Brown v. Scullin Steel Co.

260 S.W.2d 513, 364 Mo. 225, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 586
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 14, 1953
Docket43045
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 260 S.W.2d 513 (Brown v. Scullin Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Scullin Steel Co., 260 S.W.2d 513, 364 Mo. 225, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 586 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

*227 COIL, C.

Charles Brown,. plaintiff-appellant, sued to recover $130,000 actual and punitive damages from defendant-respondent) Scullin Steel Company, based upon alleged negligence in ordering, directing, and permitting plaintiff to do work which defendant corporation knew or should have known he could not do with reasonable safety to himself because of his heart condition, and allegedly resulting in permanent injury to plaintiff. The trial court directed a verdict for defendant at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. Plaintiff has appealed from the ensuing judgment, contending that his evidence was sufficient to make defendant’s .negligence and causation jury questions. . ' . a , - . - .

*228 ,. In determining this issue, we consider plaintiff’s evidence true, construe it from a standpoint most favorable to him, and give him the benefit of all reasonable inferences -to be drawn therefrom. Chamberlain v. Thompson, Mo. Sup., 256 S. W. 2d 779, 780-[2],

,-,;Plaintiff,-43 years old at time of trial, applied to the company for work in February,, 1943.; Prior thereto he had done manual labor, including railroading, cotton, farming, and furnace charging for a metal company. The Company put him. to work in the core room, first as- a laborer, then as a coremaker. He left in February, 1949. In May, 1943, plaintiff was drafted and was rejected for reasons not appearing. The company.rehired him on May 31, 1943. He left in June, 1946, and was rehired in September, 1946. He was “laid off” in December, 1946, and rehired in January, 1947.

. Defendant employed a physician, Dr. Leo Will, whose duties included making physical examinations bf applicants for employment, and in examining, treating-, and advising- employees. Dr. Will examined plaintiff before, he was first hired and each time he was rehired; and made other examinations in February, July,.and August, 1948, and in February, 1949. The pre-employment examinations included a check of the chest, heart, and lungs (including at times X-rays of .the chest).

Plaintiff testified that his first work involved carrying parts weighing from 75 to 80 pounds. In 1944 he applied for and obtained a coremaker’s job and handled cores weighing from 25 to 50 pounds; occasionally some weighed 50 to-175 pounds. -He made about 92 cores per day and apparently .carried them for short distances. He had not complained about Ms job or requested a different one. He knew of the company .dispensary and of its availability to him,-made no complaint concerning his heart or chest until July, 1948, and, from 1943 to 1946, inclusive, “felt fine.” He did not know why the army had rejected him. He was treated -for pneumonia in 1944, 1947, and 1948 by his own doctors who, each time, examined his chest but did not advise him with reference to continuing his work at defendant’s plant.

Plaintiff did not know that anything was the matter with his heart until July, 1948. Neither defendant’s doctor nor any other doctor had so advised him. In July, 1948, he fell against his core stand. Upon leaving work that day, he felt a burning sensation in his chest for’about 15 minutes. That'night he heard, a buzzing sound which came from his'chest.' Hé réturned'next day, saw the dispensary nurse, felt “pretty good”, and continued work.

On August 30,1948, he complained to the nurse that he had “busted my heart” in that fall and that he had'a.pain in his left chest. The nurse administered heat treatment. The next day Dr. Will made an exámination of plaintiff’s chest after plaintiff had said: “I fell against the truck and busted my heart” and “I had a burning sensation like a pin sticking in me.” Doctor Will told plaintiff he *229 could take a few days off if he so desired; plaintiff chose not to do so.’ The following tday Dr. Will X-rayed-plaintiff’s chest, gave him some' medicine, and told him to take it easy, but didn’t say anything about any heart condition.

Sometime during December, 1948, plaintiff visited the St. Louis Municipal Clinic in response to a suggestion on the'radio which “told yon how you were feeling if your blood was bad” and “said if you felt that way to come down and get'á blood test.” The Clinic referred him to Midwestern Medical Center, TJ. S. Public Health Service. (The Center’s records showed that plaintiff’s condition was diagnosed as cardio-vaseular syphilis‘for which he received treatment from December 17 to December 21, 1948; he was again admitted on January 17, 1949, and was discharged January 30, 1949.) Thereafter, he worked for the company one or two cthys and, in Februalry, saw Df. Will.’ The doctor told him: ‘ ‘ Charley, the best thing for you to' do is to go home and go to bed * * # and get your family doctor to look after you.” Plaintiff left the job and has since been physically unable to do manual labor.

Dr. Will, a trained and experienced industrial surgeon, had been defendant’s surgeon since 1912. He said that when he' examined plaintiff in February, 1943, he found him to be in good physical condition except for a heart lesion evidenced- by a hissing or Whistling sound, referred to as a “sea gull murmur”. He said he had never before heard that particular type of'murmur; that it was unusual as to sound; that he could not tell from the sound what particular valve of the heart was involved; that the murmur indicated the incompetence of one or more heart valves; that, in so far as plaintiff’s ability to work was concerned, it made no difference whether it was one valve or the other; that he indicated on the initial pre-employment physical examination record opposite “chest” the" word “mitral” which meant a heart lesion and did not indicate the type of murmur.

Dr. Will testified that he told plaintiff of the heart murmur but that he, the doctor, was going to pass plaintiff for work,-and “I hoped he wouldn’t come back and kick me in the teeth”; that his re'asons for making that statement were: “It is not an uncommon thing to employ men in industry, in this particular industry, With heart le’sions. This man was thirty years old [the 1943 record showed plaintiff 30, other records indicated and plaintiff testified that he was 35 in 1943] and he wad normal in weight, and his blood pressure was normal— * * * He had no signs of an individual that was suffering as a result of a heart lesion, many men are working and doing hard labor day in and day out that have a leaky heart, some know it and some don’t, and my permitting a man to be allowed to work, or be employed, is based upon the general appearance of the individual, the rate of his pulse, the absence of other signs of decompensation, and in the absence of those *230 things and. the man wanting to work, and able to work, I let him work, and I felt that man was able to work.”

The doctor further said: * * the sound of the murmur has absolutely nothing to do with the physical condition of the individual. In other words, he may have several types of murmur but the mere sound of the murmur, doesn’t tell you whether he has a heart that is carrying on its normal function or not,, nature can compensate for a leaking valve -in the heart and gradually builds up the heart muscles so that it becomes thicker and does its extra work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W.2d 513, 364 Mo. 225, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-scullin-steel-co-mo-1953.