DocketNumber: No. 13,469.
Citation Numbers: 30 P.2d 1117, 94 Colo. 528, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 436
Judges: Butler
Filed Date: 3/19/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
DAVID Allan was operating the Crown mine, and was insured by the Employers Mutual Insurance Company. John H. Gettler was working in the mine. The Industrial Commission found that on March 15, 1933, Gettler sustained an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment; that his injury consisted of a back strain and was temporary. It awarded to him as compensation $12.74 per week from March 20 to April 16, 1933, and ordered the employer to pay medical and hospital expenses. Upon review, the district court affirmed the award.
The employer and the insurance company contend that there was no evidence of accidental injury; that what Gettler suffered from was lumbago. We cannot sustain the contention that there was no evidence of accidental injury.
Gettler testified that he was picking up a heavy timber in the mine — nine-foot green timber; that he was picking it up by himself — "we had no helpers in the Crown mine"; and that his back got a catch in it and he went down on his knees; that it injured the small part of his back; that he reported the occurrence to the mine foreman on the same day and went to the mine doctor, who "put some tape around it" and told him it would be better for him to stay home for awhile; that the doctor told him that he had lumbago and gave him something to take for it; that he was off from work for a month; and that he left the mine about May 3 — that his back was bothering him. Gettler worked at the Crown mine as *Page 530 underground timberman for a period of two years just prior to the accident. The doctor testified that Gettler's symptoms pointed to lumbago; that such symptoms are "fairly" distinguishable from those of strain; that he gave him soda salicylate but did not remember whether he used strapping. Counsel for the plaintiffs in error calls our attention to a letter written by Gettler and sent to the commission, which counsel says is not in evidence, but nevertheless sheds some light on the question. In the letter Gettler says, among other things: "When the hearing was being held, I did not deny that my sickness as the Insurance Co. calls it was lumbago."
[1] The theory seems to be that if Gettler had lumbago, he has no right to compensation. That does not seem to be the law. In 1 Honnold on Workmen's Compensation, section 98, it is said: "It follows that neither a congenital weakness nor a preexisting disease will render noncompensable an injury received under conditions which would otherwise make it compensable." We have applied that rule several times. Thus, in Carroll v. IndustrialCommission,
[2] The commission's findings are sufficiently supported by the evidence. Central Surety Insurance Corporationv. Industrial Commission,
The district court did not err in affirming the commission's award.
The judgment is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAMS and MR. JUSTICE BOUCK concur.