Dial v. C. v. Dome Co.

515 P.2d 1046, 213 Kan. 262, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 3, 1973
Docket47,135
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 515 P.2d 1046 (Dial v. C. v. Dome 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
Dial v. C. v. Dome Co., 515 P.2d 1046, 213 Kan. 262, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 628 (kan 1973).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

This is a workmens compensation case in which we are called upon to determine what effect the 1967 ‘heart amendment” to the Kansas workmen’s compensation act has on a case of ‘heat stroke.”

The claimant in this case is a finish carpenter who was 58 years of age at the time he sustained his injury on June 25, 1971. He had no *263 history o£ heart trouble, but it was later determined that he did have atherosclerosis.

In April he had begun working on the construction of a large, one-story building in Parsons, Kansas, intended for use as a retail discount center. For several days prior to June 25 he had been installing paneling and trim on a long, narrow mezzanine deck being fitted out for offices. The deck was some nine to fifteen feet above the floor of the building, and about nine feet from the uninsulated metal roof overhead. For the previous five days the outside temperatures had been ranging from nighttime lows of around seventy degrees to daytime highs in the upper eighties and low nineties. The day before it had hit 94. The building shell was closed in, and as the interior paneling progressed what air circulation there was on the mezzanine diminished. To claimant the air seemed hotter each day.

On the twenty-fifth at about 10:00 a. m. claimant began to develop a headache, couldn’t see too well, and was perspiring heavily. He decided to take a coffee break. He went to the end of the mezzanine, about 45 feet away, where a co-worker had piped in some air conditioning through a flexible tube to the roof. He had just poured himself a cup of coffee when he collapsed and became for a time unconscious. His co-worker said he “Felt like fire.” He was treated at the Labette County Hospital and then at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, where he remained for 50 days.

The Veterans Administration Hospital made the following diagnosis:

“1. Extracranial Carotid Artery Disease, Bilateral
(a) Total Occlusion Right Carotid
(b) Subtotal Occlusion Left Carotid
“2. Hyperlipedemia, Probable Type IV
“3. Occlusion of left femoral artery secondary to contrast study, treated, cured.”

The medical testimony was given by Dr. W. G. Rinehart, a Pittsburg, Kansas, physician. As a result of his examination and a review of claimant’s history the doctor testified:

“Q. Did you form an opinion doctor from the examination!?]
“A. That on June 25, 1971 while working in a very hot area that there was incurred a cerebral vascular accident on the right side resulting in unconsciousness, blurred vision, slurring of speech, pain in the right side of the head, *264 numbness and weakness of the left arm and leg. He suffered a cerebral vascular accident, the probable result of heat.
“Q. As I understand doctor, each of us has a heat dissipating mechanism in our body, do we not?
“A. We have what we call a heat control center in the brain. That has a lot to do with helping control the temperature of the body. If there is excessive heat and there is a tendency because of excessive heat to quit perspiring and the perspiring has a lot to do with cooling the body and keep it, why the body has a tendency to get hot. In my opinion the heated area precipitated this vascular accident. In my opinion this is a cerebral hemorrhage. He did have a physical condition which was aggravated to the point where he has the accident.
“Q. Would this rise in this heat and his inability to accommodate to that cause any pressure intercraniallyE?]
“A. It probably caused general increase in blood pressure, including inter-cranial pressure, yes.
“Q. Was that what brought about this cerebral accident, or just what would cause that, mechanically, I mean?
“A. Well my opinion there was a rupture of the blood vessel on the surface of the brain on the right side, and that with excessive heat a body has a marked tendency to suffer hemorrhage and in my opinion this man suffered a cerebral vascular accident we call it.
“Q. Do you feel doctor there was any predisposition to this type of thing he sufferedE?]
“A. Yes. He had a condition we call atherosclerosis.
“Q. Was this aggravated by heat, you think[?]
“A. The condition of atherosclerosis was such that the heat precipitated a rupture of the blood vessel on the surface of the brain, producing this cerebral hemorrhage or cerebral vascular accident. The atherosclerosis condition would keep him from accommodating to the heat.” (Emphasis added.)

The doctor also found claimant to be totally disabled from performing manual labor and the duties of a carpenter.

The examiner, the director, and the trial court each in turn found that claimant was temporarily totally disabled, and that his disability was the result of an accident which arose out of and in the course of his employment. Compensation was awarded accordingly, and the employer and its insurance carrier have appealed to this court.

The fact or extent of disability are not in issue. The question here is solely whether the heart amendment precludes compensation because, admittedly, claimant was working no harder when he was stricken than he was accustomed to working or than he was working the day or week before. The amendment, to K. S. A. 44-501, provides:

*265 “Compensation shall not be paid in case of coronary or coronary artery disease or cerebrovascular injury unless it is shown that the exertion of the work necessary to precipitate the disability was more than the workman’s usual work in the course of the workman’s regular employment.”

The appellants basic argument is that, since claimant suffered a “cerebrovascular injury,” under the amendment he cannot be compensated because his exertion was no more than his “usual work” in the course of his “regular employment.”

Below, this contention was met in a different way at each level. The examiner made no mention of the amendment, finding merely that claimant had met with “personal injury by accident which arose out of and in the course of his employment.”

The director, on review, characterized claimant’s injury as a “heat stroke,” and observed, “The Supreme Court has long recognized heat stroke as a compensable injury.” He relied on the dictum in Hoag v. Laundry Co., 113 Kan. 513, 515, 215 Pac. 295 (1923) that “It is now generally recognized that what is known as heat stroke is an accident, within the meaning of compensation laws. . . .” He concluded: “The Director believes that it was not the legislative intent of K. S. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
515 P.2d 1046, 213 Kan. 262, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dial-v-c-v-dome-co-kan-1973.