Beatty v. Chandeysson Electric Company

190 S.W.2d 648, 238 Mo. App. 868, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 345
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 648 (Beatty v. Chandeysson Electric Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatty v. Chandeysson Electric Company, 190 S.W.2d 648, 238 Mo. App. 868, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 345 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*872 McCULLEN, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, affirming an award of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission in favor of respondent, the dependent widow of a deceased employee of appellant. The proceeding was first instituted by Renie Beatty who had been an employee of appellant. In his claim for compensation filed with the Commission on July 20, 1943, the employee alleged that on August 15, 1942, while at work on a bench drill the bench vise which was holding some metal parts slipped, causing him to fall backwards, and that several of the metal parts fell on him bruising and injuring his male organs and causing cancer of said organs. On September 26, 1943, before the claim was heard by the Commission, said' employee died, and thereafter, on October 10, 1943, a new claim was filed by Mamie Beatty, respondent herein, containing the same allegations as those filed by the deceased employee, except that respondent asked for the death benefit for the employee’s déhth.

Although respondent was joined in her death claim by James Dale Strong, her son by a former marriage, the Commission found that he was not a dependent. Therefore he need not further be considered herein.

In its answer to the claim the employer stated that the filing of the claim by the employee on July 20, 1943, “was the first knowledge the employer had that the employee claimed to have suffered an injury to his private organs while, in their employment on August 15, 1942,” and that, “this notice coming more than eleven months after the alleged accident and after the employee had undergone several operations, prevented the employer from making proper investigation into the circumstances alleged by the employee and his dependents to be the cause of the employee’s death.” The employer asked that the claim be dismissed for failure to give the proper notice, as required by law. It also denied each and every other allegation in the claim. ■

On June 6, 1944, the matter was heard before a referee of the Compensation Commission who made an award allowing the claim. Thereafter a review of said award was duly had before the full Compensation Commission and, on November 3, 1944, the Commission made a final award together with findings, of fact. The full Commission allowed to respondent a death benefit of 300 weeks at $16.03 per week, $150 for burial expenses, and $185 for medical expenses to Dr. Edwin C. Ernst. Thereafter, on appeal to the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis by the employer, the award of the Commission was affirmed and the appeal to this court followed in due course.

*873 Appellant contends that the Compensation Commission was without jurisdiction because claimant offered no evidence to show that the employee notified his employer of having-suffered any injury, as alleged in the claim, within the time required by Section 3726, Revised Statutes Missouri 1939; and that she also failed to offer any evidence to show good'cause for failure to give such notice; and offered no evidence to show that the failure to give such notice was not prejudicial to the employer’s interest.

The employer further contends that the finding and award of the Compensation Commission, that the cancer which caused the death of the employee was the result of the injuries, is not supported by sufficient competent evidence and is pure speculation. These points raised by appellant require a review of the evidence.

The deposition of Kenie Beatty, the deceased employee, which was taken on August 23, 1943, a little more-than a month before his death, was read in evidence on behalf of claimant. The employee testified that during the week of August 15, 1942, he was working at a bench in the employer’s shop drilling holes in some bronze metal yokes for large generators; that while he was screwing one of the yokes in a vise, the vise slipped and caused him to fall backwards and to strike his back on an open drawer where he kept his tools; that to keep himself from falling he grabbed hold of some of the yokes that were tying on the bench where he was working and pulled them down on top of him; that the yokes weighed approximately fifteen or sixteen pounds and were about eleven inches in width and slightly more in length and had prongs on each end; that the metal yokes “fell right here in my groin, mashed my penis, also my glands, bruised them up. I had a cut in my back about that long (indicating), about like that, about an inch and a half.”

“Q. These yokes falling on your penis — your testicles, is that what you mean by your glands ? A. That’s right.

“Q. Did you suffer any pain? A. I suffered severe pain before I could get to the first aid man to get my back dressed.

“Q. Were you able to get up immediately? A. I got up and crawled — walked over to the drill press and sat down on the stool I had there. ’ ’

The employee further testified that it was about fifteen minutes before he was able to go to the first aid man, a Mr. Leonard who was also the foreman, and have his back treated; that he did not mention anything about injury to his groin or glands to the first aid man; that the first aid man dressed the cut on his back. At this point the employee testified:

“Q. Did you say anything to him about your getting hurt? A. He dressed my back and told me he wanted to see me the next morning, and I wasn’t hurting so bad when I went out of his office, and I never mentioned the others.
*874 ‘ ‘ Q. Did yon tell him what happened, how you had been cut or how you had fallen ? A. I did.
“Q. And he dressed-the cut in your back? A. He did.
“Q. Did he do anything else besides that ? A. That’s all.
“Q. Did you mention to him the pain you had in your testicles and penis ? A. I never mentioned it to him at the time.
‘1Q. Had that subsided by that time ? A. It had. ’ ’

The employee further testified that he returned to Leonard, the first aid man, the nest day for another dressing of his back; that Leonard asked him if he wanted to go to another ^doctor; that he told Leonard he would leave that to him — that if Leonard thought it was necessary he would go to another doctor, but that Leonard said he didn’t think it was; that a few minutes after the' accident Mr. Chandeysson, president of the employer company, came through the shop; that Chandeysson asked him if he wanted to go to a doctor and he told Chandeysson he didn’t think it was necessary — that Mr. Leonard had taken care of him; that he did not tell Chandeysson about the pain. The employee further testified in his deposition that he continued to work regularly every day for the employer until some time in November, 1942, at which time he suffered pain and slight hemorrhages of the penis; that about October 15, 1942, he went to Dr. Clyde E. Kane, his family doctor, for an examination. Dr. Kane treated the employee for what the doctor believed to be a chancre and, getting no favorable response to such treatment, sent the employee to Doctors Roberts and Ives who made a biopsy of the affected part and, on January 4, 1943, made a report showing that the part from which the biopsy had been taken was affected by cancer.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 648, 238 Mo. App. 868, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatty-v-chandeysson-electric-company-moctapp-1945.