Elliott v. Gooch Feed Mill Co.

23 N.W.2d 262, 147 Neb. 309, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 70
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1946
DocketNo. 32064
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 23 N.W.2d 262 (Elliott v. Gooch Feed Mill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Gooch Feed Mill Co., 23 N.W.2d 262, 147 Neb. 309, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 70 (Neb. 1946).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. After an accident at the defendant’s feed mill, plaintiff was paid compensation for a period of 16 3/7 weeks at $15 a week. Thereafter he filed a petition in the compensation court, alleging that he had not recovered from said injury and praying that he be given such relief as he was entitled to under the provisions of the compensation law. Hearing was had thereon before one member of the compensation court, and the petition was dismissed. Plaintiff filed a waiver of rehearing before the full court, and appealed to the district court, where a trial was had, and plaintiff’s petition was dismissed. Plaintiff appealed to this court.

The plaintiff charges in his brief that “The findings of fact upon which the decree rests are not only unsupported by the evidence but are directly contrary to' and inconsistent with the overwhelming weight of the evidence.” § 48-185, R. S. 1943.

The facts of this case, as supported generally by the evidence, are as follows: The plaintiff was 66 years old at the time of the accident, and was in excellent health, and had not consulted a doctor for years. He began working for the defendant, Gooch Feed Mill Company, in Lincoln as a laborer on April 7, 1943, and continued until the accident occurred on November 12, 1943. While the plaintiff was at work loading sacks on an automatic elevator, some undisclosed person on one of the other eight floors pulled the [311]*311cable, in response to which the elevator started, the gate falling upon his neck and shoulders, perhaps knocking him momentarily unconscious. His legs were caught between the floor of the elevator and the second floor of the building. In his left leg one of the bones was fractured about six inches above the ankle, and his right leg was crushed between the knee and the hip, but the femur was not fractured. He was taken home by foreman Graham, who telephoned to Dr. Carveth who handled the company business, and had him taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital, and X-rays were taken, and the fracture properly reduced, and the left leg placed in a cast. Plaintiff’s wife had been at Arcadia, taking care of her sick daughter, and did not return to Lincoln until after he was brought back from the hospital.

An elderly retired graduate nurse, Miss Madge Cadman, who had for ten years been head of the General Hospital at McCook, lived in the same apartment house and assisted in caring for the plaintiff. She testified that the right leg had turned purple and blue when they first brought him from the mill, and that he could not move the toes on the right foot, and that he complained of pain in his back and shoulders but, more of pain in his right leg.

This nurse testified that she examined this right leg from time to time after he returned from the hospital, and that a sac developed and hung down, and had about a quart of fluid in it before it was drained the first time, and that it was drained about three times after he started to work, and there was a lot of pain in that leg.

Dr. Carveth testified that a large hematoma developed on the posterior lateral side of his right thigh, and on December 31, 1944, Dr. Carveth tapped this hematoma and drained out about a quart of light-colored fluid, which he testified was almost orange in color, with a red tinge, and that this serous fluid was not as thick as pus. He said this cavity had a tendency to refill, and they had to drain it off. The plaintiff testified that it was drained off many times, and that a gal1 on of fluid was removed altogether.

[312]*312The plaintiff was told by the company doctor that he could go back to work at the mill on March 6, 1944, but he was only able to. work about two weeks at that time, when he had to return home, and again went back to work a week later, and worked a few days more. He tried a third time to work, but fainted away while at work and was taken home, and never went back to the Gooch Feed Mill to work.

The plaintiff’s wife testified that after her husband went back to work on March 6 they drained off more fluid from time to time. He would work a few days and then lay off a few days. The first two spells he had violent headaches. The third spell he fainted at the mill, had a violent chill and a high temperature. She called Dr. Carveth, and he said, “That sounds like flu.” She said to him, “ ‘Doctor, that is not flu, it is the result of accident, I wish you would come and see him. We need a doctor badly.’ He says, ‘No, I can’t come, I am sure it is not connected with the accident.’ ” The witness testified that she could see no improvement in his condition, that his legs have bothered him ever since, also his back and shoulders; he is restless at night, “moans and twitches and turns”; he never had headache spells or inability to sleep nights before the accident.

After he quit work, Miss Madge Cadman, the nurse, telephoned Dr. Carveth a couple of times to come out and look at him, and she testified: “Mrs. Elliott called him and I thought I would try so I called him and then I called him a second time and asked if he couldn’t come in the evening just a few minutes and maybe he might help him. And he said, T don’t think this pertains to' his accident at all and I just couldn’t come and I wish Mrs. Elliott would call the family physician’. And I said, ‘He lives at Loup City, it would be impossible to get him’. And Dr. Carveth says, “Well, I couldn’t come.’ ”

He finally quit work early in May, and later in the same month went to Arcadia, where his daughter lived. He suffered from shortness of breath, chills, attacks of dizziness, headaches, nausea, bodily aches, and general weakness.

[313]*313In May and June plaintiff was taken to Dr. Carl G. Amick at Loup City three or four times for examination. He took no X-rays. He said plaintiff had perfect alignment of his. broken bone. His blood pressure was around 135 systolic and 90 diastolic. He found some condition of hardening of the arteries.

Dr. Amick further testified: “It is a well known fact that following trauma, especially severe trauma, such as occurs in the type of accident that this man had, that there, is considerable shock to the nervous system. The older an individual is, the more suseeptable his nervous system is. to such shock. I do not question but that a fall down an elevator shaft resulting in a broken leg and other severe injuries would cause enough shock to this man’s nervous system to produce all symptoms of which he complained.”

Dr. V. S. Barkey testified for plaintiff in the district court that the X-rays showed some enlargement of the. heart, but no organic difficulty; that the heart is of the athletic type, common in men of his age who have worked hard all their lives; that the heart condition would not incapacitate him from labor; that he does not have hypertension for a man of his age. He testified that the serious accident, with a fractured bone, body bruises and fright, would cause him to have a general break in his health. He testified that, where you have a ruptured blood vessel where the serous, fluid drains out, it causes pain, and then probably a new circulation is established through collateral blood vessels.

Plaintiff returned to Lincoln for the trial in the compensation court, which was held September 15, 1944, and thereafter started working for Gold & Co., where he cut. up meat for hamburger and sausage and filled egg cases from eggs in bulk.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.W.2d 262, 147 Neb. 309, 1946 Neb. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-gooch-feed-mill-co-neb-1946.