Eschbach v. Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases. Eschbach v. Brown

181 F.2d 860, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 11, 1950
Docket10033, 10034
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 860 (Eschbach v. Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases. Eschbach v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eschbach v. Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases. Eschbach v. Brown, 181 F.2d 860, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775 (7th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

SWAIM, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court enjoining the defendant, the Deputy Commissioner, from enforcing his order rejecting plaintiff’s claim for compensation under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.A. § 901 et seq., as extended by the Defense Base Compensation Act of 1941, as amended, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1651 et seq. The claimant’s employer was Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases and its insurance carrier was Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. In the first hearing before the Deputy Commissioner the employer and its insurance carrier contended that: (1) The claimant did not give notice of the injury within thirty days, as required by the Act, 33 U.S.C.A. § 912. (2) The claimant did not file his claim for the injury within the one year period allowed by the Act. 33 U.S.C.A. § 913. (3) The claimant failed to show that his injury, tuberculosis, re- *862 suited from or was caused by his employment.

The Deputy Commissioner found against the plaintiff on each of these issues and entered an order denying plaintiff compensation. The plaintiff then filed an action in the District Court to enjoin the Deputy Commissioner from carrying said order into effect and asking that the court set aside said order and require the Deputy" Commissioner to “enter an order awarding compensation to the plaintiff pursuant to the provisions and in the manner and. amount set forth” in the Act.

The District Court in its decree found and held that the Deputy Commissioner’s findings as to giving of notice and as to the time for filing a claim were erroneous as a matter of law, and' that since the Deputy Commissioner, “erroneously concluded, as-a matter of law that he had no jurisdiction to hear the claim, his remaining findings of fact (that there was no causal connection between the employment and the injury) constitute mere surplus-age.” The court, therefore, enjoined the Deputy Commissioner from enforcing plaintiff’s claim, and remanded the cause to the Deputy Commissioner with directions to make conclusions of law in accordance with the court’s memorandum, and to conduct a full hearing as to the fact of a causal connection between claimant’s disease and his employment.

The plaintiff, Eschbach, was employed by the Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases, from September 5, 1942, until January 3, 1943, on which latter date- it was discovered that he had advanced tuberculosis. At that time he gave no notice to the Deputy Commissioner, nor to his employer, that his then condition was related to his employment, or that he claimed any such relation. The plaintiff gave no notice of any such claimed causal connection until four years later and filed no claim for compensation until January 12, 1948, more than five years after he discovered his condition. The employer and the insurance carrier contested the claim for compensation. A hearing was held thereon before the Deputy Commissioner and upon the evidence adduced at that hearing the Deputy Commissioner found that claimant’s employment was covered by the Act; that on January 3, 1943, while under the care of a private physician for an anal fistula he was found to be suffering from advanced pulmonary tuberculosis, which condition constituted the basis of his asserted claim; that no notice was given to the employer by or on behalf of the claimant within thirty days; that the employer had knowledge that the employee was suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis .within thirty days, but that it had no knowledge or intimation that the disease arose out of the employment, or - was thought to have done so until more than four years thereafter; that in the absence of such knowledge the employer was not required to establish prejudice from want of notice; and that the defense of want of notice was raised at the first hearing on said claim at which all parties were represented.

The Deputy Commissioner further found that the claimant was totally disabled by said tuberculosis from January 3, 1943, to the time of the hearing; that no compensation was ever paid to him; that no claim for compensation was- filed until January 12, 1948; that the time for filing said claim, was not extended under the terms of § 30 of said Act, and that the defense that the claim was barred because it was not timely filed was raised by the employer and its. insurance carrier at the first hearing on the claim, at which all parties were represented.

The Deputy Commissioner, as his final finding, found that claimant’s illness neither arose out of, resulted from, nor was aggravated by, his employment.

In the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner, the following facts were related by Carl Eschbach, the claimant. Prior to his employment by the Contractors, Pacific Naval Air Bases, he had lived in Brunswick, Missouri; where, for ten years prior to this employment, he had been engaged in doing odd jobs of painting and carpentering work. At Kansas City, Missouri, he entered into a contract of employment with the Contractors, which was reduced to writing at Alameda, California, on Sep *863 tember S, 1942. Eschbach was examined by a Dr. Poorman in Kansas City, who found no symptoms of tuberculosis but made no X-ray examination of his lungs. Claimant testified he had never had any suspicion that he might have lung trouble. While making the crossing to Hawaii, claimant was first bothered with an anal fistula. He consulted the ship’s doctor when they were five or six days out of San Francisco, but there were no facilities aboard ship for treating the fistula. Upon arrival in Honolulu, he immediately went to see a Dr. Reichert, who lanced the fistula, asked him if he had ever had tuberculosis, and advised him that anal fistulas sometimes occur with tuberculosis. Dr. Reichert made this suggestion to Eschbach concerning the possible association of the fistula with a tubercular condition before he commenced working.

Eschbach was given another physical examination after arriving in Plonolulu and was sent to Barber’s Point, about twenty miles from Plonolulu, where he worked from September, 1942, until January, 1943, laying concrete forms. Claimant testified that he went back to Dr. Reichert several times, and Dr. Reichert told him that he did not want to operate and indicated that the fistula would heal itself if there was no tuberculosis present. In the early part of January, 1943, claimant insisted on an operation and told Reichert that during the last month he had started losing his appetite and having night sweats, which he thought was from tropical fever.

The morning he was to be operated, January 3, 1943, he was running a temperature and on that account chest X-rays were taken. He was then informed that he had tuberculosis. Claimant’s employer had nothing to do with procuring a doctor or with his treatment up tO' that time. After he had been in St. Francis Hospital about ten days, claimant went out to Barber’s Point to see about returning to work. Coughlin, the personnel man of' his employer, then arranged to have him transferred to Leahi Hospital, where his treatment would be free, and thereafter, the hospital bill at St. Francis was paid by the Contractors. They also arranged for and did pay his transportation costs back to the States, and from the port of debarkation to Kansas City. A few days after his arrival in Kansas City, Eschbach entered the Veterans’ Hospital at Excelsior Springs, Missouri, where he learned that he then had a “far advanced case” of tuberculosis.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wayne Lindahl v. Office of Personnel Management
776 F.2d 276 (Federal Circuit, 1985)
Nardi v. Willard
156 F. Supp. 425 (S.D. New York, 1957)
Furlong v. O'Hearne
144 F. Supp. 266 (D. Maryland, 1956)
Mullowney v. Hobby
134 F. Supp. 419 (D. Nebraska, 1955)
Richardson v. Cardillo
99 F. Supp. 437 (S.D. New York, 1951)
Pollock-Stockton Shipbuilding Co. v. Brown
185 F.2d 37 (Seventh Circuit, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 F.2d 860, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eschbach-v-contractors-pacific-naval-air-bases-eschbach-v-brown-ca7-1950.