Ellis, Elizabeth and Maude Shoemaker, were substituted and the cause proceeded to final hearing in their names as petitioners. The commission heard additional evidence and entered an award in favor of the petitioners in the sum of $15 per week for 266% weeks, having found that the injury resulted in death. The circuit court of Randolph county confirmed the award of the commission. This writ of error was allowed to review the record.

The only question in this case is whether or not the evidence sustains the finding of the Industrial Commission that the injury was the cause of the death of Shoemaker. The injured employee, Robert Shoemaker, testified in his own behalf in July, 1920, as follows: He was thirty-five years old. About August 5, 1919, he was employed by the West Side Coal and Mining Company, near Coulter-ville, as a blacksmith, and had been so working about six years at sixty-seven cents an hour. On that day, while so employed, he struck a hot piece of iron and a scale or piece flew from the hot iron and struck him on his lower lip, causing a blister to form. He reported his injury to the general manager of the mining company and on the next day he was treated by Dr. Hendrickson, the company’s doctor. He did not tell Dr. Hendrickson what caused the blister or sore on his lip. The doctor treated his lip for about a week and then went on his vacation. The witness was then treated by Dr. Kimball. He told Dr. Kimball that he had been injured by a piece of hot iron striking him on his lip and Dr. Kimball treated him for a burn. His treatment did not seem to help him any and he so told Dr. Kimball. His lip was swollen, pained him and pus was discharged from it. The place was about the size of a ten-cent piece and has never healed except in a way, leaving a dry scab on it. He went to C. E. Westaver, of St. Louis, a specialist in cancer, who examined him and treated him September 12, 1919, and he has been treating him since that time. About all of his lower lip is gone and he wears a bandage over his lip and has been wearing it for six weeks. He is unable to perform any character of work in a coal mine; is too weak to do so. He did not have any injury to his lip prior to the day he got hurt. There was nothing the matter with his face prior to the day of his injury. In September, 1920, he again testified that there was no improvement in his condition. Sometimes he appears to get a little better and then gets worse. He then had his lower jaw tied with a bandage and had not been able to do any work since he first testified. He is a married man, his wife’s name being Nannie, and has five children, all under sixteen years of age, — Clyde, Joel, Viola, Ellis and Eliza.

The following witnesses testified for plaintiff in error and to the following facts:

Arthur Goodall: Is the mine manager for plaintiff in error and has been since February 2, 1919, and was then acquainted with the deceased, Robert Shoemaker. When the witness began work there he noticed a sore or blister on Shoemaker’s lip. He noticed it from time to time and the fact that it did not heal. He also noted that other employees were drinking out of the same bucket as was the deceased. He bought another bucket for the deceased and instructed him to use that one. He talked with the deceased about his lip and told him to keep his fingers away from it; that he had a friend that had gotten a cancer from picking a fever blister. It did not look like a fever blister to the witness. The above facts and happenings all transspired before the alleged injury of August 5, 1919. The sore on Shoemaker’s lip was about half as large as a dime and did not heal.

Ruben Guy testified: He worked with the deceased before the alleged injury. He noticed a small sore on the deceased’s lower lip and noticed that it did not heal. The deceased said that tobacco juice hurt his lip where it was sore. The witness stated that he learned these facts a year or more before the alleged injury.

A. J. Kennedy testified: He worked at the mine and was acquainted with the deceased in 1918 and saw him frequently around the mine. During that year he saw a small sore on the deceased’s lip and noticed that it did not heal.

W. J. Smith testified: He worked at the mine and was acquainted with the deceased. He worked with him in the blacksmith shop before September 16, 1918, and during that time noticed a small sore on his lower lip. The sore remained on his lip from that time until after the deceased quit working in the mine, in July, 1920.

Charles Bickett, a straw-boss at the mine, testified that he was acquainted with the deceased and observed a small sore on his lip six months or more'before the alleged injury.

G. A. McNeill testified: He worked for the mining company and was acquainted with the deceased and observed a sore on his lip in 1918 and continued to observe it after the alleged injury. His attention was particularly called to it because the men around the mine talked about the sore on the deceased’s lip.

G. F. Hightower testified that he worked for plaintiff in error and was acquainted with the deceased. He saw the deceased in 1918 use medicine on his lip. He had a conversation with the deceased, who told the witness that he had a small sore on his lip that would not heal.

J. G. Lane, a druggist, testified that he was acquainted with the deceased and had observed a sore on his lip for five years before the time he testified. When he first noticed the sore it later apparently went away but re-appeared in 1917 and remained on his lip since that date. In 1917 he sold the deceased some blood medicine.

William Douglas testified that he was a blacksmith in the same shop with the deceased. He saw a sore on deceased’s lip before the time of the alleged injury and observed that the deceased put colored powder on it. He used a different drinking cup from the one used by the deceased because of his sore lip.

The following witnesses testified for the defendants in error and to the following facts:

Dr. G. W. Kimball testified that he was a licensed physician and graduate of National Medical School, of Chicago. He was, and had been, acquainted with Robert Shoemaker for about ten years. He treated him for the sore on his lip on August 13, 1919. The sore was open, like an open cut. Shoemaker had been putting salve on it, and he could not tell exactly what its condition then was. He cleaned the salve off of his lip and treated it with an iodine ointment. Shoemaker came to him again in about two weeks, and when he examined it he advised him to go to a specialist, because he thought it might be a cancer. He could not say whether the sore was of recent origin or not.

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 593, 321 Ill. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-side-coal-mining-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1926.