American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Brentlinger

224 S.W.2d 912, 311 Ky. 500, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 22, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 912 (American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Brentlinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Brentlinger, 224 S.W.2d 912, 311 Ky. 500, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1196 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Judge Helm

Affirming.

Appellant filed a petition in the Jefferson Circuit Court appealing from an award of the Workmen’s Compensation Board in favor of appellee, Bessie Mable Brentlinger, as an individual, and as mother and custodian of Blanch C., Mary E., and Geneva A. Brentlinger. The court dismissed the petition. Appellant appeals from that judgment.

On April 10, 1944, David L. Brentlinger, husband of appellee, Bessie Mable Brentlinger, and father of the above-named infants, filed application with the Board against appellant for adjustment of claim, alleging total permanent disability because of the inhalation of silica dust on and before December 19, 1943, and for some twenty years while in appellant’s employ, the inhalation causing the destruction of his normal lung tissue and tuberculosis. His application noted Dr. Wyborney as attending physician. Brentlinger died July 20, 1944. On September 7, 1944, appellees filed a pleading with the Board, styled “Revivor,” in which they set out that Brentlinger had filed application for adjustment of claim for compensation with the Board; that he died July 20, 1944; that he left surviving him the petitioner, Bessie Mable Brentlinger, and the above-named dependent children, and praying that the Board allow each of them compensation in accordance with the Compensation Law of the State of Kentucky.

The original record of the Compensation Board is before us. It is a jumble of pleadings and depositions; not in order; the pages are not numbered, and the record — a large one — is without an index. The record contains, it seems, all of the pleadings and evidence from the time Brentlinger filed his application up to the present time.

*502 Appellant filed an answer to Brentlinger’s application, and on September 19, 1944, filed a supplementary answer pleading that Brentlinger’s claim was filed by him more than one year after his last exposure to silica dust, and his death occurred more than two years after such last exposure. A stipulation was filed, agreeing (1) that Brentlinger and appellant were operating under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, KRS 342.001 et seq.; and (2) that “by joint voluntary applications signed February 1, 1939, and September 24, 1942, said parties had accepted and were operating under .the provisions of the ■ silicosis amendment to the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Kentucky.”

In the record which appellant has brought to this court is the deposition of David L. Brentlinger, taken May 23, 1944. He was 52 years of age. It was stipulated that appellees, Bessie Mable Brentlinger, was his wife, and that he had three dependent children. He had worked for appellant for nearly twenty-one years; he had worked in the tub grinding department for seventeen years; they got the sand off the tubs by running them through the rim grinder; from the sand “there was much silica dust in there * * * he was in a fog all the time; ’ ’ there was not any ventilation where he was; he worked there up until they quit making tubs. After that, he worked in the magnesium department. It was stipulated that he was first employed April 15, 1925, and worked in the tub cleaning department until June 23, 1942, except for a short time in 1931 and 1932; that he returned to work in the magnesium finishing department September 24, 1942, and worked there until December 20, 1943.

On May 18, 1944, Arthur Brentlinger, 29 years of age, a son of David L. Brentlinger, stated that for five years he worked in the same department as his father. Asked as to the condition of the department where tubs were ground, he said, “It was dusty * * * it was so dusty you couldn’t tell one thing from the other.” Asked as to the kind of dust, he said, “Silica dust and sand.” The dust cleared very little when the grinding stopped. They had no exhaust fans; it was “pretty dusty” where his father worked. The sand blasting was near where his father worked. Silica dust is produced from the blasting of sand.

*503 David A. Brentlinger, son of David L. Brentlinger, maintenance carpenter for appellant, had access to the whole plant; was familiar with the tnb grinding department. They had a hand sand blast machine in the magnesium department; they used sand in that department; used it up until December, 1943; when they used the sand blast “it was pretty dusty” in that department.

Brentlinger was in Waverly Hills Sanatorium. On the same day, Dr. Benjamin L/ Brock, who has specialized in diseases of the chest and who was Medical Director of Waverley Hills Sanatorium and Tuberculosis Controller of the Louisville and Jefferson County Health Department, testified that Brentlinger was admitted as a patient at the sanatorium February 28, 1944; that he gave history of having worked in silica dust for the past twenty years; frorh this history, his observation of the patient and X-rays of him, he diagnosed the patient’s condition as silico-tuberculosis. He says, “It has been shown very definitely that silicosis predisposes to tuberculosis. A very large percentage of patients with silicosis die of tuberculosis. It has been estimated by authorities, such as Dr. Gardner of Saranac Lake, * * * that 75 per cent of silicosis patients die of pulmonary tuberculosis.” Brentlinger is now “permanently and totally disabled.” He says, “In autopsy * * * you can demonstrate silicosis conclusively * * * by an incineration test.”

Dr. Vernon J. Wyborney, resident physician of Waverley Hills Sanitorium, specializes in chest diseases. On May 25, 1944, he stated he took history, made physical and X-ray examinations of Brentlinger. He says, “Silicosis predisposes to tuberculosis. I believe at least 75 percent of silicosis cases are followed by tuberculosis.” His diagnosis was “very advanced silico-tuberculosis.” As resident physician at Waverley Hills, he has quite a number of silico-tuberculosis cases. The only incontestable method of demonstrating silicosis is by an incineration test made on autopsy.

Dr. Oscar 0. Miller, specialist in tuberculosis and diseases of the chest, testifying for appellant, stated that from “a history of Mr. Brentlinger’s past occupation and the physical examination of his chest and interpretation of X-rays obtained from Dr. Ira Kerns, *504 “I could find no evidence of silicosis.” A man with advanced silicosis would be prone to develop tuberculosis; there is “no treatment for silicosis * * * it is a deadly disease.” Asked as to the so-called incineration test made on autopsy to determine the presence or absence of silicosis, he stated, “The incineration test probably at that time will show the silicon dioxide content of the lungs. * * * A normal lung will show 1.13 milligrams per gram. Carrying over two milligrams per gram would indicate the individual had been exposed to a dusty atmosphere.”

Otto A. Hoffman, Chief Chemist for appellant, made dust counts about the plant of appellant. He made six counts in the magnesium department. The largest counts in the magnesium department were one five million particles per “cubic feet, and one six million particles, 50 per cent silica he guesses, average size four microms.

Dr. A. W. Homberger, Professor of Biochemistry at the School of Medicine in Louisville, received ' the lungs of David L.

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Related

American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. v. Kellar's Adm'x
227 S.W.2d 414 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 912, 311 Ky. 500, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-radiator-standard-sanitary-corp-v-brentlinger-kyctapphigh-1949.