Judges: Swiggart
Filed Date: 11/18/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Burton's petition prays an award of compensation, to be paid by his employer, Miller Bros. Company, for a total and permanent disability resulting from three separate and distinct accidental injuries, suffered at different times, a blow on the head or neck, a rusty nail stuck through his left hand, from which local infection resulted, and a copper or brass wire stuck in his right hand. From the combined effect of these three injuries, he avers that he has suffered a loss of hearing, rheumatism, cystitis, and a partial paralysis of his lower limbs.
The trial court erroneously required the petitioner to elect to prosecute his claim as arising from only one of the three accidents. The compensation to be awarded, if at all, is for the disability, and not as damages for the accidental injuries suffered. Marhoffer v. Marhoffer,
An accidental injury, as distinguished from an occupational disease, must be assignable to a particular time and place.Morrison v. Tenn. Consol. Coal Co.,
Following the ruling of the English House of Lords in the case cited, we hold that a disability is none the less an injury by accident when it results from a series of accidents, each one of which is specific and ascertainable, although its exclusive influence on the resulting disability cannot be precisely fixed.
Preserving his exceptions to the ruling of the trial court, Burton amended his petition so as to aver the blow on his head or neck as the cause of his disability. On the subsequent trial, the court found that the accident so relied upon occurred more than one year before the petition was filed, so that the suit was barred by the limitation of one year contained in the Code, section 6874; and also that petitioner's disability was not caused by that accident. On both grounds the suit was dismissed, and there is evidence to sustain both findings.
It would be useless to require a new trial of these two questions of fact by the trial court, and they will be permitted to remain as adjudicated. Perkins v. Brown,