Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Clark

1935 OK 972, 51 P.2d 539, 175 Okla. 70, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 814
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1935
DocketNo. 25887.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1935 OK 972 (Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Clark, 1935 OK 972, 51 P.2d 539, 175 Okla. 70, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 814 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an action to recover damages for injuries to plaintiffs health under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 ÜSCA, secs. 51-59). It appears that plaintiff, Chatman Clark, was employed as a flue blower at defendant's roundhouse in El Reno, Okla., from 1920 to 1930. The action was instituted September 17, 1931, in the district court of Oklahoma county by plaintiff, Chatman Clark, against said Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company. Trial was had in said district court to' the court and jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $1,000, and defendant has duly perfected its appeal.

Plaintiff alleged that for a number of years prior to the date of filing his petition he was employed in the defendant’s roundhouse in the city of El Reno as ra flue blower ; that his duties required him to enter the fire boxes of the engines shortly after the fires were removed, and while the engines were still in a heated condition and while there was still pressure in the boilers from steam, taking with him a line conducting compressed air and blowing the flues in the engines; that this work entailed the breathing of poisonous gases, soot and smoke and heated air; that the breathing of these caused the following conditions to 'appear in persons employed in this kind of occupation, to wit, carbon gas poison, chronic endocard-itis, valvular heart lesions and chronic anemia ; that this fact was well known to defendant or could have been known to it by the use of ordinary care, but that these conditions were not known by plaintiff and he was unaware that these consequences would result to one’s health from following such employment ; that plaintiff was taken sick in August, 1930, and suffered from carbon gas poisoning-, chronic endocarditis, valvular heart lesions and chronic anemia, caused from breathing poisonous gases, vapors, soot and hot air while following his usual duties working for defendant company, resulting in total and permanent disability and making him a practical Invalid; that there is n type of mask that can be furnished employees engaged in this kind of work that would prevent them from contracting the aforesaid occupational diseases, which defendant well knew or by the use of reasonable care could have known, 'and ha^e provided plaintiff with said mask; that defendant negligently failed to warn plaintiff of the aforesaid risks and hazards of said occupation ; that by reason of defendant’s negligence in so failing to warn plaintiff and in so failing to furnish him proper mask, he has been damaged.

After general demurrer to the petition, which wag overruled, defendant in due time filed its answer denying generally the allegations of the petition and pleading affirmatively the separate defenses of assumption of risk and contributory negligence, under the aforesaid act.

The defendant on appeal has grouped its assignments of error under the following propositions:

“1. The trial court erred in overruling the demurrer of the defendant railway company to the evidence introduced by the plaintiff.
“2. The trial court erred in overruling (he defendant railway company’s motion for a directed verdict.
“3. The trial court erred in overruling *71 the motion for new trial filed by tlie defendant railway company.”

With reference to his duties and the conditions under which he was required to work, plaintiff testified as follows:

“Well, most of the time I was flue blower ; prior to that just a laborer around, sometimes put to cleaning pits and picking up scraps and iron. Well, a flue blower’s job is to go into those locomotives just as soon as they come off the road and the fire is knocked out and they are put in the house and sometimes they are blowed off and it takes about 30 to 40 minutes for the steam to blow off 'and as soon as the steam ip blowed off you are inside of them cleaning the fire box, cleaning the flue sheet, cleaning the ashes and soot. Q. You get right inside where the fire box is? A. Yes, sir. Q. What do you take with you? A. You have got a hose with compressed air. Q. What do yon do with the air? A. You go through 'and scrape the flue sheet off and take the hose and you blow your flues from back in the fire box up to the front end; the engine has a draft that works when the flues are not choked up too bad; it will suck that all out to the front end. Q. Was there soot in those engines? A. Yes, sir, absolutely. Q. Tell the jury about that. A. Take a coal burning engine when it comes off the road, when it is drafting, it accumulates what you call clinkers; the flues become coated with something like hard dirt, clinkers sometimes as big as your fist, and the flues get stopped up and you get a report about the engine is not steaming on account of the flues stopped up. and you have got & take that hose and work back and forward in the flues and the soot is so heavy you can’t see what you are doing half the time. Q. How hot was it inside those boilers? A. So hot you could hardly stay in there to work; sometimes it would be 100 pounds rand sometimes 110.”

Doctor Boyd, who had been plaintiff’s family physician off and on for some 11 years, testified that he examined plaintiff in 1027, and at that time 'advised him to quin and told him if he continued in that work he might become totally and permanently disabled. Although plaintiff throughout his testimony insisted that he never until 1930 understood and appreciated the risks and hazards of his employment nor the effects the same might have on his health, this testimony of the doctor stands undisputed and undenied. Plaintiff did not deny having this warning, although he was back on the witness stand in rebuttal. The testimony is also uncontradicted that plaintiff was, and since as early as 1925 had been, suffering continuously from syphilis. And we think the only conclusion that could be reached from the testimony is that the only ailment from which plaintiff is suffering, not attributable to syphilis, is bronchitis. We think the testimony of Dr. Catto, plaintiff’s own witness, will admit of no other conclusion.

“Q. Would the mere breathing of soot, smoke or coal dust, wtould that, in a normal, healthy person, cause the condition of the heart you have described this man to be • suffering from? A. Only as far as it causes bronchitis; it would cause bronchitis or toxemia, or anything that would keep the oxygen out of the lung would cause a heart disease or toxemia. Q. But I mean you take a man with a normal, healthy body, breathing or inhaling coal, soot or smoke, will that actually affect his heart? A. Give a normal, healthy individual, and doing that only at intervals, it would not; if persistent, continued, and he had some predisposed cause, it would.”

The testimony does shew that the conditions and ailments attributable to syphilis could have been accelerated or aggravated or intensified by working where it was hot and breathing hot air, coal dust, soot and smoke.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 972, 51 P.2d 539, 175 Okla. 70, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-r-co-v-clark-okla-1935.