This is a workmen’s compensation case. After a hearing before one judge of the compensation court and dismissal of
It has long been the policy of this court to give a liberal construction to the Workmen’s Compensation Act so that its beneficent purposes may not be thwarted by technical requirements of interpretation. Zanski v. Yellow Cab & Baggage Co., supra. However, it must be remembered that the rule of liberal construction of the Workmen’s Compensation Act applies to the law and not to the evidence offered to support a claim by virtue of the law. The rule does not dispense with the necessity that claimant prove his right to compensation within the rules hereinafter set forth nor does it permit a court to award compensation where the requisite proof is lacking. Chambers v. Bilhorn, Bower & Peters, 145 Neb. 277, 16 N. W. 2d 173.
In that connection the rule is that the burden of proof is upon a claimant in a compensation case to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that personal injury was sustained by the employee by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. A compensation award cannot be based on possibilities or probabilities but must be based upon sufficient evidence that the claimant incurred a disability arising out of and in the course of his employment. Kaffenberger v. Iverson, 142 Neb. 257, 5 N. W. 2d 687; Zanski v. Yellow Cab & Baggage Co., supra; Chambers v. Bilhorn, Bower & Peters, supra.
With these rules in mind we will briefly review the evidence which predicates the result. Plaintiff was a large
He testified that on December 25, 1941, while on duty and heavily dressed he slipped on the curb, fell flat, and felt a pain in his right side. Upon seeing his physician pass on the street he went with him to his office. There the physician dressed his hand, which had been slightly injured upon another occasion not connected with the fall. He then told the physician about his fall and complained of pain in his side and ankle. Examination of his abdomen and ankle disclosed no evidence of bruises or marks of violence and there were then no objective symptoms of a ruptured gall bladder.
Plaintiff also testified that on December 27, 1941, he slipped and fell again. He first testified that he fell on his head but later that he fell on his hip. Later his physician was called to the home where plaintiff complained of pain in his knee, ankle, and abdomen. At that time there was a slight bruise on his knee and slight muscle rigidity of his abdomen. The next day, not feeling well, he did not report for duty. Examination of plaintiff and X-ray taken December 29, 1941, disclosed no evidence of fracture of the knee or ankle. On December 30, 1941, he became quite ill and was taken to a hospital in Sioux City, Iowa.
His surgeon testifies that at that time plaintiff gave him a history of several recent falls on icy streets, the most severe of which was a few days previously at which time he injured his knee and bruised his upper right abdomen of which he had no previous complaint. An examination made at that time by the surgeon was mostly negative except for tenderness and some rigidness in the upper right quadrant. However, from the history given by plaintiff the surgeon’s diagnosis was possible fracture of the liver. X-rays disclosed a nonfunctioning gall bladder. On January 12, 1942, plaintiff was dismissed from the hospital and returned
He was readmitted to the hospital on January 29, 1942, and a drainage operation disclosed an abscess secondary to rupture of his gall bladder. A few stones were found in the abscessed cavity and removed. Plaintiff was dismissed from the hospital on February 17, 1942, but readmitted on May 7, 1942, with a biliary fistula secondary to his drainage operation. A second operation was then performed which consisted of the removal of plaintiff’s gall bladder, with stones therein and drainage of the common duct. He was dismissed from the hospital on May 23, 1942, and has recovered.
Plaintiff’s physician testified that rupture of the gall bladder was very rare and resulted from two causes, disease and trauma, a very minute percent of which result from the latter and most of them from direct blows or stab wounds. He admits that if no marks of violence were present, as in the case at bar, it would be a very rare case since the gall bladder has a tough wall and is very well protected by other parts of the body, including the liver. He testified that he was of the opinion that the rupture of plaintiff’s gall bladder resulted from his falls but admits that the rupture could have been caused by trauma or could have been caused by an infection or a necrosis resulting from stones and if plaintiff had never fallen he would say that it resulted from the latter.
Plaintiff’s surgeon reported in writing to plaintiff’s physician in part as follows: “I don’t know how Mr. Hassmann is going to come out with the insurance company. There is no question but that he had an empyema of the gall bladder with perforation — a walled-off abscess. Whether such condition could be caused by an injury is questionable.” In another letter to the physician he said in part: “The only leg Mr. Hassmann has to stand on is the history of no previous symptoms before his falling and his sequence following the fall.”
The surgeon testified that a ruptured gall bladder is ordi
A physician who specializes in internal medicine and diagnosis and is an associate professor of medicine at the University of Nebraska, College of Medicine, testified for defendant. He had during his practice seen and treated a large number of gall-bladder cases. . He describes the gall bladder as a conical, suspended, stout, elastic, muscular sac under and attached to the liver. It stores the bile and of necessity expands and contracts. He says that it is very difficult to rupture except by direct’blow, such as gunshot wounds, and that there are two kinds of diseased gall bladder, one with and the other without stones. The evidence conclusively supports his statement that plaintiff must have had chronic gall-bladder disease with stones at the time of his accidents. He explained that if a stone obstructs the return of bile to the common duct it sets up an irritation and pressure, resulting in inflammation, shutting off circulation leading to necrosis and perforation, the size of which determines the extent of subsequent symptoms. After perforation nature then attempts to seal it but if unable to do so an abscess develops or if the perforation is large enough an abscess does not develop but the patient goes into immediate shock and disablement requiring opera
We conclude-that the evidence supporting plaintiff’s contention that he incurred a disability arising out of and in the course of his employment is purely speculative and conjectural, based on possibilities and probabilities, which will not support an award. For the reasons heretofore given the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the case is dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.