Bauer v. Industrial Commission

26 Ohio Law. Abs. 559, 11 Ohio Op. 515, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1078
CourtStark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 3, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ohio Law. Abs. 559 (Bauer v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bauer v. Industrial Commission, 26 Ohio Law. Abs. 559, 11 Ohio Op. 515, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1078 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

OPINION

By SWEITZER, J.

The only issue involved in this cause is: Did the employee, David C, Bauer, on'the evening of July 23, 1934, at the plant of the Federal Refrigerating Company located [560]*560near Fairhope, Stark comity, Ohio, sustain an accidental injury arising out of his employment, proximately contributing to his instant death? The Industrial Commission denied a claim for an award. It was filed by Mae E. Bauer, employee’s widow. Later she died and employee’s daughter was substituted as claimant and plaintiff.

The plaintiff contending she is entitled tc participate in the state insurance fund appealed to this court. At the close of the introduction of evidence the court sustained the commission’s motion asking a directed verdict in favor of the commission. Such verdict was returned. The cause is here at this time on plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

But four witnesses testified, Mae E. Bauer the widow, -Dr. Clovis, the employee’s attending physician, and Dr. McQuate, at the time county coroner, testifying for the claimant. Bernard N. Clark, employer’s superintendent at the plant where the death occurred, testified for the commission.

Tlie place of employment is just south of Fairhope, Stark county, Ohio. The plant where the death occurred is an electric refrigerating ' plant. Employee was one of several engineers, among a considerable number of employees who worked at the plant. He was about fifty years old, and had worked for the company as an engineer about fourteen years.

Employee’s attending physician testified that employee, for about two and a half years preceding his death, had been suffering from a coronary occlusion, a heart disease; that he examined employee about January 3, 1932 and at that time “he was suffering with a coronary occlusion.”. The doctor continued to treat employee for this disease regularly until he died, and saw him just after his death. Dr. Clovis saw employee about two days before his death, also. The doctor was taking care of this patient regularly. His examination of this patient made about two days before patient’s death revealed patient was “a man very sick”, “sick from a coronary occlusion”. About six months prior to employee’s death, his physician prescribed six months absolute rest. The patient co-operated. “After a long period in bed plañir tiff got up, improved, sitting in a chair, and he was able to go out in a car. That was when he died.”

On July 23, 1934, the day employee died, he was taken in an automobile by his wife and another lady to Mansfield, Ohio, a distance of sixty or sixty-five miles to consult a heart specialist there located. Employee’s attending physician had not advised this trip. Dr. Clovis testified, to a man in his condition, “any kind of exercise might be fatal.” Dr. McQuate, county coroner testified in effect, this automobile trip to Mansfield, Ohio, in itself, was hazardous to a man in employee’s condition. Dr. Clovis says his patient, also, bad symptoms of coronary sclerosis. Employee’s wife testified employee, while at the plant, standing and talking to some men, dropped dead about 8:15 P. M. of this same day, July 23, 1934. No post mortem was had.

Employee received word during the afternoon of July 23, 1934 at the doctor’s office in Mansfield, from the plant superintendent, that employer’s plant had stopped or broken down. Employee was returned by automobile to the plant from Mansfield at the suggestion of said superintendent. This return trip consumed approximately two hours, 5 P. M. to 7 P. M.

For some reason not accounted for, of the several persons who were preesnt at the plant from 7 1'. M. to 8:15 P. M. during which interval employee dropped and died instantly, but two testified, Mrs. Bauer, widow of the employee testifying in plaintiff’s behalf, and Mr. Clark, employee’s superintendent, in defendant’s behalf. Their testimony, as to occurrences surrounding the death, is hopelessly in conflict. Since the verdict was a directed one, Mrs. Bauer’s version of occurrences, for the purpose of this motion, must be accepted as presenting the true situation.

According to Mrs. Bauer’s testimony she and employee arrived at the plant about 7:00 P. M., remaining there until his death about 8:15 P. M. Thus, an hour and a quarter intervened between employee’s arrival and his death. According to Mrs. Bauer the employée upon arrival from Mansfield, talked to some employees, took off his coat, went into the engine room from the storage, and up over the tanks, going up some steep steps, or stairs, transcript page 12. He went up and down these Steps at least four times. He started the engine, that is, the ice machine, page 12 of the transcript. He pulled a switch or switches, and turned two valves two times. Her evidence fails to reveal whether the pulling of the switches and the turning of valves required muscular effort. The record does not show that any heavy muscular work of any kind was engaged m by employee. Mrs. Bauer says employee “hur[561]*561ried”; also “that he walked hurriedly”. “Hurried” and “walking hurriedly” are words and expressions more or less relative. While they constitute facts, yet to a large extent they are relative terms bordering on conclusions. Nowhere does Mrs. Bauer say. that employe ran. She refers to him as “walking”. It appears reasonable to assume from Mrs. Bauer’s evidence that employee’s muscular efforts were not extreme or heavy. Besides it apears she knew of her husband’s very serious condition as lesult of heart disease. She knew he had been in bed for a long time, and that he just recently had become able to sit in a chair, to walk about and to ride in an automobile. It can scarcely be conceived that she, knowing this condition on the part of her husband, would acquiesce in his doing heavy work. There is no evidence of any caution or protest by her or by anyone against- the type of work he performed. No doubt the most hazardous activity employee engaged in was going up and down the steps or stairs. Prom the evidence it must be concluded he went up and down these steps empty-handed, that is, he carried nothing up or down. Counsel for plaintiff in questions refer to the steps or stairs as ladders. Our recollection is, however, that witness makes no reference to ladders. This term seems to have been injected into qúestions without warrant by witness’s answers.

Mrs. Bauer says further “After he was there and traced the trouble for them, it took only around 15 or 20 minutes to fix it and then they immediately started up, “he helped start the plant”, transcript pages 16 and 17. Witness says the plant was running at the time employee dropped dead. He was standing in front of a switch board talking to three or four men. “I don’t know what he .was saying. I was at a distance. The only thing I know he talked, because he moved his hands and motioned. I was perhaps 30 feet from him, but he was explaining.” Transcript page 16.

For what length of time Mr. Bauer had been standing in the position described, before he fell dead, is not disclosed by the evidence. At any rate, he was not engaged in activity other than standing and talking at the time he fell dead. Prom pages 18, 19 and 20 of the transcript, it appears Mrs. Bauer had personal knowledge to an extent, of the work performed by her husband at the plant on former occasions. In her testimony she leaves the impression she saw him in the performanee of his work at times when the plant was running normally and also at times. when the plant, in a state of break-down, required starting.

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Related

Crawford v. Industrial Commission
13 Ohio Law. Abs. 185 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Ohio Law. Abs. 559, 11 Ohio Op. 515, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauer-v-industrial-commission-ohctcomplstark-1938.