Bailey v. Stonega Coke & Coal Co.

40 S.E.2d 254, 185 Va. 653, 1946 Va. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 25, 1946
DocketRecord No. 3105
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 S.E.2d 254 (Bailey v. Stonega Coke & Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Stonega Coke & Coal Co., 40 S.E.2d 254, 185 Va. 653, 1946 Va. LEXIS 238 (Va. 1946).

Opinion

Holt, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The deceased, Wilburn C. Bailey, was a man thirty-nine years of age, about six feet tall and weighed around one hundred seventy pounds. He had been employed as a coal miner for many years. Much of this time he had worked for the defendant, although in intervening years he had worked for other coal companies; but he returned to the Stonega Coke and Coal Company, had worked at its mine known as the Imboden Mine for the past twenty-two months and was working there on the night shift at the time of his death on June 10, 1944. He and petitioner, [655]*655Louella Bailey, had been married for eleven years and had five children. His average weekly wage was $42.37.

Until the date of his death, his health seemed excellent. The first intimation that this might not be the case occurred just before he was stricken. He had been loading a mine car with coal when he quit, put away his tools, and said to a fellow-workman that he was not well. There was an autopsy. The coroner and two examining physicians returned this report:

££ # # # The chest contents were thoroughly exposed by dissecting the ribs and inverting a large flap. The lungs looked normal with the exception of pigmentation usually found in miners.
“Right side of heart acutely dialated and contained about one pint of blood. This dialiation was confined to the right auricle which was at least five times its normal volume. The enlargement of the right side of the heart was so extensive before opening the heart it stimulated a large custic tumor of the wall of the right auricle.
“Death in our opinion was due to acute dialitation of the heart centering in the right auricle and was evidently practically instantaneous.
“Coroner and associate doctors signatures below.
N. F. Hix, Coroner.
C. B. Bowyer T. J. Tudor.”

Dr. C B. Bowyer, a witness introduced on behalf of the petitioner and who had been for the preceding year president of the Medical Society of Virginia, said:

“That is my opinion, that this man had this congenital thing, it gradually got worse, coincidental with work, with natural causes. If it had not been that day it might have been the next on the way home.”

Dr. Thomas J. Tudor, another witness for the petitioner, said that “The auricle ordinarily holds no more than four ounces of that size, that would be one-fourth, it was dilated some beyond that. Figured five times beyond normal, about amount of twenty ounces, as had been [656]*656enough to stretch it tight. Would have been sac containing twenty ounces, whereas heretofore would contain about four ounces,” and that this dilation was “About as big as I ever saw.” Again: “The most probable cause of that weakened condition (congenital) of the wall of the auricle was that it was present, had it all his life and heart had accommodated it and carried on; and finally it just got to point it failed. * * * ”

Dr. Bowyer also said:

“Well, from what we have found, the condition of the heart, in my opinion the man has congenital condition to start with He died from natural causes, just what part his work played, I am unable to say.”

Dr. N. F. Hix, who was also coroner, answering a hypothetical question by petitioner’s counsel, said, assuming all of the facts there stated are to be proven, “I think that would cause it, over-exertion. I think it would be more apt to occur from over-exertion than not doing anything.” On cross-examination he was asked: “If loading coal

was his regular occupation, you would not say that it was over-exertion?” He answered: “I don’t know' whether over-exertion or not. I feel if he was over-exerted he would be more apt to have that.”

When coal mines are opened not all of the coal in sight is usually then taken, else the roof might fall in; but pillars for support are left, which are themselves afterwards cut away to the extent that seems to be safe. In this instance one was left 100 feet wide and 150 feet long. By its side ran a railway track. At the time of Bailey’s death about 70 feet of this pillar had already been cut away.

The floor of this mine, along which the railway ran, was not level but went up and down in various places and to this extent: The top of a coal car at grade was 32 3/16 inches as it stood from the floor, and it stood from the floor 46 3/16 inches at the utmost point of depression—that is to say, the top ■ side of the car to one standing on the ground was a foot higher in one instance than in the other. It is the contention of the petitioner [657]*657that Bailey stood on the lower level and that the strain of loading coal was greater in that instance than it would otherwise have been, and that the extra labor thus entailed brought an accident which otherwise probably would not have happened. The defendant, in answer to this claim, said that this physical situation might have existed at some point along the railway track, but that as a matter óf fact the floor was level where this car stood when Bailey was shoveling coal into it; that heart failure at this particular moment was due to a congenital heart disease that might have occurred at any moment, and that such dilations of a healthy heart which would have followed the exertion incident to the loading of a car under normal conditions would have readjusted themselves in due course.

This case was first heard by Commissioner Deans. His opinion, written into the record, contains a comprehensive review of relevant testimony. He held that the evidence failed to establish that there was any working condition of an unusual or extraordinary nature such as would produce strain or exertion to account for the death and that it was only necessary to lift the coal 32 3/16 inches to clear the top of the coal car.

“The autopsy disclosed an enlarged heart, the walls of the right auricle were weakened so that there was approximately five times as much blood in this cavity as would normally be. The walls of the right auricle were distended but not ruptured indicating a congenital condition, or a condition of long standing. Ordinarily exertion places a burden on the véntricles of the heart which are ordinarily able to compensate for the additional strain in pumping the blood away from the heart. The auricles, however, receive the blood after that has passed through the body, pumping only a short distance into the ventricle, so that there is normally no strain on the auricle. It could not be determined by the autopsy as to whether the valves of the right auricle were non-functioning so as to account for the distension of the auricle, causing the blockage of the blood to the auricle, or whether there was just an accumulation of [658]*658blood five times above normal in the auricle because of the weakened condition of the walls of this part of the heart. There was no evidence of poison gases or lack of proper air ventilation, so that the only conclusion that can be reached is that death was due to heart failure having no connection with the employment but coincidental therewith.

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40 S.E.2d 254, 185 Va. 653, 1946 Va. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-stonega-coke-coal-co-va-1946.