Court Opinion

ID: 3505684
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:15:53.836665+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:05:27.457440
License: Public Domain

1 Reported in 204 N.W. 323.
Certiorari to the Industrial Commission. Plaintiff, the employe, while unloading coal from a steel constructed gondola coal car, undertook to throw out of the car a piece of soft coal weighing three or four pounds. It struck the side of the top of the car and fell back striking him on the cheek, knocking him down. The employe suffered a wound or cut which bled profusely. He washed and bandaged it, and it has ever since been the subject of bandage and care. The injury was known to the employer, it was not of a disabling character and the employe worked practically all the time for about a year and a half when it was definitely determined that cancer was present. The commission awarded compensation. The principal contention is that the evidence does not justify the award and that cancer does not result from injury.
The substance of the testimony of the medical witnesses called in behalf of the employe is that, in their opinion, the cancer resulted directly from the injury. It is not for us to decide as a scientific fact that trauma causes cancer or that cancer is a medical mystery. The employe in the course of his employment suffered an injury, upon his cheek, at a place previously free from blemish. Under constant care, it developed a malignant growth which was eventually diagnosed as cancer. The circumstance alone is pretty strong evidence that the injury was the proximate cause of the result, and would be quite convincing to the mind of a layman. There is no apparent break in the chain of causation. If the medical profession conceded that it did not know the cause of cancer, the connecting events between the cause and effect in this case might be sufficient to justify the conclusion that the injury was the legal cause and that the result should be compensable. Klika v. Independent School Dist. No. 79, 161 Minn. 461,202 N.W. 30. But according to the *Page 399 
medical testimony some of the best authorities in medicine and surgery assert that cancer comes from injury. Plaintiff's evidence is sufficient to meet the legal requirements. Other cases have been decided upon the same theory. Schneider, Workmen's Comp. Law, § 311, p. 774; Santa Ana Sugar Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com. 35 Cal.App. 652, 170 P. 630; Lewis v. Port of London Authority (1914) 7 B.W.C.C. 577; C.A. Haward v. Rowsell  M. (1914) 7 B.W.C.C. 552; Cramer v. Littell, 38 N.J.L.J. 82. The medical testimony referred to, however, in this case stands uncontradicted, and it, together with the other evidence in the case, sufficiently supports the finding that the cancer was due to the injury which was received in the course of employment. Whether the result was due to the bruise incident to the original injury or to constant irritation thereafter is of little consequence in view of the entire record.
Any uncertainties that may be in this record because one of the doctors said that the causes of cancer are not definitely known; that cancer seldom comes from an injury; that there are a number of different theories advanced by the medical profession as to the cause of cancer, but they are all theoretical; that it is speculative to advance an opinion that the condition in this case was due to the injury, do not reach the state of being conjectural (which is a mere guess, 12 C.J. 503), as claimed by appellant. The record provides such substantial support for the conclusion reached that it cannot be said to rest on surmise or suspicion. The proof is ample.
The respondent is allowed $50 as attorney's fees incident to this proceeding in this court which will be included in the judgment for, and in addition to, the usual costs and disbursements taxed herein.
Affirmed. *Page 400