Lindhout v. Brochu & Hass

Brochu Hass, employer, and General Casualty Surety Company, insurer, defendants, *Page 235 appeal from the award of the department of labor and industry, to John Lindhout, employee and plaintiff, for the loss of an eye. A piece of steel, chipped from a hammer, penetrated the cornea of the plaintiff's eye while he was at work at his trade of tool and die maker, and was removed with a magnet. A cataract developed and was subsequently removed by an operation. The eyesight of the injured eye was destroyed, but with the use of a proper lens the vision was restored and increased about 25 per cent. Without the use of glasses, however, the vision of the injured eye is dim, and useless for industrial purposes, but for other uses sufficient to "see large objects at the sides and up and down."

The facts in the case are very similar to those inSuggs v. Ternstedt Manfg. Co., 232 Mich. 599, where compensation was allowed for the loss of an eye. Appellants' appeal is based entirely upon the recent case of Powers v.Motor Wheel Corp., 252 Mich. 639 (73 A.L.R. 702), where the denial of an award for the loss of an eye by the department was affirmed. In the latter case, however, it was shown that claimant still had "protective" or peripheral vision in the injured eye, and that when glasses were not used, the two eyes co-ordinated. There is no such showing in the present case. Dr. Campbell, an expert, testified that claimant could not use his eye for any kind of industrial work without glasses, and with glasses he could only use the eye alone as the eyes would not coordinate with each other; that "he will always use his uninjured eye to the exclusion of the injured eye, either with glasses or without." The effect of the injury is such that plaintiff's vision will always *Page 236 be limited to the use of only one eye at a time. The instant case differs from that of Powers v. Motor Wheel Corp., supra, in which there was proof that the eyes co-ordinated when no glasses were used. In the latter case, the various cases regarding injury to, and loss of, an eye, are reviewed in the majority opinion, where we said:

"The cases display considerable variety and divergency, but we are not called upon to reconcile them. It may be noted that, except in the Collins Case, where the board held that the injury to the remaining eye had caused total disability and was compensable as such under the general provisions of the statute, the decisions of the compensation board on loss of an eye have been uniformly affirmed by this court. The application of the test to a specific case is very largely a question of fact upon which the finding of the board is conclusive, if supported by evidence. Liimatta v. Calumet Hecla Mining Co.,229 Mich. 41; Hayes v. Motor Wheel Corp., 233 Mich. 538; Banker v. Chevrolet Motor Co., 244 Mich. 1."

The instant case, as we stated in the Powers Case, "presents an issue of fact upon which the decision of the board is final." The award is affirmed, with costs.

WIEST, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred. *Page 237