Cunningham v. Warner Gear Co.

198 N.E. 808, 101 Ind. App. 220, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 143
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1935
DocketNo. 15,464.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 808 (Cunningham v. Warner Gear Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham v. Warner Gear Co., 198 N.E. 808, 101 Ind. App. 220, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 143 (Ind. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Kime, J.

Appellants appeal to this court from an award of the full Industrial Board of Indiana, a part of which award reads as follows:

“And the full Industrial Board having heard the argument of counsel, having reviewed the evidence in the original hearing and being duly advised therein, now finds that on June 28,1934, one Pearly Cunningham was in the employ of the defendant at an average weekly wage of $24.96.

“It is further found that on June 28, 1934, the said Pearly Cunningham died.

“It is further found by the full Industrial Board of Indiana that the death of the said Pearly Cunningham was caused by heat prostration.

“It is further found by the full Industrial Board, by a majority of its members, that the death of said Pearly Cunningham was not due to any accidental injury arising out of or in the course of his employment with the defendant.

Order.

“It is therefore considered and ordered by the full Industrial Board of Indiana, by a majority of its members, that the plaintiffs shall take nothing by their complaint herein and that they shall pay the costs of this proceeding.”

*222 The error assigned is that the award of the full Industrial Board of Indiana is contrary to law.

The evidence discloses that appellants’ decedent died as the result of heat prostration while in the employ of appellee; that he was forty-three years of age at the time of his death; that he did not use alcoholic beverages or tobacco in any form and had no organic disease. That for several years prior to his death he had been in good health and had no sickness except occasional common colds, mumps in 1928, and a slight illness on the Monday evening preceding the Thursday evening on which he died. That he worked from 4:00 o’clock P. M. until midnight and that for several days prior to his death he did no work except at appellee’s factory, where he was employed in the heat treat department, located in a building made of brick and glass. Part of the heat treating operation consisted of immersing automobile gears in a cyanide solution heated to a high temperature, leaving the gears therein until heated to a red hot state, then removing the gears and placing them in a receptacle containing oil. The cyanide was heated in pots set in furnaces in the heat treating department. These pots were about three feet long, two and one-half feet wide and one and one-half feet deep. Four of these pots were known as the automatic pots and were arranged in a row along the south wall of the building. They were-enclosed on all sides, except as to a hole big enough to put the gears into the pots. On these four pots one Williamson'worked. The pots at which decedent worked were arranged in two rows, two pots to the row,-set in furnaces placed to the north from the automatic pots. The pots at which decedent worked were enclosed on one side and at the ends, and above them was a hood in which was an opening through which the fumes were taken out by suction. One side of each of these sets of two pots was entirely open, being *223 the side which the decedent approached for the purpose of immersing and later removing the gears from the cyanide. Of these two sets one opened to the south toward the automatic pots operated by Williamson, the other set opened to the north. There was a space of eight or ten feet between the set opening to the south and the automatic pots operated by Williamson.

At a distance of about eight feet from the pots was a unit for forcing air into the heat treating department. It was the custom of the operators to have this incoming air and current thereof trained at and toward the open pots, and the current was noticeable only when one was in front of the open pots.

The cyanide solution in which the gears were dipped was heated to a red hot liquid state of which the temperature was from 1200 to 1600 degrees, and the receptacles containing the oil were set a few feet from the pots. Decedent, on the day of his death, was operating with three of the open pots. The distance between the two sets of pots at which decedent worked is not clearly disclosed by the evidence but it is shown that his work kept him, at all times, within a distance not greater than twenty feet from the open pots.

The precise manner in which decedent performed his work was as follows: Automobile gears, each weighing from 1 to 1 y% pounds, were placed at a point about twenty feet from the open pots. Four of these gears were wired together at a time by the decedent and by him carrid with a five-foot iron rod constructed so that the hook on the end thereof would pass beneath the wires fastening the gears together. With this rod the decedent carried the gears to the open pots, placed them in the cyanide, and later, by means of the rod, removed them from the cyanide and placed them in the oil receptacle. In doing this operation, the decedent came in close contact with the open cyanide pots, his *224 hands being almost directly over the edge thereof. The rods with which he worked became heated and it was necessary for him to wear gloves to protect his hands from the heat. In immersing and removing the gears from the cyanide, the decedent was required to face the open pots. Persons passing in the aisles or space near the open pots could feel the heat emanating therefrom.

On the Monday evening preceding his death, the decedent became somewhat ill and went home from his work. On Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday he went to work as usual. On Thursday, June 28, 1984, the decedent drove from his home to the appellant’s factory and worked from 4:00 o’clock P. M. until about the time of his death, sometime between 7:00 and 8:00 o’clock P. M. He did not eat at the factory after going to work except some time before 7:00 'o’clock P. M. he was seen eating or sucking a lemon. A little later, decedent looked like he was sick. He was sitting down, about ten feet away from the pots. He had a pale color, was not sweating, his clothes were dry except under his suspenders. About 7:50 o’clock P. M. he was found lying on the floor with his feet toward and about six feet from the south tier of pots on which he worked, and the rest of his body extending away from the pots. Workmen who approached him raised him up, he seemed to gasp for his breath, but was not observed to breathe any more. He was carried outside and placed on a lawn for about five minutes and was then moved to the first-aid room, about one-half square from the lawn, where first-aid was administered. About fifteen minutes after he was taken to the first-aid room the factory doctor arrived and found that the decedent was dead at the time.

The weather was warm on the day of decedent’s death and had been for some preceding days. Temperatures on the date of decedent’s death taken in the standard weather bureau observation thermometer shelter in the *225 shade, as specified by the weather bureau, were 99 degrees at 4:00 o’clock P. M.; 95 degrees at 5:00 o’clock P. M.; 94 degrees at 6:00 o’clock P. M.; 88 degrees at 7:00 o’clock P. M.; and 86 degrees at. 8:00 o’clock P. M. These temperatures were taken 75 feet above street level and the expert testified that the heat would be greater on the ground level.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 808, 101 Ind. App. 220, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-warner-gear-co-indctapp-1935.