
    LIONDALE BLEACH, DYE AND PAINT WORKS, PROSECUTOR, v. VAN WYKE F. RIKER, PETITIONER-RESPONDENT.
    Argued November 7, 1913
    Decided February 24, 1914.
    1. Where no specific time or occasion can 'be fixed upon as the time when an alleged accident happened, there is no injury by accident within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation act.
    2. Petitioner after ten days’ service in defendant’s bleachery, was affected with a rash, which was pronounced to be a condition of eczema, and it was said might be caused by acids; the trial judge found that the petitioner’s condition was caused by contact with the dampened goods. Held, that the petitioner was not injured by accident.
    On certiorari to Morris Pleas.
    Petition under Workmen’s Compensation act.
    ■ The petitioner, after ten days’ service in the defendant’s bleachery, was affected with a rash, pronounced bjr the medical testimony to be a condition of eczema. One physician testified that this could be caused by acids. The trial judge thereupon found that the petitioner’s condition was caused by contact with the dampened goods. He then held that the condition was due to accident.
    Before Justices Swayze and Bergen.
    Eor the prosecutor, Jehiel G. Shipman (Fort & Fort on the brief).
    Eor the petitioner-respondent, Ulysses G. Davenport.
    
   . The opinion of the court was delivered by

Swayze, J.

The proper definition of “accident,” within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation act, has been the subject of decision in several cases under the English statute and we cannot do better than review the most important. \Ye need not go back of Fenton v. Thorley & Co., Limited (1903), A. C. 443, since earlier decisions of the Court of Appeal were there overruled by the House of Lords. It was there held that a workman, employed to turn the wheel of a machine, who ruptured himself by au act of overexertion, suffered an injury by accident. But Lord Macnaghten, who delivered the principal judgment, was careful to say that the words “by accident” were introduced to qualify the word “injury,” “confining it io a certain class of injurie?, and excluding other classes, as, for instance, injuries by disease or injuries self-inflicted by design.”

In Turvey v. Brintons, Limited (1904), 1 K. B. 328, a workman employed in a wool-combing factory, in which there was wool which had been taken from sheep infected with anthrax, contracted that disease by contact with the anthrax bacillus that was present in the wool; the Court of Appeal held ihat the workman was .injured by accident. The judgment was affirmed by a majority of the judges in the House of Lords. (1905), A. C. 230. To what extent the result turned on the finding of the trial judge that the anthrax was caused by the accidental alighting of a bacillus on the deceased does not dearly appear in the opinion, but Lord Lindley, who agreed with the majority, expressed approval of a remark of Lord Justice Cozcns-Hardy, in the court below that he should he sorry io hold that every disease contracted bj" a workman on the premises is a disease contracted in the course of the employment, or a result arising from accident in the course of employment. It has since been held that the decision of this case ilimed on the specific findings of the trial judge.

In the next case the remark of Lord Lindley bore fruit. Steel v. Cammell, Laird & Co., Limited (1905), 2 K. B. 232. A workman whose employment necessitated the handling of white and red lead gradually accumulated lead in his system with the ultimate result that he suffered from lead poisoning, which produced partial paralysis and incapacity for work; the court held that this was not an injury by accident within the meaning of the act. The reason seems to have been that it was not possible to indicate a time at which there was an accident which caused the injury to the workman. Lord Justice Cozens-Hardy distinguished the anthrax case because there the impact of the bacillus upon the particular spot where the disease developed was proved as a fact; the source of the bacillus was known, the place at- which it struck the subject was known, and the accident was known.

In Ismay, Imrie & Co. v. Williamson (1908), A. C. 437, a workman in a weak and emaciated condition, while raking out ashes from under the boiler in the stokehole of a steamship received a heat-stroke, from the effect of which he died; the House of Lords held that this was a case of death by accident. It is notable that Lord Macnaghten, who had delivered the principal judgment in Fenton v. Thorley, dissented.

In Broderick v. London County Council (1908), 2 K. B. 807, a workman contracted enteritis from inhaling sewer gas in the course of his employment, and it was held that this was not an injury by accident. The case is close to Brintons, Limited, v. Turvey. As to that the court said: “It is said that it is an accident because this • disease was probably due to a bacillus. I believe that the modern theory is that all diseases are due to bacilli, and I will assume that the present disease was due to a bacillus; and it is said that it was quite unexpected that this mishap would fall upon this particular man rather than upon other men engaged upon similar -work, and that such a circumstance satisfies all the words of the act, and that it was an injury arising by accident. I am unable to assent to that view.”

In Eke v. Hart-Dyke (1910), 2 K. B. 677, the workman died of ptomaine poisoning from server gas inhaled or absorbed into his system; he had been employed four or five days in finding and opening certain cesspools for inspection. It was held by the Court of Appeal that his death was not due to an injury by accident. All the judges explained Brintons, Limited, v. Turvey, upon the special finding of facts in that case, and Lord Justice Kennedy suggested that a similar finding -would have been permissible in the pending case, but he agreed that, there could be no recovery for injury by accident where you cannot give a date, and added “it is hardly a lawyer’s question.”

We need not, of course, consider eases where there has been an accident and disease has followed. We have considered that question in Newcomb v. Albertson, decided at the present term.

The English courts seem at last to have settled that where no specific time or occasion can he fixed upon as the time when the alleged accident happened, there is no injury by accident within the meaning of the act. This seems a sensible working rule, especially in view of the provisions of the statute requiring notice in certain cases within fourteen days of the occurrence of the injury — a provision which must point to a specific time.

We need not consider in this case the question of the effect of a finding by the trial jndge as in Brintons, Limited, v. ’Purvey. Not only is there no such finding of fact, hut the learned trial judge rested upon a construction of the statute which makes the word “accident” include “those events which were not only the result of violence and casualty, hut also those resulting conditions, which were attributable to and caused by events that take place without one’s foresight or expectation.” This, however, is to make the employer’s liability torn on resulting conditions rather than on the fact of injury by accident. There may indeed be compensation awarded for resulting conditions where you can once put your finger on the accident from which they result; but the ground of the action fixed by the statute is the injury by accident, not the results of an indefinite something which may not be an accident.

The judgment must he reversed, but without costs.  