DocketNumber: Docket No. 73, Calendar No. 39,076.
Citation Numbers: 273 N.W. 418, 280 Mich. 127, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 609
Judges: Bushnell, Sharpe, Wiest, North, Butzel, Potter, Chandler, Fead
Filed Date: 5/21/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The award of compensation, in part at least, rests upon subsequent insanity of plaintiff and should be vacated and the case remanded to the department with direction to limit consideration to plaintiff's physical disability caused by the injury to his foot, and previous adjudications with reference thereto.
It is manifest that plaintiff brooded over inability to obtain compensation until he is insane. Of course, under such circumstances, there is a relationship between the physical injury and the mania but not in the sense of compensable causation.
As stated in my Brother's opinion [post] we have affirmed awards for neurasthenia directly occasioned by physical injuries or severe shock, but the distinction between such cases and the instance at bar should be obvious. The instant case goes into another field and, if affirmed, sanctions compensation for subsequent mental derangement resulting from disappointment and brooding over an imagined wrong. *Page 131
In this field my views are well expressed inKowalski v. Railroad Co.,
"We must also decline to recognize that the compensable consequences of an injury, although far-reaching so long as the chain of causation remains unbroken, may be extended so as to include unhappy mental or nervous states which do not pertain to the original injury except in the sense that they arise from the pendency of proceedings for compensation for the injury or anxiety because compensation may be terminated. The distinction between such a situation and a functional nervous upset and neurotic condition having causal relation with the personal injury, as in Hunnewell's Case,
SHARPE, J., concurred with WIEST, J.