Court Opinion

ID: 9681372
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 07:49:11.093657+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:17:33.626129
License: Public Domain

PALMORE, Judge.
George Fletcher Robinson, 40 years of age, fell dead while engaged in the course of his employment with the appellant company, a road contractor. On the theory that his death occurred by reason of a coronary occlusion resulting from his work the Workmen’s Compensation Board awarded maximum benefits on the personal representative’s claim. The company appeals from a judgment of the Shelby Circuit Court affirming the award.
The dispositive question is whether the evidence was sufficient to support a factual finding that the physical exertion of Robinson’s work was a causal factor in the fatal attack. To phrase it in terms of legal principle, was there substantial evidence to indicate a reasonable probability that the work caused or contributed to the injury?
Robinson’s usual activities were to operate a watering tank truck which wet down the sub-grade of the road under construction and, from time to time, to dismount and dig “bleeder drains” in the loose dirt piled against the edge of the newly de*893posited crushed rock so that the water would drain out of the rock and off to the side of the road. The latter job consisted of using a hand shovel to displace three or four shovels full of dirt and then walking 100 feet and repeating the operation. Ordinarily it was not a strenuous activity. A fellow workman said, “As far as labor work, I think it’s just a simple ordinary job.”
Though no witness observed Robinson actually engaged in the shovel work on the day of his death (which was variously estimated to have occurred around 9 or 10 o’clock in the morning), he had been seen walking along the road carrying a shovel a short while before the fatal attack. The day (July IS) was hot, and he was perspiring. Moments before the end he was on his water truck which was parked on a bridge over Bullskin Creek, the source from which water was pumped for use on the road. His foreman, working at the other end of the bridge, whistled and motioned for Robinson to come over to him. The foreman then directed his attention to the matters immediately at hand and did not again see Robinson until he, the foreman, looked around three or four minutes later and found him lying on the ground. Robinson had walked across the bridge, a distance of about 100 feet, and had just about reached the foreman when he fell. This is the substance of the evidence bearing upon Robinson’s physical activity immediately preceding his death.
There was but one medical witness, Dr. L. A. Wahle, who as county coroner examined Robinson after death and executed a death certificate assigning coronary occlusion as the cause. He had never seen the decedent before. He said that his verdict was based partially on a history of pre-existing coronary disease, which history was given him by members of the family and other associates of Robinson. He had no written record and could not recall the identities of the specific persons from whom he obtained this information. Robinson’s widow testified that he had never had heart trouble or manifested any sign of ill health.
Dr. Wahle recommended to the members of the family that if they had any further interest in the cause of death they have an autopsy. However, this was not done.
On the witness stand Dr. Wahle declined to say that the occlusion would have occurred regardless of the work Robinson was doing, but indicated that it could have. He likewise declined to say that the work was or probably was a causative factor, but said that it could have been. The following quotations fairly exemplify his testimony in this respect :
“I can say that he died while at work, and his cause of death was coronary occlusion, the extent to which his occupation caused his death is a questionable factor.”
Q 83: “Without the benefit of more information such as might be obtained in an autopsy, it would be purely mere speculation to try to guess.”
Answer: “It would be speculation,” etc.
Q 87: “You stated in response to one of Mr. Ewen’s questions that the physical exertion which Mr. Robinson experienced as a result of his employment and the heat of the day were factors in causing his death, is that correct?”
Answer: “I believe,. Mr. Liebman, that my remarks were that the conditions that existed the day of his death could have been a factor in his fatal occlusion.”
In Terry v. Associated Stone Co., Ky., 334 S.W.2d 926 (1960), the Board’s finding was supported by medical testimony to the effect that the coronary occlusion was “probably precipitated” by Terry’s exertion. In Grimes v. Goodlett and Adams, Ky., 345 S.W.2d 47 (1961), three doctors expressed opinions on the relationship of the work to the heart attack. One said the exertion “could have” contributed and the *894other two said it probably did. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we held that this testimony was conclusive.
Our decision in the Grimes case was premised on the expert testimony to the effect that the decedent’s exertion probably did contribute to his death. Such testimony constitutes substantial evidence sufficient to require an award in the absence of rebuttal or to sustain an award in the event the board chooses to believe it over rebutting testimony. But there is a significant difference between probability and possibility. A possibility is not enough to support a finding.1 Terry v. Associated Stone Co., Ky., 334 S.W.2d 926, 928 (1960). In our opinion the words “could” and “could have” speak in terms of possibility only, not probability. The excerpt from Dr. Wahle’s testimony quoted in the dissent to this opinion, to the effect that the disease aould have progressed in such a manner that the work would have been sufficient to induce a fatal conclusion, amounts to nothing more than a conjecture of what might have been.
In the absence of medical testimony that the physical stress of Robinson’s work did or probably did cause, contribute to or precipitate his coronary occlusion, a court cannot find it so without assuming an expert medical proficiency of its own. It may be that Robinson’s claim inherently was as valid as those in the Terry and Grimes •cases, but the difference is in the witnesses. Neither the board nor the courts can use the testimony from Terry and Grimes in this case, and the relationship between physical activity and coronary occlusion is not so clearly established that we could take judicial notice that if a man has an occlusion while he is engaged in manual labor, ■or immediately afterward, the exertion is probably a causative factor. That must come from the mouth of a qualified member of the medical profession before it can be found as a fact in a court of law.
Since the claim cannot be sustained at all, it is unnecessary to discuss the board’s action in rejecting Dr. Wahle’s thesis to the effect that exertion never is the sole cause of a coronary occlusion, while at the same time accepting his opinion that there was an occlusion, an error that resulted in a maximum award rather than an apportionment.
The judgment is reversed with directions that it be remanded to the Workmen’s Compensation Board for dismissal of the claim.
WILLIAMS, J., dissents.

. “To establish causal connection between an accident and an injury the standard of proof is held to require medical testimony to the effect that the accident ‘caused’ the injury, not that it ‘could have’ or ‘probably did,’ though absolute medical certainty is not demanded.” Schneider, Workmen’s Compensation VoL 12, p. 308 (§ 2532). Thus it would appear that by equating “probably did” with “could have” some courts have been less liberal than we.