Dillon v. Gasoline Plant Construction Corp.

75 So. 2d 80, 222 Miss. 10, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 610
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1954
Docket39302
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 So. 2d 80 (Dillon v. Gasoline Plant Construction Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Gasoline Plant Construction Corp., 75 So. 2d 80, 222 Miss. 10, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 610 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

*13 McGehee, C. J.

This is a suit for death benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1948 and amendments thereto. The *14 claimants are the appellant Mrs. Ava Johnson Dillon and her minor son William Hamilton Dillon, ten years of age, and who are the sole heirs at law and dependents of Ralph E. Dillon, deceased, who was employed on the date of his death and for about two months prior thereto by the appellee Gasoline Plant Construction Corporation as a painter on a construction job. Ralph E. Dillon died at his home on the night of September 10, 1952, at about 9 o’clock, after having quit work at about 5 o ’clock that afternoon. He did not sustain an accident or suffer an injury on the job within the common meaning and acceptation of that term. The theory of the claimants is that the nature and character of the work in which the employee was engaged as a painter, and the number of hours employed in the work for several days prior to his death, was a contributing factor thereto in that he is alleged to have had a pre-existing heart ailment which was aggravated by the nature and character of the work and the hours of labor each day so as to precipitate his sudden death from coronary thrombosis.

In support of this theory the claimants offered the testimony of the appellant Mrs. Dillon and of two co-employees of Mr. Dillon in connection with the fact that he had normally worked 9 hours per day for 5 days in a week, and that these hours were increased during the calendar week preceding his death to 10 hours per day for 5 days and 8 hours on the 6th day. His death occurred on the next Wednesday night following his work at the normal 9 hours per day on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of the week of his death.

Mrs. Dillon testified that her husband had complained of pains in his chest and in his arms from time to time during the 10 days immediately preceding the death and had stated to her that he was tired and would have to quit work and take a rest unless they soon completed the job on which he was engaged; that he made such a complaint after he returned home on the evening of *15 September 10th and that after eating his supper he decided to remain at home and read the newspaper instead of accompanying her and their son on a trip of 5 or 6 miles to town and to the picture show that evening.

Mr. McKenzie, a coemployee, heard Mr. Dillon say about an hour before he quit work that afternoon that he “was tired out.” He also admitted that a painter had to bend his body and stretch his arms when painting.

Mr. Trusty, a coemployee who lived 3 or 4 miles from the home of Mr. Dillon, testified that they had an arrangement whereby they would drive 28 miles to the place of their employment in the ear of Mr. Dillon one day and in the car of the witness the next day, and that Mr. Dillon used his car in going to and from their work on September 10th, and that he was jolly, in a good humor and apparently in good health en route home that afternoon. But that he had heard birr) say something that day about “he was going to have to quit smoking cigarettes” on account of a tight feeling in his chest; that this occurred during the forenoon of that day and that he had made statements to that effect on prior occasions; and that he had thrown his cigarettes away.

The testimony on behalf of the claimants also established the well-known fact that it is necessary for a painter to bend his body and stretch his arms in painting and to stoop when applying paint underneath pipes and other surfaces on the job, and also that steady manual labor will cause the arms of a painter and other workmen to ache, but it was for the determination of the attorney-referee and the Workmen’s Compensation Commission as to whether or not wielding a paint brush for 9 or 10 hours per day with one hour out for lunch would constitute an unusual exertion or strain. Naturally a painter would get tired, and this is true of most anyone who really works. The question after all is whether or not his work was so burdensome as to *16 bring about or contribute to Ms death from coronary-thrombosis or some other unknown cause about 4 hours after he had left the job.

The claimants introduced as a witness a local physician, who had been summoned to the home upon the return of the appellants from the picture show, and who found M-r. Dillon dead on the floor of the front porch by his chair when the physician arrived. The proof also disclosed that the employee had been on the bed undressed and that his newspaper was on the floor beside the bed. The physician stated in the death certificate as the cause of death “suspected coronary thrombosis.” He testified that the employee entered his hospital on November 10, 1951, complaining of chest pain and was kept there for observation and examination until the next day when an electrocardiogram was made, and which was interpreted as showing no evidence of heart disease and that the patient was informed of this fact. He was again in the hospital on the 25th of February and was again complaining of chest pain and was examined by another physician at the hospital on February 27, 1952, who found him to be suffering from pains in Ms back, and there was some lay testimony that he was also found to have had indigestion at that time, but the physician who testified did not see the patient again until after his death. This witness testified that he didn’t consider “being tired” a symptom of acute thrombosis, or occlusion, saying “I don’t think of fatigue or being tired as being a symptom of heart disease.”

In regard to the death certificate the physician who was called to the home on the night of September 10th and who signed the certificate, stated in answer to a hypothetical question in regard thereto that “I want to make it clear as to the form, on my death certificate, that I didn’t make a positive diagnosis of coronary thrombosis, and I don’t know now beyond doubt it was the cause of his death.” He further stated that “In a *17 person who has a setup for development of a thrombosis, any intense exertion prior to the development would be a predisposing cause;” that he didn’t rule out other causes than heart trouble as being the cause of death in this instance; and that he didn’t know the cause of his death but that if he had a coronary disease, and the witness had known it, he would have told him not to work, if he had been asked whether he should or not.

A neighbor, who said that she lived in talking distance of Mrs. Dillon, testified that she had a conversation with the latter at the home of the employee immediately following his death, and that Mrs. Dillon told her that “he ate a good supper”, and the witness was asked whether Mrs. Dillon said anything to her about the condition of her husband when he started to work that morning, and the witness replied, “Yes, sir. She said he patted himself on the chest and said he thought the hurting was coming back in his chest and she said she told him he was smoking too many cigarettes and drinking too much coffee.” This witness further testified that Mrs. Dillon said her husband “seemed to be perfectly all right and he ate a hearty supper and the little boy wanted to go to the show. She said he told her to take him, he wanted to read the paper.

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Bluebook (online)
75 So. 2d 80, 222 Miss. 10, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-gasoline-plant-construction-corp-miss-1954.