Affirming.
Edgar Duncan, an employee of the Kentucky Coke Company, was killed or died in one of the company's mines on March 28, 1928. Claim was made by the dependents for compensation, and the application filed with the workmen's compensation board. One of the referees heard the proof on July 12, 1928. The workmen's compensation board dismissed the application on January 15, 1929. This order does not show, on its face, whether it was a full board order, or made by a less number of members than the full board. Under the authority of the opinion in American Bituminous Coal Co. et al. v. Ponder,
The first question presented is whether the circuit court had jurisdiction of the petition for review. Appellants insist that the petition for review was filed more than 20 days after the final order of the full board. Section 4933, Ky. Stats., authorizes the board, or any of its members, to hear the parties at issue and determine the dispute in a summary manner. The next succeeding section provides for an application for a review by the full board within seven days, if the first hearing was not held before the full board. The next succeeding section allows either party 20 days after such final order of the board to file a petition for review in the circuit court.
After the order dismissing the application on January 15th, and within seven days thereafter, the appellees filed an application for a review by the full board, and at the same time filed a motion asking that permission be granted to take additional proof. Thereafter the board refused to allow the taking of additional evidence, and ratified the order entered on the 15th day of January. This last order appears to have been made by the board on February 13th. It was the final order. The petition for a review was filed in the circuit court within *Page 615
20 days after the order was entered, and this gave the circuit court jurisdiction. It was held in the case of Lena Rue Coal Co. v. Brewer,
The circuit court, upon a consideration of the facts as disclosed by the hearing before the workmen's compensation board, determined that appellees were entitled to compensation, and entered a judgment accordingly, directing that the judgment should be certified to the workmen's compensation board. Complaint is made about this. It is first insisted that the circuit court may not make a finding of facts. It is true that it may not, but it may consider the facts for the purpose of determining whether the board's finding of fact is supported by some substantial evidence. The board found that Duncan did not come to his death as the result of coming in contact with electricity used in the mine. The circuit court had authority to determine whether there was any evidence on which the board could base such a finding. The circuit court did not depart from the principles announced in South Mountain Coal Co. v. Haddix,
Duncan was a coal miner. He had not suffered with heart trouble in the past, to the knowledge of any witness who testified about the matter. The motor running on the tracks in the mine was supplied with electricity *Page 616 through a fuse plug attached to the motor. The electricity came from wires carrying 250 volts. Duncan sat down on the motor and leaned back against the fuse plug. He cried out, and his companion immediately asked him if he had been shocked. He did not answer, and when his companion took hold of him he was dead. There was a small discoloration on his back, another on the inside of one of his legs, and a small place about his forehead, where the skin was abraded. The evidence establishes that 250 volts is enough to kill a man; that a mule on one occasion ran against these wires, and was electrocuted; that others had received shocks; that the clothing of Duncan was wet with perspiration; that the insulation had come off of the fuse plug a day or two before the accident; that when the current was grounded a shock was felt by others who had used the motor. It seems to the court that the evidence was overwhelming that Duncan came to his death by electrocution, but that is not the question, as the circuit court had no authority to set aside the order of the board, if there was any evidence to support it. The superintendent of the mine testified, and admitted that he knew little about electricity; but about an hour after the death of Duncan he had another man sit in the motor and lean back against the spark plug, while he turned on the current. No harm resulted. He stated that the motor was in the same condition that it was when Duncan died, but he does not state whether the man upon whom he made the test was damp, or whether the current was grounded. He also stated that he had never heard of the electrocution of any man while using a motor. Neither of these statements of his constituted competent, or relevant, evidence tending to show that Duncan was not electrocuted.
The death certificate was offered in evidence, and it shows that Duncan came to his death by electrocution. It was prima facie evidence that he so came to his death. Ky. Stats., sec. 2062a21; L. N. R. R. Co. v. Rowland's Adm'r,
It is said by counsel for appellants that the circuit court reached the conclusion that death was caused by electrocution only through guesses and surmises. They overlooked the death certificate, and apparently they overlooked a well-known fact that electricity is a highly dangerous instrumentality, not well understood, and that death may be caused by it when it is well-nigh impossible to explain just how it came about.
One other point is made, and that is that the circuit court was without authority to make an award and enter a judgment directing the board to carry it out. Appellants rely on the case of South Mountain Coal Co. v. Haddix, supra. It is true, in that case, that the proceedings were referred to the board, with directions to rehear the application. The court gave no reasons for the direction to remand the case to the board. But in the case of Black Mountain Corporation v. Humphrey,
Judgment affirmed.