Cecil v. State Road Commission

1 Ct. Cl. 114
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketNo. 11
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ct. Cl. 114 (Cecil v. State Road Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cecil v. State Road Commission, 1 Ct. Cl. 114 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

WALTER M. ELSWICK, Judge.

[115]*115This case was heard by the court at a special term held at Wheeling, West Virginia, on the 25th day of February 1942. It appears from the evidence that on October 27, 1936, the claimant, George B. Cecil, was employed as a day laborer by the state road commission at a stone quarry on Riley hill, above Middle Grave creek, in Marshall county, West Virginia. On the morning of said day claimant had been transported from Moundsville to the stone quarry in the cab of a state road truck operated by a state road employee. In the evening, about four-thirty o’clock, when their day’s work was complete, another state road truck drove up to where claimant and a companion were standing and stopped for the purpose of offering to furnish claimant and his companion transportation back to Moundsville. Claimant testified that when the truck stopped, his companion, Robert Darrow, entered the bed of the truck, but at which time claimant failed to enter same. After the truck had been driven ten to fifteen feet further down the hill and again stopped, claimant entered the bed of the truck. The driver of the truck, Burson Davis, testified that on the evening in question he had two companions in the cab of the truck with him, and that upon arriving at the place where Mr. Cecil and his companion were standing, he stopped. He testified that he thought they motioned for him to go ahead and he continued to drive on not knowing that the two men had entered the back end of his truck until one of the companions in the cab announced that the accident complained of had occurred. Robert Darrow, claimant’s companion, was in the United States Army on the day of the hearing and was not produced as a witness. Neither were the truck driver’s two companions in the cab produced as witnesses. From the evidence it appears that the driver drove the truck down the road from Riley hill toward Middle Grave creek at a modeate rate of speed until he left the hill and then upon a straightaway he picked up speed from twenty-five to thirty miles per hour. Claimant testified that the truck bed did not have any seat, and contained mud and water which did not permit him and his companion to sit down. They stood up leaning on to the cab of the truck until it came to a feharp curve turning first to right then to the left. When the truck [116]*116made the turn to the right claimant by the swing of the truck was thrown against his companion standing on his left, and as the truck swung'to the left claimant was thrown out of the truck backwards, falling into the roadway and was thereby injured, for which he claims compensation. Claimant was not acquainted with the road, and it appears from the evidence that the driver did not slow down his speed when approaching the curve in question. It appears from the evidence that a reasonable and safe rate of speed around this curve would have been from ten to fifteen miles per hour while the driver Was exceeding that rate of speed. After the injury claimant was taken by the road employees to Dr. S. F. Yoho of Moundsville, West Virginia, who rendered him first aid, and then sent him to Reynolds memorial hospital at Glendale, West Virginia. He had received a laceration at the back of his head and a fractured vertebra. Claimant was x-rayed on October 28, 1936, by Dr. Haislip of said hospital. From the x-ray it appeared that claimant had received a fracture of the first lumbar vertebra and lower dorsal, (record p. 6). Other x-ray pictures were taken on November 16, 1936 and on December 6, 1936. The latter radiographs of the lumbar and lower dorsal spine showed a compression fracture of the first lumbar vertebra body in good position and alignment and showing healing. The ninth thoracic spine also showed a compression fracture, and good position and alignment. Dr. Haislip by profession a roentgenologist and radiologist with wide experience in treatment of such injuries (record p. 13) testified that persons sustaining fractures such as the one which claimant received usually have some limitation of motion in their spines, and while some do continue working, others don’t. “It just depends on how badly they can stand the pain and how badly they need the work and various other factors” (record p. 15). It also appears from his evidence that the injury received is “a permanent compression of the bodies and when they are mashed down, unless you can get them right out right away, they stay mashed down”; that it would interfere, so far as the full proper function of it is concerned and would cause pain frequently or most of the time throughout life (record p. 17). Dr. Haislip further testified in his opinion [117]*117claimant would have some pain, but as to how much, “it’s more likely a personal item.” It also appears from the testimony of said physicians that the age of the person injured would be a factor considered, the older the person is the longer the period of recovery.

The claimant remained at the hospital for a period of seven weeks, and during the first week was unconscious or delirious. At the end of seven weeks he was removed to his home where he received further treatment by Dr. Yoho during the year 1937.

He was carried on the payroll of the state road commission until the 15th day of April 1937, receiving approximately $160.00 as wages during all of which time he was unable "to work. It would appear that he was then dropped from the payroll and still remained unable to work. However, he was permitted to perform some light work for the road commission for a short time in 1938.

Before sustaining the injuries complained of it appears that the claimant was an able-bodied man and a good worker. He had worked on farms most of his life, but had also worked as a teamster several years receiving wages from one dollar to six dollars per day. At the time of the injury he was "employed at a stone quarry receiving $3.20 per day. He was then approximately fifty-one years of age, married and the father of four children, and is the father of another child bom since said time. The children’s ages now range from two to eighteen years. Since the injury claimant has been unable to perform the labors which he had been accustomed to do. He can only perform light work today and such work is likely to be accompanied by pain. This view is substantiated by his testimony, his wife, and the physicians attending him following the injury heretofore referred to.

There was an appropriation made by the Legislature, under the general appropriation act of 1937, to George Cecile, who is the same person as claimant, for the sum of $304.18. From [118]*118the record it appears that said sum was applied as follows: To Reynolds memorial hospital for hospitalization of claimant $157.50; to Dr. S.-F. Yoho for medical services rendered claimant $55.00; and to claimant was paid the sum of $91.68 in the year 1937 as appears by receipt signed by claimant filed in evidence as “exhibit b.”

There was another appropriation made by the Legislature, under the general appropriation act of 1939 to claimant, as George Cecile, for the sum of $332.59, which amount was receipted by him on' April 19, 1939, but from which sum the wages he had drawn from date of injury until April 15, 1937 were deducted when the check was endorsed and delivered for payment. From these two appropriations it appears that a total of $636.77 has been paid to and on behalf of claimant on account of said injury.

The state road commission, by the attorney general, filed a general denial of liability on the claim and a special plea of release.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ct. Cl. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cecil-v-state-road-commission-wvctcl-1942.