Board of Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund Trustees v. Ryan

273 S.W.2d 908, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 1954
DocketNo. 10253
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 273 S.W.2d 908 (Board of Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund Trustees v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Firemen's Relief & Retirement Fund Trustees v. Ryan, 273 S.W.2d 908, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2291 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This suit is brought by the Board of Firemen’s Relief and Retirement Fund Trustees of Texarkana, Texas, to set aside an order of G. F. Williams, Firemen’s Pension Commissioner, awarding Mrs. Joy Ryan, surviving widow of David Ryan, a deceased fireman, a widow’s pension under the provisions of Art. 6243e, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., Firemen’s Relief Pension Fund Act.

The Pension Commissioner and Mrs. Ryan are appellees.

The order of the Commissioner, dated June 4, 1953, was as follows:

“Mrs. David (Joy) Ryan is entitled to a widow’s pro rata part of pension, due to the death of her husband, David [909]*909Ryan, on May 11, 1952, which we have found (from the evidence presented to this office) to be as a consequence •of the performance o-f his duties as a Fireman. This payment of pension to Mrs. Ryan to be retroactive to June 1, 1952.”

The trial court found that the above ■order was “reasonably supported by substantial evidence on the record made in this Court” and rendered judgment sustaining the order and awarding Mrs. Ryan a monthly pension in accordance with the provisions of the Firemen’s Relief Pension Fund Act.

David Ryan had been a member of the 'fire department of Texarkana for about •eleven years prior to his death on May 11, 1952.

Prior to the fall of 1950 Mr. Ryan had been a strong, robust man of some 200 pounds weight who frequently hunted and fished. In October, 1950 Mr. Ryan was •overcome by smoke while fighting the “casket factory fire” and in November of that year he was hospitalized for virus pneumonia. Following this illness Mr. Ryan’s health declined, he lost weight, tired easily, suffered moderate hypertension and lessened his hunting and fishing .activities.

On February 1, 1952, there was a large ■fire in Texarkana known as the “Mule ¡Barn fire.” Mr. Ryan helped fight this fire and while inside the burning barn was injured by a falling cross timber. The testimony of some of the eyewitnesses to this incident is summarized below:

Frank L. Earhart, city fireman: Mr. Earhart was on the hose with Ryan inside the burning building when the timber fell. The timber fell from a point where the roof was the highest, about fifteen feet in height and when it fell it struck both him and Ryan, knocking them to the ground. The timber had to be removed from their bodies, and he, Earhart, was led out of the building by the hand, while two men, one on each side, had to assist Ryan from the building.

•C. P. Birmingham, a fire captain at the time but present Chief of the Texarkana Fire Department: Chief Birmingham was present at the fire and saw Earhart and Ryan inside the burning building on the hose line fighting the fire. He saw the timber falling and hollered to them to “look out,” but they failed to hear him. The timber fell “like a tree,” knocking them both down. He helped to remove the timber and helped Earhart out of the building. Ryan was removed by two men holding him up, one from each side, and was thereafter carried to the hospital. The timber which struck Ryan was four or five inches in diameter, which he thought was square in shape.

Arthur Jordan, city fireman: Mr. Jordan was present at the Mule Barn fire and saw Ryan inside the burning building fighting the fire. He saw the timber falling, it was a large timber some eight by ten inches in size. The timber fell from about ten to twelve feet in height, striking Ryan across the head and shoulders, knocking him down and he, Jordan, along with another man rushed into the building and helped to remove the timber from Ryan and helped to carry him out of the building. Ryan was staggering and addled, and when they got him out of the building they laid him down behind the fire truck, making a pillow for him with his bunking coat. Ryan was in pain, complaining of his head, and he examined the back of Ryan’s head, and discovered a knot about the size of a golf ball at the base of the hair line. Mr. Jordan had his wife call an ambulance, and upon arrival of the ambulance, he helped to place Ryan in the ambulance for removal to the hospital. ; ■ ■ •'

Winfred Owen, a part owner of the Mule Barn: Mr. Owen was at the Mule Barn fire on February 1, 1952. He saw Ryan inside the barn on the hose line spraying water on the large beams used for roof support runners and as the roof burned these big timbers started falling and one of these large timbers fell on Ryan very hard and knocked him down; he ran in the building and assisted others in trying to pull Ryan from under the [910]*910heavy timbers. The heavy timber which fell was one used to support the roof of the barn and fell from a height of thirty or forty feet, injuring Ryan “pretty bad.” After Ryan was carried out of the 'building an ambulance was' called and Ryan was placed in the ambulance for removal to the hospital.

A barber testified that he observed a knot on the back of Mr. Ryan’s head when cutting his hair about two weeks after the Mule Barn fire and also noticed the knot in March and May of 1952.

There is also evidence that subsequent to this fire Mr. Ryan suffered severe headaches, pains in the chest and nose bleed and was unable to work full time.

Mr. Ryan was discharged from the hospital on the day after the Mule Bam fire. He was readmitted to the hospital on April 22, 1952 for four days and readmitted three days later and remained until his death on May 11.

It is appellant’s contention, as reflected by its first two points, that there is no causal connection between the injuries received by Mr. Ryan while fighting the Mule Barn fire and his death, the principal basis for which is the testimony of Dr. Kenneth E. McIntyre.

Dr. McIntyre who had previously treated Mr. Ryan for monoxide poisoning attended Mr. Ryan in his last illness and attributed his death to a cerebral hemorrhage as a “manifestation of his long-standing vascular disease and was unrelated to injury.” A death certificate was executed and filed by Dr. McIntyre which gave the cause of death as “cerebral hemorrhage — thrombosis femoral artery.” This artery is the chief artery of the thigh.

Dr. McIntyre ruled out cerebral embolism saying:

“I do not think Mr. Ryan’s death resulted from a cerebral embolism, because there were no sources for the development of such an embolism. Emboli arising in the legs would have been venous in origin and resulted in a pulmonary emboli rather than cerebral. It is, therefore, my opinion that cerebral hemorrhage was more likely the cause of the death of David Ryan, and in my opinion his death was not associated with cerebral embolism.”

On the other hand Dr. Wm. E. Jones, an associate of Dr. McIntyre, treated Mr. Ryan for injuries sustained in the Mule Barn fire and who also attended him in his last illness, testified that, in his opinion, the cause of death was “cerebral embolism.” Dr. Jones gave these definitions:

“A cerebral hemorrhage is active bleeding from a ruptured blood vessel in the substance of the brain. A cerebral thrombosis is the formation of a clot in the blood vessel of the brain. A cerebral embolism is a blood clot formed elsewhere and lodges in a blood vessel in the brain.”

Dr. Jones testified that cerebral embolism could result from trauma on any part of the body and that the normal lapse of time between trauma and cerebral embolism was ten days to two weeks. There was no definite evidence here, Dr.

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273 S.W.2d 908, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-firemens-relief-retirement-fund-trustees-v-ryan-texapp-1954.