Blue Bell Globe Mfg. Co. v. Lewis

27 So. 2d 900, 200 Miss. 685, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 339
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1946
DocketNo. 36226.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 900 (Blue Bell Globe Mfg. Co. v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Bell Globe Mfg. Co. v. Lewis, 27 So. 2d 900, 200 Miss. 685, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 339 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

L. A. Smith, Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case originated in the Circuit Court of Adams County, where the appellee obtained a judgment against appellant for damages due to personal injuries received by her in its employ, from which judgment it appeals here.

Appellant, a manufacturer of overalls, shirts, pants and pajamas, employed a large number of people in its operations, and among them was the appellee here, whose job was that of a machine operator. This involved the handling of bundles of garments in process of manufacture. Appellee was, at the time of these events, about forty-five years of age, weighed two hundred, and thirty-four pounds, was five feet and eight inches tall, was married to a sixty-five year old husband, and was the mother of two sons — one about twenty-three years of age in the armed forces of the nation, and the other about eleven years of age. She was compelled by necessity to work in order to help defray the expenses of the family. When she was first employed by appellants in August, 1942, bundle boys were used by appellant to handle these weighty and unwieldy bundles. In November, 1943, because of difficulty in securing help, her employer posted a notice on the bulletin board that the machine operators would have to handle the bundles themselves, but reduced their weight to twenty-seven or thirty pounds each.

About three weeks before her injury, appellee was engaged in basting belt loops on army trousers. These trousers, in bundles, she was required to get from the cutting table, go around a bin in the shape of a cradle, on which she stowed the bundles until moved to the machines for finishing on the opposite side of an aisle, and when completed she had to rebundle them and return them to' the bin, the top of which was about thirty inches from the floor. If a bundle had to be piled on top of another *691 bundle before the first was removed, she had to lift the second bundle higher, and if a third, she had to lift it still higher. It is in the evidence that these operations were repeated as often as sixteen or twenty times a day. Appellee testified that “when the bin was full I would have to throw them shoulder or head high. ’ ’ She further testified that the bundles were ‘ ‘ tied in the middle with a rope. You would lay the bundle on the rope and then draw7 it around them and hook them and pick up the bundle in the middle. They were so high we had to put our knee under them at times.” She complained some about these bundles and the strain of handling them before she was hurt, and then and thereafter she complained very much more, and specifically. She contends, which appellant denies, that she was threatened with discharge if she did not continue to handle them like all,the other machine operators, many of them young, vigorous, unmarried women under thirty years of age. We believe the foregoing statements sufficiently present a description of the employment and its nature.

On October 17,1939, appellee underwent an operation at a Natchez hospital for a right inguinal hernia, the result was considered a complete cure thereof. When she applied for employment to appellant on August 28, 1942, nearly three years later, she was not suffering from this trouble, although the scar evidenced the operation. On her application for work, under the rules of appellant, she was required to submit to a physical examination by the company doctor. This she did, stating that the examination was thorough, and that she informed the examining doctor of the previous operation for hernia. At the conclusion of this examination, she was given a sealed report by the doctor to transmit to the assistant manager at the plant. This she did, and the assistant manager made a note in writing on a slip, she said, “Virgine Lewis, condition satisfactory. ’ ’ She did not know what was said in the report. Appellant denied that she made full disclosure of the previous hernia operation, and introduced wit *692 nesses to testify that appellee boasted of hoodwinking the doctor, while she introduced witnesses to substantiate her statements. The jury heard this and the other evidence-in all of which on almost every material point there was sharp conflict — and accepted the testimony of appellee and her witnesses, and rejected that of appellant and its witnesses, by their verdict for appellee. She stated that she had said she was glad the doctor did not find her afflicted with hernia, or words to that effect, because if he had found that she was so afflicted, she would not have been able to work. Appellant, on the other hand, contended she said that she was glad the doctor did not discover her hernia, as if he had, she would not have gotten employment, or words of similar import. The jury here, too, believed her version of it.

So, if she had hernia when she was employed she was unaware of it, had concealed nothing from the examining physician, and was put to work with approval of her physical condition by appellant, after it satisfied itself by an examination by its employee, the doctor.

She continued to work under these conditions, without any bad results, until an evening in December, 1943, about four years after the original operation. This was approximately a month after the discontinuance of the aid to her, and others in like employ, from bundle boys, at the time the event took place which formed the basis of this lawsuit. She was asked this question: “About that injury in December 1943, tell the jury all about the facts and circumstances of that?” A. “On this particular evening, we were getting through with the army order and we were to go over on the commercial orders. We had big bundles and small bundles. And this last big bundle. . . I had

worked one or two small bundles after I worked this big bundle. When I picked up this particular large bundle and put it on the bin it felt like a knife . . . That is when I felt this burning hurting almost like a knife. I tried to ignore it. In ten or fifteen minutes we went over on commercial line. I sat down and I got so weak I *693 couldn’t work and this place in my side began to get bigger. I got up and went to the first aid room and told the nurse. I told her I had ruined my side. She said ‘Let’s don’t think so. ’ I told her to feel the knot and she felt it and said] ‘Let’s don’t call it a rupture, we will call it a gas pocket.’ ” The nurse corroborated appellee as to the first aid room and the gas suggestion, but denied she could feel or see anything amiss. However, she further said she was unwilling to take any responsibility in the matter, and took appellee to a second doctor, then in the employ of appellant, who reported he found no hernia, but warned the nurse that if appellee had a recurrence of pain she should be put to bed, and that he would examine her again. Appellee testified that this doctor told her he found nothing alarming. She therefore returned to work some weeks later. The condition and pain recurred repeatedly, until finally she consulted her own physician, who informed her she had a most dangerous hernia, and that she must stop work at once, otherwise she was liable to develop strangulation. She stopped work. This condition was confirmed by still another doctor who diagnosed appellee’s condition as being “a recurrent right inguinal hernia. At the present time, on June 11, 1943, this mass is about the size of a lemon.

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Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 900, 200 Miss. 685, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-bell-globe-mfg-co-v-lewis-miss-1946.