Bates & Rogers Construction Co. v. Allen

210 S.W. 467, 183 Ky. 815, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 557
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 467 (Bates & Rogers Construction Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates & Rogers Construction Co. v. Allen, 210 S.W. 467, 183 Ky. 815, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 557 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Carroll

Affirming.

This case, under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, is brought here by the employer, Bates & Rogers Construction Company, from the Mason circuit court, to which an appeal was prosecuted from the decision of the Workmen’s Compensation Board by the appellee, Henry Allen, who had been denied compensation by the board.

There is no dispute about the facts, which are substantially as follows: Henry Allen was in the employ of the appellant, Bates & Rogers Construction Company, at lock and dam No. 33, on the Ohio river, near Mays-ville, Kentucky, during the month of November, 1916. He went from Louisville, Kentucky, where he obtained the employment through the agency of the State Free Employment Office, to Maysville, and about four days after he commenced work for the construction company he received the injury for which he claimed compensation.

He testified before the board, on the hearing of his claim, that the injury happened in this manner: “Well, I was tearing up the dinky track, the one the little engine hauls on, hauls the cars, and working on a kind of trestle; the men would take up the rail and carry it back, and where the angle iron holds them together they wouldn’t come apart, there was a big heavy fellow called Cobb, and he was hitting on these pieces of iron that held the rail together' with a sledge to loosen them so I could get them apart, and something flew up and hit me in the eye, and that’s the way I got hurt.”

Asked as to who he told about it and what occurred afterwards, he testified as follows: “ A- At that time there was several men knew I got hit in the eye with something. I told-ihe boss I got hit. Q. Who was the boss? A.. Little short fellow they called Tom — wore a straight hat like a cow boy. Q. Do you know what his last name [817]*817was? A. No, sir; Tom is all I know. I was not there long enough to get acquainted. I was only there a little over a week. Q. Was Tom the man in charge of you? A. Yes, sir. Q. Representing Bates & Rogers Construction Company? A. He was their foreman. Q. ITow long did you continue to work after you received this blow in the eye? A. Well, I worked — that was in the morning — • and I worked out that day and I worked the next day and the next morning I left; came back to Louisville. Q. The day after you were hurt did your eye show any evidence of being hurt? A. Well, it pained me all the time. When it was first hurt I just thought something was in there and would work out and quit hurting right away; I didn’t have any idea it would terminate the way it did, but then it would feel all right for a while and commence hurting again and kept on until it got inflamed so I couldn’t sleep. Q. Did you tell the foreman anything about it afterwards? A. Well, the foreman knew about it; knew when I got hurt; knew the last day I worked. Q. How did he know that? A. Well, I told him when I first got hit I was hit in the -eye with something. Q, After you came to Louisville what did you do ? A. Well, I came home and after I went and came home I couldn’t work and I went to the city hospital. Q. How long were you in the hospital? A. I judge about eleven days. I went in on Monday and came out the following Sunday week. Q. Mr. Allen, what was the condition of your eye before you were struck with whatever substance struck you? A. I had good eyesight. Q. How is your sight in the injured eye since that blow? A. Well, I haven’t got any sight at all. I can close this eye and tell light, that’s all I can see. I can’t see anything. Q. Do you know whether that condition ^was brought about by this blow in your eye? A. Well, I never had anything the matter with my eye in my life until I got hit with that piece, whatever it was, never had any diseases in my eyes or anything or any complaint. Q. Now, after you were released from the hospital, what attempt, if any, did you make to notify Bates & Rogers Construction Company of your injury? A. Well, I wrote them, the best of my memory, about three letters. Q. And when was the first one that you wrote? A. Well, it was before Christmas, and then I wrote one around Christmas, and then I wrote another letter I think a couple of weeks after Christmas and it came back. I wrote to the wrong place. X [818]*818had it Mayfield instead of Maysville, and then I went to Bob Eneas and he wrote a letter and kept a couple of letters for me. Q. There is an envelope; read how that is addressed. A. Well, that is Mayfield, Ky.; that’s the way I wrote. Q. That is a stamped envelope? A. Yes, sir. Q. It has across the face the figure of a hand. .‘Returned to the writer unclaimed.’ Will you file that as part of your deposition? A. Yes, sir. ‘Law Offices Robt. H. Lucas, 316-317 Louisville Trust Building, Louisville, Ky., January ,30th, 1917. Bates & Rogers Construction, Mayfield, Ky. Gentlemen: I have been employed by Mr. Henry Allen, of this city, to represent him in a claim against you growing out of an injury which he received while in your employ on lock and dam No. 33 on or about November .1st, 1916. While engaged in his work he was struck in the eye with a piece of steel which caused him to lose the sight of his eye. Dr. Wolfe, in the Atherton Building, this city, has been attending him. Kindly investigate this matter and inform us whether or not we may expect a settlement and oblige, Yours very truly (Signed) Robert H. Lucas.’ Q. What time in the morning Avas it you got hurt ? A. Must have been around ten o ’clock, nine or ten o ’clock. Q. And you continued to work all that day? A. Until three that evening. Q. And went to Avork the next morning? A. Yes, sir, and worked until three the next evening. Q. How many doctors did Bates & Rogers Construction Co. have at their' camp? A. If they had any I never saw them. Q. Did you ask for a doctor? A. I never heard anybody say anything about any doctor; I never heard of any doctors. Q. Did you ask any of the bosses for a doctor or for any medicine for your eye? ^A. No, sir; I asked one fellow where there was a hospital, and he said they had a place at Maysville where they taken men who Avas sick and hurt. Q. You say there Avas a man named Tom there who was your boss? A. Yes, sir, Tom. Q. Did he pay you off? A. I don’t knoAv — they called it a job and jump job — you can' get your money any time. Q. Did you go to the office to get your pay? A. Ño, sir; you had to go to the commissary. Q. You did that, did you? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you say anything to the commissary about getting hurt; about quitting because you were hurt? A. No, sir. Q. Or the man at the office? A» No, sir. Q. Did you tell the man at the cpmmissary or the man Avkere you got your money why you AVere [819]*819quitting? A. No, sir. Never told anybody but the fox*e-man. Q. That is tliis man ‘Tom;’ you don’t know his last name? A. No, sir, that’s all I know him by — Tom. . . . Q. When you read that notice you knew you were working under the Workmen’s Compensation Act? A. I knew I was working under the compensation all the time; I knew that. Q. You say you wrote three letters to Bates & Rogers at Mayfield, Ky. ? A. Yes, sir. Q. How did you happen to write it Mayfield when you knew their plant was located at Maysville? A. I was taking Mayfield for Maysville all the time, that’s the way I made the mistake; I thought it was Mayfield instead of Mays-ville. Q. What did you say in your letters to. the Bates & Rogers Construction Co? A. Well, that has been a long time; I don’t know whether I can think exactly or not what I wrote now. I don’t hardly think I could. Q. Well about wliat you said? A.

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210 S.W. 467, 183 Ky. 815, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-rogers-construction-co-v-allen-kyctapp-1919.