Appellees, who are the widow and children of Howard Tompkins, deceased, filed their application before the Industrial Board, alleging that they were dependents of said decedent, and asking for an adjustment of their claim against appellant Hege and Company for compensation on account of the death of said decedent, resulting from injuries received by him while in its employ. The application was heard by a single member of the Industrial Board, resulting in an award in favor of appellees, based on a finding of facts which recited that appellant Fidelity and Casualty Company was the compensation insurance carrier of said Hege and Company on the date the decedent received his said injuries. This award was afterward reviewed by the full board on the application of appellants, which resulted in an award in favor of appellees, and from which award appellants are prosecuting this appeal.
Appellants have assigned as errors on which they reply for reversal that the award of the full board is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and is contrary to law. Under these assigned errors appellants assert that there is no competent evidence in the record *276proving, or tending to prove, directly or by legitimate inference, that the injury causing the death of said Howard Tompkins was sustained by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by appellant Hege and Company. This is the sole question presented for our consideration.
1. 2. 3. We agree with appellant’s contention that the burden rested on appellees to furnish evidence establishing facts from which the conclusion could be properly drawn that the decedent’s injuries were caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by Hege and Company. Haskell, etc., Car Co. v. Brown (1918), 67 Ind. App. 178, 117 N. E. 555. Also, that the ultimate facts upon which an award is based must be supported by some competent evidence. United Paperboard Co. v. Lewis (1917), 65 Ind. App. 356, 117 N. E. 276. However, it should be borne in mind that a finding of facts by the Industrial Board stands upon the same footing as the finding of the trial court, or the verdict of a jury, and when sustained by any competent evidence is conclusively binding on this court. Bloomington, etc., Stone Co. v. Phillips (1917), 65 Ind. App. 189, 116 N. E. 850; Sugar Valley Coal Co. v. Brake (1917), 66 Ind. App. 152, 117 N. E. 937. Such board, like a court or jury, may draw reasonable inferences from the facts and circumstances in evidence. Haskell, etc., Car Co. v. Brown, supra.
With these well-settled rules in mind, we proceed to determine the question before us. The evidence in this case discloses that the deceased died as a result of an injury to one of his thumbs. W. F. Kendall, a member of the firm of Hege and Company, testified *277that the deceased was in the employ of said firm as a carpenter at the time of his injury; and that the deceased told him that he had run a splinter or sliver in his thumb while he was at work finishing a room at the residence of James Pierce.- Adra M. Tompkins, widow of the deceased, testified that her husband came home on the evening of the day he was injured and told her that he had hurt his thumb, and that he thought he had struck it on a screw. A. M. Kirkpatrick, a physician who attended the deceased after his injury, testified that the deceased stated to him that he had hurt his thumb with a sliver off of a screw while at work. The witness said that from the nature of the injury he thought that was correct. Paul C. Graham, another physician who treated the deceased after his injury, testified that the deceased told him that he had pricked the end of his thumb with the burr on a screw. Both physicians gave it as their, opinions that the deceased died as a result of the injury to his thumb. The evidence shows that the deceased was injured on April 8, 1918, and that he died as a result thereof on April 18, 1918. On April 17, 1918, his employer, Hege and Company, made a report of the accident in question to the Industrial Board. This report is in evidence.and states, among other things, that on April 8, 1918, the deceased was injured while in its employ by an accident arising out of and in the course of the employment; that the injury was caused by a sliver off of a screw being run into the end of one of his thumbs, resulting in infection' of his left hand and forearm. This is substantially all the evidence bearing on the question under consideration.
*2784. 5. *2796. 7. 8. *277Appellants contend that the statements made by the. deceased to the several witnesses, as to the canse and *278manner of Ms injury, are hearsay, and tlierefore incompetent as evidence. Appellees admit that such statements are hearsay, hut assert that, under the state of the record, the Industrial Board had the right to consider the same, regardless of such fact. It is firmly settled in this state that a material fact at issue may he established by hearsay evidence, where the same is admitted without objection. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Lyons (1912), 50 Ind. App. 534, 98 N. E. 824. In that case the court said: “The party against whom such evidence is introduced may not take his chance of obtaining a favorable verdict at the hands of a jury on the evidence so admitted, and then, after an adverse verdict, obtain a new trial on the ground that the verdict does not rest on any competent evidence. ’ ’ The above case has been cited with approval in Wagner v. Meyer (1913), 53 Ind. App. 223, 101 N. E. 397; Butts v. Warren Mach. Co. (1914), 55 Ind. App. 347, 103 N. E. 812; Baxter v. Moore (1914), 56 Ind. App. 472, 105 N. E. 588. The reasons for adopting the above rule in ordinary civil actions apply with even greater force in hearings before the Industrial Board. ■ It is evidently the intent of the Workmen’s Compensation Act that, by concise and plain summary proceedings, controversies arising under the same should be promptly adjusted by a simplified procedure, unhampered by the more technical forms and intervening steps which sometimes incumber and delay ordinary civil actions. Acts 1915 p. 392, §55, §8020m2 Burns’ Supp. 1918. In harmony with the manifest intention of the act, this court has held that the Industrial Board is not bound by the rules of court procedure in civil actions (Carl Hagenbeck, *279etc., Shows Co. v. Leppert [1917], 66 Ind. App. 261, 117 N. E. 531); that a motion for a new trial is not an essential to the right of appeal on any question (Union Sanitary Mfg. Co. v. Davis [1917], 63 Ind. App. 548, 114 N. E. 872); that the admission of incompetent evidence by the Industrial Board will not operate to reverse an award, if there be any basis in the competent evidence to support it. United Paperboard Co. v. Lewis, supra. To deny the application of the rule relating to hearsay evidence, as stated and applied in the case of Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Lyons, supra, in proceedings before the Industrial Board, would be to violate the spirit of the act, by applying a more rigid rule with reference to hearsay evidence in such proceedings than is applied in civil actions. We see nothing unreasonable or harmful in. applying the rule announced to proceedings before the Industrial Board, as it would only require that a party object to hearsay evidence, when offered, in order to overcome the presumption which would otherwise arise that he consented to its admission and consideration by the board. In this case the hearsay evidence was admitted without objection, and the board, therefore, had a right to consider the same, and give it such probative force as it might believe it merited, under all the attendant facts and circumstances.
