Carter v. Ries

378 S.W.2d 487, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 11, 1964
Docket49732
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 378 S.W.2d 487 (Carter v. Ries) 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
Carter v. Ries, 378 S.W.2d 487, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 758 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Action for $50,000 damages for personal injuries sustained by Loran Carter at the premises of Wagner Electric Corporation when an electric warehouse truck operated by plaintiff’s fellow employee Thebeau ran into a ladder on which plaintiff was working, throwing him to the floor. Defendant was the company physician. Thebeau, who suffered a broken ankle, was treated by defendant, and after several weeks was authorized by defendant to return to work. In this action plaintiff claimed that he was injured as a direct result of defendant’s negligence in authorizing Thebeau’s return to work before Thebeau had fully recovered from the injury and while he was still unable to operate the brake pedal of the vehicle. A trial jury returned a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff appealed.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged the breach of a duty owed by defendant to plaintiff as a doctor of medicine, in the following language: “It was defendant’s duty, as a doctor of medicine to exercise ordinary care at all times to exercise the knowledge and skill usual in that profession in said city in the examination and treatment of patients. It was defendant’s duty as medical officer of Wagner Electric Company to exercise ordinary care at all times to examine and treat as a doctor of medicine, employees of said company who were injured in their employment, and to determine from the standpoint of the examining and treating doctor, the fitness to return to employment of employes of said company injured in their employment, having in mind their own safety and that of their fellow employes.” After alleging that defendant examined and treated Thebeau for injury to his ankle and that defendant authorized and directed Thebeau to return to work, plaintiff alleged that plaintiff was injured due to the fact that Thebeau was suffering from the effects of the broken ankle and had not recovered the full use. and strength of the ankle; that plaintiff’s injury was the direct and proximate result of defendant’s carelessness and negligence “in failing to exercise ordinary care to determine Thebeau’s condition with respect to his ability to perform work to which he was assigned, before directing and authorizing him to return to work as aforesaid.” Plaintiff’s verdict-directing instruction submitted negligence in that defendant, after examining and treating Thebeau for broken ankle bones, being under the duty to determine the physical ability of employees to perform the duties of their employment, negligently gave Thebeau a report to go back to work which work defendant knew or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known would be driving a truck, Thebeau’s regular occupation, and thereby caused and permitted Thebeau to undertake employment which defendant knew or could have known Thebeau could not safely perform because of inability to operate the brake pedal due to pain and weakness in his ankle.

On this appeal plaintiff raises four procedural points, all based on claimed errors in instructions given at defendant’s request. We do not reach these procedural questions because, considering the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, he did not make a submissible case.

Thebeau, before his injury, operated an electric warehouse “pool” truck, his duties requiring considerable “getting on and off the truck.” After defendant removed the cast from Thebeau’s ankle sometime in August following the injury earlier in the year defendant said to Thebeau that he thought exercise would help his foot, and expressed the opinion to Thebeau that being on a truck and working the brake pedal would help his foot. A safety and hospital “memo,” signed by defendant, dated August 31, 1959, directed to the personnel director, reached, the safety supervisor. It *489 stated the history of the injury, gave the diagnosis trimalleolar fracture and dislocation of right ankle, and released The-beau “for light work that requires no extensive walking or standing.” It was the function of the placement department to determine the meaning of the term “light work,” and the decision as to what work Thebeau should he assigned to do was made by the personnel department, not by defendant. The safety supervisor asked Thebeau if he could drive a truck and The-heau answered that he did not know. The-heau did not tell his foreman what the defendant told Thebeau, but his foreman and the safety supervisor talked about the type of work Thebeau should do. The safety supervisor made a notation on the memo “Heitman [Thebeau’s foreman] to arrange light work.” The personnel department decided, in accordance with union rules “and supervision,” to place Thebeau-at work on a fork lift truck which is similar to the truck he formerly operated. In operating such a truck the driver is not required to get on and off the machine as often as in the case of the regular truck operation. Normally in the operation of the fork lift truck an operator uses his right foot on the brake pedal. Upon assuming the new duties Thebau did not use his right foot to operate the brake pedal because it was “too sore” — he could not do it. Instead, he favored his right foot by crossing over and using his left foot to activate the brake pedal. Thebeau could not handle the truck, and so stated in a conversation with plaintiff. Plaintiff himself, observing Thebeau’s operation of the truck, considered Thebeau unsafe. Nevertheless The-heau continued to operate the truck in this manner on the working days between August 31 and September 8. On the latter date Thebeau, while pulling in to put his electric truck “on charge,” saw that he was going to hit the ladder on which plaintiff was working, and got excited. He hit the brake with his left toe instead of using his right foot. It bent over and his foot slipped off, as a result of which the truck struck the ladder. He tried to but could not stop the truck by the use of his right foot because it hurt him “too had.”

Defendant denied that he knew what kind of work Thebeau had been doing prior to his injury or that he told Thebeau to go hack to work on a truck or that he told Thebeau that operating a brake pedal would be good for his foot. For the purpose of this decision, however, we disregard defendant’s testimony and assume the truth of Thebeau’s testimony in this respect.

Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to him plaintiff failed to make a submissible case. There is a failure of proof in two vital respects.

Under plaintiff’s theory of the case the burden was on plaintiff to prove that defendant did not exercise the knowledge, skill and learning of an industrial doctor in determining, the fitness of Thebeau to return to work and that defendant knew or could have known that Thebeau was not physically fit to return to work on a truck requiring him to operate a footbrake pedal because of pain and weakness in his ankle. Defendant cannot be held liable for the consequences of all mistakes in diagnosing and determining whether an injured employee may safely return to work. The mere fact that he may have been wrong in his conclusion in this case is not sufficient to convict him of negligence. Brown v. Scullin Steel Co., 364 Mo. 225, 260 S.W.2d 513, 518 [3]. Whether Thebeau, with safety to himself and others, could undertake duties involving such physical exercise, considering the condition of his ankle and the extent of his recovery, was a matter of medical judgment. The standards by which defendant’s determination is to be judged are the same by which a defendant in a medical malpractice case is to be judged, Brown v.

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Bluebook (online)
378 S.W.2d 487, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-ries-mo-1964.