Wolfe v. State

10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 469, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 14, 1939
DocketNo. 2985
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 469 (Wolfe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolfe v. State, 10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 469, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 12 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Yantis

delivered the opinion of the court:

The original claim herein was filed by Charlie R. Miller on September 23, 1936, alleging that while working as a laborer in the Highway Division of the Department of Public Works and Buildings, on September 25,1935 on S. B. I. Route No. 9 in McDonough County, he suffered accidental injuries which resulted in loss of time and disability which necessitated an operation for the removal of a tumor and the right testicle. Claimant sought an award of Six Thousand ($6,000.00) Dollars for temporary and partial permanent disability. On December 4, 1936 Roswell B. O’Harra as attorney for claimant filed a report of the death of claimant.

Leave of court being first had and obtained on March 9, 1937, J. Binnie Wolfe, administrator of the estate of Charlie R. Miller and Edith Miller, surviving- widow of decedent, filed herein their amended and supplemental complaint.

The case comes before the court upon the foregoing and the transcript of evidence „and the written briefs of the respective parties filed herein, together with a report by Theo. Plack, District Engineer for the Division of Highways, filed herein on July 13, 1938.

Prom the record it appears that Charlie R. Miller was working with one Sherman Adair cleaning ditches along the highway on September 25, 1935; that they had a piece of sod about five feet long two feet wide and six inches thick which they were attempting to lift with their shovels from the ditch onto a truck; that when they had the sod almost to the top of the truck Adair’s shovel slipped and the entire weight of the sod was thrown upon Miller.

Adair testified that Miller immediately complained of having hurt his back or side; that “he seemed in quite intense pain — he seemed to have quite a bit of pain at once.” This happened in the afternoon and they continued to work that afternoon.

His wife, Edith Miller, testified that the next day it rained and no work was attempted; that he went back to work the following day and worked for the next three days until that particular job was finished, and that he did not work from that time until his death. She further testified that he was in apparent pain all the time, that the right testicle began to swell and that there was no' apparent bruise but there was a redness on the testicle. He went to Dr. B. -A. Harrison at Colchester on October 7, 1935. The patient was treated by the latter and the doctor attempted to diagnose his trouble. In December he was taken to Dr. Arp at Moline. The latter’s examination pronounced his condition to be the result of a strain, and the Doctor instructed him to continue under the care of Dr. Harrison. In January he and another man attempted to open up a coal mine but he was only able to work one morning. He then went to a Dr. Dillon whose only treatment was to give him something* to relieve the pain from which he was suffering. At Dr. Harrison’s request Mrs. Miller took her husband to- a hospital at Iowa City. X-ray pictures and blood tests were taken and an operation was performed and the right testicle which was found to be a malignant tumor was removed. He was then removed to his home where he died three weeks later, on October 9, 1936. .

The deceased was in apparent good health and physical condition prior to- the day of his accident. His wife testified that he had never been sick from the- time they were married in June, 1929, and had never had any injury that she knew of prior to that on September 25, 1935. Sherman Adair testified that he had known the deceased for approximately a year and a half before the accident, and .had worked with him on the hard road for some time prior to that date; that they were working in the same gang and that Miller was in apparent good health and possessed of ordinary physical strength and ability. Archie Martin testified that he was maintenance patrolman, had known Charlie Miller all of his lifetime; that he had hired him for this job. The witness saw Miller about ten days after the accident when the latter was on his way to see Dr. Harrison. Martin got a medical report from Dr. Harrison and sent it to the State Highway Department at Peoria, later sending a second report. This witness further testified that he had seen Charlie Miller working prior to the day of the accident; that he was apparently ablehodied and able to do a man’s work. The witness further testified that he saw Miller from time to time after the accident; that he then complained of severe pain and that he rapidly fell off in weight.

Another witness, Thomas Booth, testified that he had worked with Charlie Miller on a W.P.A. project prior to September 25, 1935; that he had also worked with Miller in coal-mining; that prior to the time of his accident Miller was apparently ablebodied and able “to carry a full load.”

Dr. Clarence Van Epps testified that he is associated with the Medical School of the University of Iowa and specializes in nervous diseases; that in addition thereto1 he engages in private practice and in the course thereof saw Charlie R. Miller on August 30, 1936 at the hospital in Iowa City; that Miller at that time was emaciated and had an enlargement of about two hundred (200) per cent of the right testicle which was hard and irregular; that a complete medical examination of the patient was made which disclosed enlarged glands in the groin with abdominal pains suggesting1 testicular malignancy with retro-peritoneal. The doctor was given a history of the accident and testified that he did not think the trauma described to him was the essential cause of the testicular tumor. The doctor further testified that it is not possible in a case of malignant tumor to definitely state the cause thereof; that some malignant tumors are of traumatic origin but that in his opinion the testicular tumor which he found in this patient was not of traumatic origin. The doctor modified this opinion in cross-examination by stating that if the history of the case disclosed the patient was struck on the right testicle at the time of the accident it would have made a difference in his conclusion.

The wife of Charlie R. Miller testified that when he came home from work on September 25, 1935 he told her of his accident. That during the days that followed he complained constantly of pain. That there were no bruises apparent; that there was a swelling in the right testicle and that there was a redness there for three or four days after the accident. Claimant began to lose weight, then in January he began to feel better. The pain was not so severe and had moved into his side, but when he attempted to open a coal mine he was unable to do the work and Dr. Harrison ordered him to a hospital. The operation there resulted in the removal of the right testicle with a laboratory report of malignant tumor. According to the record Mr. Miller was never sick from the time of his marriage in June, 1929 until after the accident in question. That he was ill continually after that time until his death. A coroner’s jury returned a verdict, “Death from injury sustained while in the employ of the Division of Highways,” and the conclusion to be drawn from the testimony of all the witnesses and the facts and circumstances in evidence is that there was a causal connection between Mr. Miller’s death and the accident in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. Ct. Cl. 469, 1939 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-state-ilclaimsct-1939.