Burgess v. Belton Mills

55 S.E.2d 292, 215 S.C. 364, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 14, 1949
Docket16262
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 S.E.2d 292 (Burgess v. Belton Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Belton Mills, 55 S.E.2d 292, 215 S.C. 364, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 98 (S.C. 1949).

Opinion

Tayeor, Justice.

By this appeal we are asked to review the decision and findings of the Industrial Commission and the Circuit Court, awarding death benefits to the respondents for the death of Geneva Burgess.

Mrs. Burgess, on her first day of work, August 30, 1945, at the Belton Mills, Belton, S. C., was alleged to have “sprained” her back while picking up a quill box that had *366 overturned. Claim was duly filed with the Industrial Commission, and, pursuant thereto, an award was made for disability compensation, and payments were being made thereon at the time of her death, July 31, 1946. Thereafter, claim was duly made for death benefits, and notice of such hearing bore the same docket number as the claim for disability compensation. Appellant promptly filed objection on the grounds that the two were separate claims, involving separate parties. Pursuant to this hearing, the Commission made its award in favor of respondents and held that the two claims would be considered as one. Appellants then appealed to the Circuit Court which reversed the Commission on its ruling that the case was one and the same, and held that this is another claim separate and apart from that for disability compensation, in that it is for death benefits and the parties are different, but affirmed the award of the Commission.

There is no appeal from the ruling of the Circuit Court that the two claims were separate and distinct, the one from the other, and should be so treated, but appellants come to this Court contending that there was no testimony of a causal connection between the injury suffered by Mrs. Burgess and her death.

Since there is no question as to who are the proper parties, we will proceed to examine the record to ascertain whether or not there is any competent evidence to the effect that the deceased's death was attributable to or accelerated by the accident heretofore referred to.

A review of the testimony shows that Mrs. Burgess, on the date in question, arighted her quill box which had turned over, experiencing pain as she did so, stating, “the pain struck me up and down my backbone and come straight around me.” She continued to work the rest of the shift and that of the following night, suffering pain.

Dr. T. Willis Martin testified as follows:

“Q. I will ask you, Doctor, if in 1943 you discovered that Mrs. Burgess had a cancer of her breast? A. In about 1943 *367 I delivered a baby for her and found a lump in her breast, and she couldn't succesfully nurse the baby. There were glands enlarged in the left armpit — I believe it was the left armpit — so we had to dispense with that breast during that .nursing siege, and I advised her to go to Dr. Wrenn and to the clinic and be checked up, but she did not go: she objected to going and kept putting it off and did not report. I think that was in 1943. So we just let the matter drop and I saw her from time to time and checked up on it two or three times. It didn’t seem to be enlarging or growing rapidly and the glands hadn’t made very much change, so all I could do was just to suggest each time, and I think I made three different suggestions over a period of a year or a year and a half.
“Q. Doctor, did Mrs. Burgess come to you some time in 1945 and tell you that she had fallen in the mill or something? A. Yes, sir. I think it was the last of August in 1945 that she reported up to the office one morning and said ‘Bast night I fell and hurt my back in the mill.’ I examined her as thoroughly as I could — I had not acquired my X-ray then — ■ and I couldn’t make out any injury; there was no apparent bruise or anything. So I suggested, in view of what we had found out about her previously, that she go and let Dr. Wrenn X-ray her back and also pass on that breast while she was over there. She put that off, put me off several weeks before I finally coaxed her over there, I think it was, but she finally reported to Dr. Wrenn, and he immediately sent me a written report that he found destruction of one of the vertebrae. partial destruction of one of the vertebrae of the back.
“O. Doctor, when she came to you and complained about having fallen there in the mill, did you find any physical evidence of a strain or a muscle spasm? A. No, sir. I went over her carefully. There was a tender area in her back. There was no bruise, discloration or swelling. I couldn’t make out any definite physical appearances of a strain or a trauma.
“O. You say that you did find a tender place in her back? A. Yes, sir.
*368 “Q. Doctor, if her cancer had advanced to the point that part of the backbone was eaten away, in your opinion would or not that have caused the tenderness that you found; could it or not have caused it? A. Yes, sir; it most likely would have.”

Dr. J. R. Young testified:

“Q. Doctor, will you take it up there and tell the history that you got from Mrs. Burgess and your findings ? A. She gave a history at that time that since the spring of 1943 she had had a lump in her left breast.
# * *
“A. She said that in recent months the tumor in her left breast had gotten a good deal more noticeable. She had had a baby six months before in March, and she developed a big lump in her arm. Her family physician had referred her to Dr. Wrenn. She stated also at that time when she came to the clinic on that day that in August, the preceding August, while at work, she had- strained her back.
“We examined her and found that she did have what we call an inoperable cancer of the left breast. What we mean by that is that it had spread from that side to the glands in her arm; and we X-rayed her back and found it had spread to the spine, so it was not an operable case. Dr. Wrenn treated her with X-ray, and she responded dramatically almost to the X-ray treatment. Her breast shrank up in size and the lump in her arm almost disappeared and she got definitely better from the standpoint of symptoms. A few weeks later, the last of October, she came back, and she was about five months pregnant. On the opinion of her family physician, Dr. Martin and I, we all felt that should be interrupted. So I operated on her abdomen, and the operation consisting of removing the womb with the baby in it and the ovaries. The reason that was done was to slow down the cancer process. She stood that operation all right in October, and following that she looked to us like she made definite improvement. She gained some weight, looked better and felt *369 better from October until about the following June; she picked up in weight and looked definitely better.
“In July of 1946 Dr. Martin referred her back to the hospital. She, in the meantime, had become paralyzed; she had had what is commonly called a stroke and was paralyzed on her right side.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.E.2d 292, 215 S.C. 364, 1949 S.C. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-belton-mills-sc-1949.