Bishop v. Morrison-Knudsen Co.

137 P.2d 963, 64 Idaho 806, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 46
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1943
DocketNo. 7091.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 963 (Bishop v. Morrison-Knudsen Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Morrison-Knudsen Co., 137 P.2d 963, 64 Idaho 806, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 46 (Idaho 1943).

Opinions

BUDGE, J.

This is an Industrial Accident case on appeal from an award in favor of claimant, respondent herein, surviving widow of Curtis Bishop, on her own, behalf, and on behalf of Eddie DeWayne Bishop, dependent child of Curtis Bishop, now deceased, and respondent.

*809 The pertinent facts found by the board and disclosed by the record, briefly stated, are as follows:

During his lifetime, Curtis Bishop was employed as a laborer, his principal occupation being that of a hard-rock miner. Between July 14, 1942, and July 27, 1942, inclusive, Curtis Bishop, hereinafter referred to as “employee” (approximately 51 years of age, and apparently in good health), while in the employ of appellants, Morrison-Knudsen Company and J. W. Brennan, as a common laborer, on July 18, 1942, and while engaged with other co-workers in unloading masonite from a railroad box-car at the U. S. Army Air Base near the City of Pocatello, and while standing on said masonite, either fell, or was knocked out of the car, to the ground between the box-car and the warehouse, a distance of from 4 to 6 feet; in falling he hit against a sliding door on the warehouse, lighting upon his rump, with his shoulders and back against the warehouse side. With slight assistance from his co-workers, employee rose to his feet, said he was not injured, and refused to go to a first aid station. After sitting around for a short time, employee resumed the work he had theretofore been doing, continuing work until five o’clock. Thereafter employee, upon reaching home, complained to his wife of pain in his back and left shoulder blade, and had a large red lump or swelling on his back. He ate sparingly of the evening meal and went to bed. Claimant applied hot towels and rubbing alcohol to her husband’s back and shoulders. He complained of pain in his back and shoulders at different times during the night. The next morning claimant again rubbed her husband’s shoulders and back with alcohol, and did so upon numerous occasions thereafter. Employee returned to work on each and every day up to and including July 27, 1942. He continued to work eight hours a day, and upon some days worked over time. However, covering practically this entire time and upon different occasions employee complained to his fellow-workmen and to claimant that his shoulder was stiff and that he suffered pain in his back. The record discloses that he (Bishop) was unable to sleep; that it was necessary to keep him propped up in order that he might breathe without experiencing great difficulty, and his pain might be lessened, thereby obtaining some sleep. On July 27, 1942, he complained to one of his fellow-workmen that he was sick and ceased working. On July 28, 1942, he visited Dr. West, a chiropractic physician, who made a *810 general examination of employee, and who testified that the examination disclosed nothing abnormal except that the muscles through the region of employee’s back “were extremely tender.and tense;” that his “heart was extremely slow” and “seemed to be laboring,” and at the time of the examination of the employee the swelling and discoloration, on his back and shoulder had disappeared. After the examination employee went home. He lay down during the day and that night he had trouble with his breathing and had to keep in a certain position to breathe; he suffered pain constantly in his back and shoulder, and on the morning of July 29,1942, employee died.

On July 31, 1942, an autopsy on the body of the deceased was performed by two physicians. The board found “that at said autopsy no evidence of injury of any kind was disclosed but a marked pleurisy in the left lung and over the chest and at the base of the left lung and diaphram was found, also that the coronary vessels which supply the heart with blood were markedly stenosed, or filled in due to fatty change or arteriosclerosis and that there was marked- fatty infiltration and the heart muscle was poor quality and that the arteriosclerosis was generalized and especially marked in the kidneys; that the said stenosis of the coronary vessels and the arteriosclerosis existed for some time prior to the time the employee entered the employ of the above-named employers and continued to exist until his death.”

Dr. West testified, in answer to the following questions:

“Q. Now, Doctor, what was the history given you at the time of this accident?
“A. He stated that he was unloading masonite boards from the box car. In turning the board around he was pushed part way out and fell backwards between the car and the storehoüse and lit on his shoulder.
“Q. Did you examine his shoulder ?
“A. I did.
“Q. What did you find there?
“A. The muscles through that region of his back were extremely tender and tense.
“Q. And what was his blood pressure?
“A. Blood pressure, 118 systolic and 80 diastolic. Pulse 45.
“Q. What would be the effect of this condition you found in the future — what effect would that have ?
*811 “A. From an anatomical and physiological point of view the anatomy consisting of the upper dorsal — there are fibers that go to make up the brachial plexus and supply it alone. There are also fibers that turn inward and make up the ganglia. They are the nerve supply that affect the heart and also supply the lungs. * * *
“A. * * * he was apparently having quite a marked painful condition in the arms and shoulders. He said he had his wife rub and massage his arm and shoulder every night after he got home, and some times during the night in order to be able to sleep a bit. This extreme tenseness of the muscles in turn could affect those nerves that supply the arms. The brachial plexus goes through that region and that could be productive of the pain he was having.
“Q. Could or could not the condition you found there have been caused by the injury that he gave you the history of sustaining?
“A. Possibly.
“Q. * * * State whether or not, doctor, the condition that you found in the shoulder could have been caused by the injury of which he gave the history?
“A. It is very likely it could have been. Yes. (Emphasis ours.)
“Q. And would you say that or not, Doctor, that considering the fact that Mr. Bishop died within twenty-four hours after he was in your office, or a day after he was in your office — would you say that his death could have been caused from the condition which you found at the time you examined him ?
“A. It is quite possible that sufficient injury could have been produced to interfere with those nerves and affect the action of his heart. Now, the heart was extremely slow.”

Summarizing the testimony of Dr. West, it is apparent that the doctor was of the opinion that the injury was sustained as a result of the accident and was possibly, likely, or probably, the cause of his death.

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Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 963, 64 Idaho 806, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-morrison-knudsen-co-idaho-1943.