9. *28010. 11. *28112. *279Appellants also contend that the report of the accident filed by Hege and Company with the Industrial Board, and introduced in evidence, is not competent as an admission against appellants that the deceased was injured by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. It *280bases this contention on a number of reasons, •which we will consider in the order given. It is claimed that the report is an ex parte statement and within the hearsay rule. It appears to have been introduced in evidence without objection, and, as it is a statement by the party primarily liable, it is competent as an admission, notwithstanding its ex parte character. It is also urged that the report was filed pursuant to §67 of the Workmen’s Compénsation Act, ■supra¡, which required that it be made on a blank prepared and furnished by the Industrial Board for that purpose, and therefore was not a voluntary statement of a material fact. The record does not disclose what portion of the report is the printed form, and what portion was inserted therein by the party making the same. But, conceding that the statement in question is a part of the printed form, it appears in evidence over the signature of the decedent’s employer without explanation, and it must be held to have adopted the same. While the law requires that such reports must be made on blanks to be procured from the Industrial Board for that purpose, it is not so unyielding or unreasonable as to require the adoption of any statement therein, or the making of an answer to any question, which is not in accord with the facts, or about which the party making report cannot obtain reliable information. It is further urged that such statement is a conclusion of law, and not a statement of a material fact. But admitting, without deciding, that such statement is a conclusion of law, still we know of no rule that requires an admission to be disregarded because made in the form of a conclusion of law, rather than a statement of fact, and hence’ we *281conclude that this reason gives no support to appellant’s contention. It is claimed that the uncontradieted evidence shows that the statements made in the accident report are based on hearsay evidence, and not upon facts within the knowledge of the deceased’s employer or its agent. If this be conceded, it does not follow that the report must be disregarded. We know of no rule that precludes a party from making an admission based on hearsay evidence if he chooses so to do, and therefore we cannot adopt appellant’s view in this regard.
13. It is finally urged that, by the provisions of §56 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, supra, accident reports received from employers in accordance with §67 thereof are private records of the Industrial Board, open only for the inspection of the parties directly involved, and that their use as evidence against an employer is prohibited. An inspection of said §56 will disclose that it does not make an absolute prohibition against the use of such report as evidence, the exact provision in that regard being as follows: “These reports shall not be used as evidence against any employer in any suit at law brought by an employe for the recovery of damages. ’ ’ This provision cannot be construed as a prohibition against the use of such reports in proceedings before the Industrial Board by injured employes or their dependents to secure the compensation due them under the provisions of said act. We therefore conclude that appellant’s contention with reference to the competency of the accident report in question as evidence cannot be sustained. Our conclusion in this regard finds support in the case of Reck v. Whittlesberger (1914), 181 Mich. 463, 148 N. W. *282247, Ann. Cas. 1916C 771. The act of the State of Michigan, .under which this case was decided, provides, as does §67 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of this state, that every employer shall keep a record of all injuries “received by his employes in the course of their employment.” A question arose in the case just cited, as it did in the instant case, with reference to the admission of the accident report of the employer in evidence, and the court in passing on such question said: “We think that such reports from the employer, where all sources of information are at his command when the reports are made, and he has had ample opportunity to satisfy himself of the facts, can properly be taken as an admission, and, at least, as prima facie evidence that such accident and injury occurred as reported.” No evidence was offered to impeach the report so made, or to show that the accident occurred otherwise than stated therein. Considering the evidence as a whole, with all reasonable inferences deducible from the facts established thereby, we are forced to the conclusion that the finding of facts is supported by the evidence, and the award is fully justified by the facts found.
The award is therefore affirmed, and by virtue of the act of March 5, 1917 (Acts 1917 p. 154, §8020q2 Burns’ Supp. 1918), the amount thereof is increased five per cent.