Cox v. Ulysses Cooperative Oil & Supply Co.

544 P.2d 363, 218 Kan. 428, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 565
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 13, 1975
Docket47,865
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 544 P.2d 363 (Cox v. Ulysses Cooperative Oil & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Ulysses Cooperative Oil & Supply Co., 544 P.2d 363, 218 Kan. 428, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 565 (kan 1975).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kaul, J.:

This is a workmens compensation case. The appeal is by respondent-employer and its insurance carrier from a judgment of the district court which approved and adopted the findings and award of the examiner in favor of claimant. The claimant is the widow of Melboum A. Cox, the workman who died on February 10, 1973, as a result of a “malignant melanoma” which had metastasized to the brain.

The basic question presented is whether there was substantial competent evidence to support the trial court’s findings that there was an accidental injury which arose out of and in the course of employment; and that such injury resulted in the death of the workman. Intertwined is the question whether the trial court applied an improper medical standard in determining whether or not claimant had sustained her burden of proof concerning the causal relationship between the employment and the death of decedent.

The facts, which are basically undisputed, are developed by *429 the testimony of claimant and the medical history given by the deceased to his treating physician.

At the time of his death the decedent, Melboum A. Cox, was fifty-six years of age and was employed at respondent’s elevator, as foreman. Mr. Cox had had a dark mole on his back below the left scapula for a number of years. In October 1971, Mr. Cox scratched the mole on a nail while at work. Claimant testified that prior to this incident the mole was “real dark brown”, about the size of a large pea, and that the decedent had had no previous problem with it because it was flat. After the mole was scratched there was a change in its appearance “It was raised up and had gotten bigger around.” Claimant further testified that after the mole had been scratched her husband came home with blood on his shirts nearly every day. The decedent told her that he was always hitting or scraping the spot on protruding nails or the rough cement walls of the plant; and that he was in contact with the rough walls constantly, because he had to get down into the pits and was crawling around in passageways at the elevator. Claimant testified that decedent told her he first scratched the mole while he was up on the lift in the elevator and that he had mentioned it to his supervisor. Claimant also testified that she knew the mole had not changed in appearance prior to October 1971; and that to her knowledge the condition of the mióle was never aggravated by anything outside her deceased husband’s employment.

Early in January 1972 Mr. Cox went to see Dr. Evan R. Williams about the mole. Dr. Williams found a “4 cm. by 4 cm. lesion” which appeared to be a malignant melanoma. On January 19, 1972, Dr. Williams surgically removed the growth and submitted it to a pathologist, who reported “malignant melanoma, adequately excised.” Dr. Williams testified that he examined decedent on January 28, 1972, and again on February 25, 1972. On an examination in May 1972 Dr. Williams found that the malignancy had spread from the original site in the decedent’s lymph nodes; and that two nodes in his armpits were positive for malignanoy. Dr. Williams continued seeing decedent through 1972. Early in January 1973 decedent was found to be suffering cerebral disturbance and having severe headaches and was scheduled for a brain scan. The brain scan report stated the existence of possibly two metastatic lesions in the brain. At this point, Dr. Williams referred decedent to the care of Dr. Dennis F. Moore, an oncologist, at St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. Decedent was treated with whole *430 brain radiation and high dose Decadron. After treatment he was returned to Dodge City where his death ensued.

These proceedings were then initiated before the Workmens Compensation Examiner. Depositions were taken and after a hearing, the examiner found that Mr. Cox was injured in October 1971, and that his injury aggravated a preexisting condition to a point where it became cancerous and that his death resulted.

Based upon decedent’s annual salary of $10,000.00, the examiner found claimant to be entitled to the maximum dependent benefits and entered an award accordingly. Appellants applied for review to the Workmen’s Compensation Director who sustained the award, entered by the examiner, except for a modification pertaining to medical and funeral bills, which is immaterial to the issue on appeal. Appellants then appealed to the district court. On review the district court adopted the findings of the examiner and in addition specifically found “the testimony of Dr. Williams, the treating physician, provides ample evidence to support the Award.”

The examiner reviewed the testimony of Mrs. Cox and summarized the testimony of Dr. Williams in part as follows:

“Dr. Evan R. Williams was the attending physician. He operated on the claimant in January, 1972. The history he took from the decedent was as follows: ‘the man stated that he had had a mole on his back beneath the scapula on the left side for a number of years. That in October he continued to hit this against a door at work and it became irritated, and it began fungating and grew. He relates this to aggravation at work, and whether this is true or not I do not know. The mole itself had been present for years, but he stated it started to grow after the irritation.’ This was the history related to the Doctor in January, 1972, and was consistent with the history of illness related by Mrs. Cox in her testimony. After Dr. Williams performed the surgery, he continued to make checks on the decedent and when he was in for a routine visit, he found that the claimant suffered a double hernia for which he was subsequently operated on. Another surgery was performed on the decedent on May 1, 1972 for the removal of lymph nodes under the arms. The patient’s progress was followed, and in January, 1973 it appeared that the cancer was having some effect on his brain which was confirmed by a brain scan. Dr. Williams then referred the decedent to Dr. Dennis Moore of Wichita, Kansas. After some treatment in Wichita, the decedent expired on February 10, 1973. Dr. Williams testified that moles or melanoma are susceptible sites for malignancy. No one knows when they will start or what will do it. It is the consensus of all doctors to avoid hitting the mole at all times. If it is in a spot where it will receive irritation, as under a belt or a bra line, most doctors will urge its removal rather than take a chance on the irritation causing the melanoma to begin fungating or growing. Dr. Williams stated that in his opinion the irritation of the mole could have aggravated the pre-existing melanoma to a point *431 where it became malignant; and that therefore the malignancy spread through his body which caused his death.”

Concerning the testimony of Dr. Moore, the examiner summarized as follows:

“All of the medical records were introduced in evidence and the deposition of Dr. Moore was taken on behalf of the respondent and insurance carrier. He testified that he did not see the decedent until after the cancer was affecting his brain and that he became familiar with his history through Dr. Williams. Apparently, Dr. hjoore is a doctor who takes incurable cancer patients, and works with experimental programs to see whether or not their particular cases are: 1. possible candidates for experimental treatment;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 P.2d 363, 218 Kan. 428, 1975 Kan. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-ulysses-cooperative-oil-supply-co-kan-1975.