The claimant, Fannie Lurye, was employed as a saleswoman in a department store. "On October 15, 1932, while the said Fannie Lurye was *Page 184 engaged in the regular course of her employment and while working for her employer, showing coats to a customer, a fellow-employee switched on an electric fan, which caused a draft to be blown upon her, causing her to sustain a chill, resulting in Bell's Palsy, and as a result of which she became disabled." On this finding the claim for an award of workmen's compensation has been dismissed on the authority of Matter of Lerner v. Rump Bros. (241 N.Y. 153).
In that case the finding was that the employee, a salesman, while working on June 2, 1923, at "his employer's plant, and while showing fruit and vegetables to a customer of his employer in the refrigerator of said employer's plant, and because of the sudden transition from the superheated atmosphere on the outside of said refrigerating plant to the chilly atmosphere in the interior thereof, and as his duties necessitated his remaining in said refrigerator for ten minutes, he received a chill that naturally and unavoidably caused a cold to develop which lowered his disease-resisting power, and as a result, pulmonary edema and cerebral embolism and septic endocarditis developed and caused his death on November 22, 1923; the proximate cause of death being the injury that he received in the refrigerator of his employer's plant on June 2, 1923." (212 App. Div. 747, 748; 241 N Y at p. 154.) It was there held that the facts so found did not make out a case of disease which could be classified as an accident within the fair meaning of the statute.
We have here the same circumstances of contact with cold air at a definite time and place resulting in disease, with nothing out of the ordinary either in the claimant's work or condition of health. But there, we think, the likeness ends.
In the Lerner case the employee passed from a hot room into a cold one. The specific result was something that was almost as likely to occur as not. What was *Page 185 presented, the court said, was "a case of ordinary exposure resulting in a cold." We thought that to the average man there would seem to be no accident in such a sequence of events. (Cf.Matter of Hocke v. Emdee Management Corp., 269 N.Y. 592.)
In the case at hand the claimant was struck by air propelled by the fan. The result was "palsy which is limited to one side of the face and is acute in onset and called Bell's" — with consequent distortion of the parts and of the powers of expression. We think the average man would say that so swift and harsh a disablement was an accidental injury when it was so strangely suffered in the ordinary day's work. (See Lewis v.Ocean Accident Guarantee Corp., 224 N.Y. 18, 21.) It seems to us that analogy, too, leads to that conclusion. "Sunstroke, strictly speaking, is a disease, but the suddenness of its approach and its catastrophic nature have caused it to be classified as an accident." (Matter of Connelly v. HuntFurniture Co., 240 N.Y. 83, 87.)
For cases like this no general rule can be annunciated. (Mansbacher v. Prudential Ins. Co., 273 N.Y. 140, 145.) Confining ourselves to the finding here made and affirmed, we hold that the claimant was entitled to relief. (Cf. IndustrialCommission v. Middleton, 126 Ohio St. 212.)
The order of the Appellate Division and the determination of the State Industrial Board should be reversed and the award originally made reinstated, with costs in all courts.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, HUBBS, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *Page 186