Commercial Transfer Co. v. Quasny

227 A.2d 20, 245 Md. 572, 1967 Md. LEXIS 547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 8, 1967
Docket[No. 161, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 227 A.2d 20 (Commercial Transfer Co. v. Quasny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Transfer Co. v. Quasny, 227 A.2d 20, 245 Md. 572, 1967 Md. LEXIS 547 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

Oppenheimer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal question in this Workmen’s Compensation appeal is the admissibility of a hearsay statement by an employee to his wife shortly before his death. The claimant, the appellee, brought her claim as wife and sole dependent of the deceased, John Quasny (Quasny), an employee of Commercial Transfer Company, alleging that her husband’s death, which occurred as a result of a heart attack on January 9, 1963, was caused by an accidental injury compensable under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Code (1957), Article 101. Her claim was allowed by the Workmen’s Compensation Commission and, on the appeal to the Baltimore City Court, heard by a jury with Judge Grady presiding, at which most of the testimony was given de novo, the Commission’s order was affirmed. The appellants, the employer and its insurer, contend not only that the wife’s statement was improperly admitted, but also that their objection to certain medical testimony was improperly overruled, and that the testimony, even with the disputed statements admitted, was insufficient to establish an accidental injury, or that the injury was the cause of Quasny’s heart attack, and therefore that their motion for a directed verdict should have been granted.

At the time Quasny sustained his heart attack, he was 51 years of age. His height was five feet seven or eight inches, and his weight was estimated at between 180 and 200 pounds. Fie had enjoyed good health, and had not changed in appearance for several years. Dr. Sollod had been the Quasnys’ family doctor for almost thirty years, and testified that, except for several attacks of kidney stones in 1935, Quasny was in good health until the doctor saw him at the hospital on the day of the heart attack. There was some evidence that Quasny had complained of indigestion for about four months before the attack and received pills from his doctor, but Dr. Sollod testi *576 fied Quasny had never received any medicine from him over a prolonged period of time or for any serious ailment. Quasny had sustained injuries to his leg and toe several years before 1963 but there was no evidence that he had ever complained of shortness of breath or pain in the chest or arms. A neighbor characterized Quasny as a healthy, jolly man who never seemed to be sick. A co-worker of Quasny had seen him frequently over the years and Quasny “always looked pretty good” to him. When Quasny came to work the morning of his heart attack, he was laughing and joking.

Quasny was employed as a truck driver. Among his duties was the job of picking up various kinds of merchandise at the Camden Warehouse for transportation to the consignees. It was quite usual for him to pick up as part of the merchandise 55 gallon drums of glue which weighed between 500 and 600 pounds each. In picking up' one of these drums, it was normal practice that a forklift driver would place the drum on the rear of the truck which was backed up to the loading dock. From there the truck driver, as part of the loading operation, would have to move the drum to the front of the truck. To move these barrels required tilting the barrel on its edge or rim and, while balancing it on the rim, rolling it to the desired position, where again it would have to be righted.

On Wednesday, January 9, 1963, Quasny ate a hearty breakfast, and went to work. At about 9:00 A.M. he was at the Camden Warehouses loading his truck. Parker Willis, a forklift driver working at the warehouse, who knew Quasny personally and who had seen Quasny load at that warehouse many times previously, placed a 55 gallon drum of glue on the back of Quasny’s truck and, as he backed away from the truck, he saw Quasny take hold of the drum, pull it towards him and then tilt it and roll it or “chim” it towards the front of the truck. Willis stated he saw nothing which seemed unusual in Quasny’s procedure, although he said he could not see Quasny after the latter left the back of the truck because it was dark in the truck. Willis could not say what happened in the truck. After he saw Quasny begin to roll the drum towards the front of the truck, Willis backed his tractor away.

Willis testified that a drum is not handled the same way every *577 time. “Maybe you set your hand one time to pull the barrel over; other times you might set the other hand against the side of the truck. You got to have one hand braced to get it over.”

When Willis backed away or after he returned with another load, he found Quasny standing at the back of the truck “holding himself” and complaining that he was “feeling bad.” Willis asked him what had happened and said: “Are you going to die?” An employee of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Clarence Madden, came to the truck with a load of cake mix. Quasny started unloading the cake mix, and Madden left to get some more of the mix. When he returned, Quasny was sitting on the back of the truck, and said he did not feel good. Quasny got paler and paler, told another employee sent to get him that “I got terrific pain,” and began moaning and vomiting. He was taken to the South Baltimore General Hospital in an ambulance, praying en route.

Mrs. Quasny, the appellant, arrived at the hospital at about 10:30 A.M. A priest had given her husband his last rites; the priest was still at the bedside when Mrs. Quasny arrived. Mrs. Quasny found her husband “a very, very sick man.” He recognized her and called her by name. When she first arrived, her husband “was just like a piece of marble. He was cold and hard * * *” Quasny was under oxygen the entire day, with tubes in his nose. Mrs. Quasny was the only person with him until about 5:00 P.M. except for the priest and the medical attendants. As the day went on, Quasny recovered somewhat, and talked to his wife at intervals, and asked for a cigarette.

Mrs. Quasny testified, over objection, that at this time, she asked her husband “What happened to you today?” and testified:

“He said he had a heavy drum on the back to move from the back to the front of the truck. While moving this heavy drum, he said it tilted over to him and while trying to upright it a terrific pain struck him in his chest, and he said the pain grew so severe that he thought his end had come.”

Afterwards, some of Mrs. Quasny’s relatives came in the room and Quasny spoke to them, calling them by name. He was *578 speaking normally. Mrs. Quasny stayed until about 8:30 that evening. Quasny died on Friday, January 11, at about 4:00 P.M. He had never been out of danger from the time of his arrival at the hospital.

This Court, in a number of cases, has considered whether a hearsay statement as to the cause of an accident is admissible, under Section 11 of the Act, which provides that “the Commission shall not be bound by the usual common law or statutory rules of evidence or by any technical or formal rules of procedure * * *” Our review is limited to the questions raised in the appeal to the lower court permitted by the Act, but, as Chief Judge Bond said, for the Court, in Standard Oil Co. v. Mealey, 147 Md. 249, 254, 127 Atl. 850 (1925) :

“[I]t seems unquestionably true that the mere allowance of an appeal must intend a review of the decision of the commission with some advantages from the special training and methods of the judicial tribunal.

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Bluebook (online)
227 A.2d 20, 245 Md. 572, 1967 Md. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-transfer-co-v-quasny-md-1967.