This is the second time this case has been before us. The first appeal was Ward Furn. Mfg. Co. v. Reather, 234 Ark. 151, 350 S. W. 2d 691. The history of the litigation shows the care that the judicial system has taken in. dealing with this claim:
(a) For several years prior to 1956 Mr. Reather was employed by Ward Furniture Manufacturing Company (hereinafter sometimes called “employer”); and on September 26, 1956, while Mr. Reather was at work he suffered a collapse. Some time thereafter Mr. Reather filed a claim for workmen’s compensation alleging that he had suffered an accidental injury by breathing dust and that he had become disabled on September 26, 1956.
(b) The claim was controverted; and the Workmen’s Compensation Commission (hereinafter called “Commission”), in an opinion dated November 10, 1959, found that Mr. Reather was entitled to compensation; and the employer appealed to the Sebastian Circuit Court.
(c) The Circuit Court, by judgment of January 11, 1960, vacated and set aside the award and remanded the claim to the Commission for further testimony.
(d) Both sides offered additional evidence before the Commission; and on August 31, 1960, the Commission disallowed the claim of Mr. Reather; and he. appealed to the Circuit Court.
(e) On December 15,1960, the Circuit Court vacated the order of the Commission and directed that the case be returned to the Commission for further investigation and evidence. That judgment of the Circuit Court was appealed by the employer to this Court, and resulted in our Opinion in the said case of Ward Furn. Mfg. Co. v. Reather, 234 Ark. 151, 350 S. W. 2d 691, which affirmed the said judgment of the Circuit Court.
(f) The claim of Mr. Reather then went back to the Commission, which reopened the case for further evidence. In order to make full investigation, the Commission caused Mr. Heather to be examined by Dr. Grimsley Graham, who was asked by the Commission to answer certain propounded questions. Dr. Graham examined Mr. Heather and answered the questions propounded, and these will be subsequently discussed. Mr. Heather also had an examination by a doctor of his own selection, and offered other medical evidence.
(g) Based on the original record and all of the said supplemental evidence, including the report of Dr. Graham, the Commission, on July 26, 1963, made an order denying any compensation to Mr. Heather and stated that Mr. Heather had not sustained his burden of establishing a causal connection between his employment and his disability.
(li) Mr. Heather appealed to the Circuit Court which, on October 24, 1963, affirmed the order, of the Commission; and from the said Circuit Court judgment Mr. Heather prosecutes the present appeal to this Court.
So much for the brief history of the litigation, which extends over a number of years. The decisive question now before us is whether there is substantial evidence in the record to sustain the findings of the Commission in disallowing the claim of Mr. Heather. If so, the Circuit Court judgment was correct and must'be affirmed under our long recognized holdings, some of which are: Lemmer v. Chicopee Mfg. Co., 233 Ark. 523, 345 S. W. 2d 629; and Ft. Smith Couch & Bedding Co. v. Jones, 231 Ark. 790, 332 S. W. 2d 817.
It is undisputed that Mr. Heather collapsed while at work for appellee on September 26, 1956. He claimed that he collapsed because of breathing dust while in his place of employment. The’ question is, whether his work under the conditions existing caused or contributed to his collapse. If so, he is entitled to compensation; but the burden was on Mr. Heather to prove a causal connection between his disabled condition and his employment. Holland v. Malvern Sand & Gravel Co., 237 Ark. 635, 374 S. W. 2d 822. The Commission found that Mr. Heather had failed to prove said causal connection; and we examine now to see if there is substantial evidence in the record to sustain the said finding.
As aforesaid, the Commission caused Mr. Heather to be examined by Dr. Grimsley Graham, a specialist in the field of thoracic and cardio vascular diseases; and the Commission propounded certain questions to Dr. Graham to be answered "by him from his examination of Mr. Heather and the information furnished him by Mr. Heather. Dr. Graham made the examination and reported to the Commission in a four-page single spaced typewritten letter, dated June 5, 1962, and to that letter no objections were filed. In answer to one of the Commission’s questions, Dr. Graham stated that Mr. Heather was suffering from a pulmonary disease, being bronchiectasis, and that the chest x-ray showed some generalized emphysema and intersticial type fibrosis.
Here is the Commission’s second question to Dr. Graham:
“If the claimant is suffering from any pulmonary condition, is there, in your opinion, any causal connection between such pathology and the condition under which the claimant worked1?”
And here is Dr. Graham’s answer:
“It has been my feeling that bronchiectasis is not caused by any occupational exposure, but usually can be found to begin either in early childhood or during their younger years and may often have its onset at the time of whooping cough, which this man did have as a child, or with pneumonia; and once again this man’s condition is consistent with having had pneumonia in 1925 and 1928. I do not believe that his exposure to the dust in any way created any underlying pulmonary pathology. ’ ’ Dr. Graham went on to state that any aggravation of Mr. Heather’s condition that might have been caused by exposure to the dust would have ceased once Mr. Heather was removed from such exposure, and that the dust
did not create any change in his already pre-existing disability.
Thus, we have a case in which it was testified by Dr. Graham that there ivas no causal connection between Mi\ Reather’s work and his disability. In short, his work for appellee did not cause or aggravate his pre-existing disease or condition. Because of this testimony the Commission disallowed Mr. Reather’s claim. Dr. Graham’s report is substantial evidence and supports the decision of the Commission, so we have no choice except to affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court, which affirmed the decision of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission.
Affirmed.
Ward and Johnson, J.J., dissent.