Citation Numbers: 49 A.D.2d 998, 374 N.Y.S.2d 402, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11335
Filed Date: 10/30/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeals from decisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Board, filed July 26, 1973 and May 13, 1974, which modified a referee’s decision by reversing so much thereof as found no causal relation between decedent’s accidental injury and subsequent amputation of his right leg, and made an award for benefits for loss of use of the right leg. The board has found that claimant’s decedent sustained an accidental injury in the course of his employment when, on February 16, 1970, he was struck on the right ankle by falling lumber in the employer’s store, causing a laceration. Appellants contend that this determination is not supported by substantial evidence, and cite in support of this contention the absence of any medical evidence that a laceration in fact occurred. However, we are of the view that the testimony of decedent as to the occurrence of the accident, as well as testimony of the employer’s bookkeeper that decedent had reported to her that he had hurt his foot, is sufficient to support the finding of accident. A more difficult question is raised by the contention that there is no substantial evidence to support the finding of causal relation between the initial accident and the subsequent gangrenous infection which led to amputation of decedent’s right leg in May, 1970. (We also note that a gangrenous condition led to the amputation of decedent’s left leg in December, 1973.) It is not disputed, and the board found, that decedent was suffering from an "underlying vascular disease involving the lower extremity”. The board premised its finding of causal relation on the testimony of the one medical expert who testified on behalf of claimant, Dr. V. Cummings, summarizing his testimony thusly: "An injury to an extremity that has some limitation to the blood supply, because of arteriosclerosis or occlusion of the vessels, that that injury can cause a sequence of events that might lead to an amputation * * *. It is entirely possible that the injury sustained * * * could lead to a sequence of events which could produce this disability [the claimant had]” (emphasis supplied). It is, of course, by now well established that medical opinion as to causality need not be couched in terms of certainty to be accepted by the board, provided it is the judgment of the expert that causality should and could be assumed (see Matter of Ernest v Boggs Lake Estates, 12 NY2d 414). This, in our opinion, is not such a case. Firstly, Dr. Cummings never expressed an opinion as to why it could be concluded that a "sequence of events” productive of decedent’s disability had occurred here, and he in fact did not even express an opinion that there was causal relation here. Dr. Cummings had not seen the decedent prior to the amputation, and thus could premise his answers to hypotheticals only on the findings of other physicians. The testimony of these physicians is significant. Dr. Kave testified that when he examined decedent in April, 1970 he found both ankles to be swollen and the existence of a condition of cellulitis on both legs. He specified that he found no evidence at that time of the continuing consequences of a laceration. Dr. Magat saw decedent on his first hospital admission on February 28, 1970 and found marked swelling in both legs which radiated downward from the waist, and no evidence of any laceration or contusion. This evidence does not necessarily indicate that decedent had not suffered the injury claimed on February 16, 1970, but the