Western Foundry Co. v. Industrial Commission

51 N.E.2d 466, 384 Ill. 420
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 27245. Judgment reversed; award set aside.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 51 N.E.2d 466 (Western Foundry 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
Western Foundry Co. v. Industrial Commission, 51 N.E.2d 466, 384 Ill. 420 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of 'the court:

John Lanucha, a molder and cleanup man, made a claim for compensation from his employer, the Western Foundry Company, Inc., for disablement claimed to have been caused by pulmonary tuberculosis, to which he was last exposed while in such employment. The claim for compensation was denied by the arbitrator and on review the finding was set aside by the Industrial Commission which allowed compensation at the rate of $11 per week for a period of 400 weeks and thereafter an annual pension of $352, payable in twelve equal monthly installments of $29.33 during life, as provided in paragraph (f) of section 8 of the Workmen’s Occupational Diseases Act. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 48, par. 172.8.) This award, on review, was confirmed by the superior court of Cook cpunty. We have allowed a writ of error to this court.

The facts were substantially as follows: John Lanucha, defendant in error, commenced work in Márch, 1918, for plaintiff in error, the Western Foundry Company, as a molder in its plant and continued as such until laid off on account of no work during the month of June, 1934. He was re-employed on December 10, 1934, and continued until November 13, 1936. During the latter period, however, he was not engaged as a molder, but as a cleanup man about the plant for which he was paid forty cents an hour for forty hours a week until May ix, 1936, and from then on until November 13, 1936, at the rate of $12 a week. His earnings for the year preceding November 13, 1936, the last day of his employment, amounted to $728. The evidence reveals that during the time he worked for plaintiff in error as a molder he came in contact with sand and dust; that after he was laid off he returned to work and his occupation was that of laborer; that he followed this occupation until his disablement on November 13, 1936; that as a laborer he worked in cars with sand and when they brought the forms in rolls to the cars the wind blew the dust and sand in his face and mouth; that he took the ashes out of the furnaces located in the plant and filled them with coke; that from May to November, immediately preceding his disablement, he filled the furnaces with coal and cleaned them; that there was plenty of dust because sand was used and sprinkled about; that he pitched dirt in the boxcars in the summertime and before he was laid off in November, 1936, was pitching sand into boxcars.

W. M. Huisinga, called as a witness for defendant in error, testified he was employed by the Western Foundry Company as an employment manager and safety man, and made trips throughout the plant daily; that the last few days Lanucha worked in November, 1936, he was raking and cleaning gangways, cleaning up the dregs throughout the plant; that the sweepings would be accumulated in a pile and Lanucha would load the refuse in a wheelbarrow, carry it to the yard and run it up a ramp and dump it in an open car; that in the mornings he would rake the gangways inside the plant, scrape them with a scraper-like hoe about two feet wide; that the sand on the gangways would be in spots about one-fourth inch thick; that the gangways have a brick foundation with about an inch of solid, old, accumulated sand packed on top; that in order to keep it from getting too thick the surface was scraped every day.

Doctor Albert C. Field, called by defendant in error, an expert in X-ray work and a specialist in tuberculosis and silicosis cases, who examined Lanucha on December 13, 1938, and who had examined two X-ray films, testified that in his opinion Lanucha had pulmonary tuberculosis ; that the two films show some adhesions to the diaphram, the costophrenic and some softening, which is suggestive of an activity of pulmonary tuberculosis; that the inhalation of quartz or sand has both a chemical and traumatic effect upon the lungs; that the traumatic effect is when you inhale the small particles of silica; that the edges are sharp and it has a tendency to make small lacerations in the part of the lung into which they come in contact; that where one is exposed to dust or quartz, especially where you have had fibrosis and damage to the lung tissue, it produces a soil that is receptive to the tubercular germs; that there was a causal relationship between the tubercular condition and the inhalation of small particles of quartz. He also testified there was some evidence of silicosis but the silicosis was not disabling; that it was the active pulmonary tuberculosis that disabled defendant in error from doing any work; that when the small particles of quartz first strike the lungs, the cutting and irritating and subsequent inflammation and infection will be sudden; that the constant laceration and lowering resistance makes one susceptible to the germs and prepares the soil for the tuberculosis ; that tuberculosis was the main thing that was disabling Lanucha at the time he examined him.

Doctor Field also testified in answer to a hypothetical question that there was a causal connection between the occupation Lanucha was engaged in and the subsequent condition of ill-being, namely, the tuberculosis, and gave as his reason, that sand caused small lacerations or breaks in the lungs, lowering resistance, making a fertile field for the tuberculosis to lodge.

Doctor Harold E. Davis, a specialist in radiology and the use of the X ray, who was the only witness called by plaintiff in error, testified from an examination of three X-ray pictures taken in the case; defendant in error’s exhibit 1, taken November 23, 1936, defendant in error’s exhibit 2, taken on March 2, 1938, and plaintiff in error’s exhibit 1, of September 19, 1936. He testified he saw no changes in any of the three films; that from his X-ray study and diagnosis, it revealed a simple uncomplicated nodular silicosis, which, over a period of some time from September, 1936, until the last film, no change was shown; that he was familiar with foundries where sand molding is done. He also testified, from his examination of plaintiff in error’s exhibit 1, that the film showed the marks or evidence of early silicosis. In answer to a lengthy question which we must assume was hypothetical, covering a smiliar situation as to occupation to that of Lanucha, and where similar work was carried on, he testified he knew of no way that a man could acquire tuberculosis at such occupation.

Plaintiff in error contends as a matter of law an employer is not liable under the Workmen’s Occupational Diseases Act, effective October 1, 1936, in a case of silicosis, with or without tuberculosis, where it is undisputed that the employee was employed during a period of only forty-four days after the effective date of the act, because in such cases section 25 of the act requires a period of at least 60 days of exposure in employment after the effective date thereof. Defendant in error, on the other hand, claims he is not barred by the provisions of section 25 from recovering, under the provisions of the act for disability caused solely by pulmonary tuberculosis incidental to non-disabling . simple silicosis, compensation from plaintiff in error, in whose employment he was employed forty-four days after the adoption of said act, and growing out of which employment the active pulmonary tuberculosis and disability occurred. It can readily be seen the difficulty lies in the proper application of the provisions of the statute to the facts as shown by the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E.2d 466, 384 Ill. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-foundry-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1943.