Esmonde v. Lima Locomotive Works, Inc.

1 N.E.2d 633, 51 Ohio App. 454, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 577, 5 Ohio Op. 415, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 372
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1935
DocketNo 650
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 N.E.2d 633 (Esmonde v. Lima Locomotive Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esmonde v. Lima Locomotive Works, Inc., 1 N.E.2d 633, 51 Ohio App. 454, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 577, 5 Ohio Op. 415, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 372 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

This is an error proceeding from the Court of Common Pleas of Allen county, Ohio. In that court J.W. Esmonde was plaintiff, and the present defendant in error, Lima Locomotive Works, Inc., was defendant. The parties, therefore, in the course of this opinion, will be referred to in the relation in which they appeared in the Common Pleas Court.

Plaintiff had filed his claim with the Industrial Commission of Ohio for compensation for an injury claimed to have been sustained in the employ of the Lima Locomotive Works, Inc., a self-insurer. After rehearing the Industrial Commission made a final order denying compensation, whereupon the claimant appealed to the Common Pleas Court. The case was heard in the Common Pleas Court upon a transcript of the evidence submitted to the commission.

The pertinent facts of the case as shown by the transcript are as follows: On December 23, 1931, plaintiff, who had been employed by the defendant Lima Locomotive Works, Inc., at its plant in Lima, Ohio, for a period of nine years, as a blacksmith's helper, was in the course of his employment engaged with one Johnson, a blacksmith employed by the defendant, in making a locomotive arch bar weighing about three hundred *Page 456 and fifty pounds. The piece of steel from which the arch bar was being made was twelve and half feet long, one and three quarters inches thick, and four inches wide. The work was done by heating the bar and sledging it with a twelve pound sledge into four bends over a form embedded in the ground and projecting upward three and a half feet. On both sides of this form were two holes two and a half feet deep to receive the ends of the bar during the various operations on it. To take the bulges out of each bend the crooked bar was laid on a face plate flat on the ground and sledged with a twelve pound sledge.

In detail the work consisted of four distinct operations, one for each of the four bends made in the bar. The first two bends were made near the middle of the bar, so that when placed on the form after the second bend the two ends extended into holes on each side of the frame. Bends three and four were near the ends, turning them back parallel with the original direction of the bar.

At the beginning of the work and before the first bend the straight bar was heated to a white heat and carried by Johnson and plaintiff to the form and bent down by hand and with a fork. Then, while Johnson held the flatter, plaintiff sledged the bar to the form by striking it three or four blows with the sledge. Johnson and plaintiff lifted the bar with the one bend in it from the form to the face plate, and plaintiff with seven or eight blows of the sledge as hard as he could strike straightened out the bulges at the angle of the bend.

As a second operation Johnson and plaintiff then carried the bar to the fire, where it was reheated and then carried back by the two men and placed on the form for the second bend, with one end extending down into a hole at the time. By hand and with the fork the other end was bent down into the other hole, and with four sledge blows plaintiff sledged it to the *Page 457 form. Both ends being down two and a half feet in the holes at the side of the form it was necessary for Johnson at one end and plaintiff at the other to stoop down to the level of their knees and lift the three hundred and fifty pound bar (shaped roughly like an inverted U) two and a half feet upward to clear the top of the ground, and then drop it on the face plate. This was a difficult, straining lift, and was the heaviest work required in the making of the bar. It was while plaintiff was so lifting that he felt a sharp pain in his left side. Plaintiff again sledged the bulges out of the hot bar by striking them seven or eight blows as before, and while doing so he felt uncomfortable. He then walked outside of the shop and urinated, passing bloody urine. He came back holding his side, but made no complaint because he did not know he had been injured.

In the third operation in the making of the bar, as soon as plaintiff returned he and Johnson again lifted the crooked bar to the fire with the assistance of a fellow-employee named Hoak, who was called in to assist because of the bar's awkward shape. It was reheated and returned to the form with Hoak's assistance. The plaintiff again helped bend the bar and then struck it four blows with the sledge. He then helped Johnson lift it from the form to the face plate, where he again sledged it with seven or eight blows. This was the third bend.

In the fourth operation the bar was carried to the fire, heated and returned to the form, where it was bent into shape. Plaintiff again sledged it. Then it was lifted to the face plate and the plaintiff sledged it again.

At the time of the injury plaintiff was twenty-eight years of age, weighed one hundred and fifty-five pounds, and was strong and husky. During his employment covering a period of nine years as a blacksmith's helper he had been laid off part of each year, *Page 458 making in all about seven years work. He had never left his work, and had never remained at home from his work except once, on account of quinzy, at which time he had his throat lanced, and he had never complained of bad health. He had never had any heart trouble or rheumatism, although he had doctored a little for gas on the stomach. Before the time of his injury he had never experienced the pain he felt on that day.

The next day after the injury the plaintiff began doctoring for his heart. Doctor Mumaugh examined his side on that date and said, "I am afraid you have done yourself." On December 26th he consulted Doctor Chenoweth, who was leaving for several weeks, and the doctor gave him digitalis, because a heart diagnosis indicated heart murmur and dilation. During the absence of Dr. Chenoweth the plaintiff continued to consult Dr. Mumaugh. Upon Dr. Chenoweth's return on January 15th following, he examined plaintiff again and for the first time plaintiff learned that he had heart trouble. Dr. Chenoweth treated plaintiff from January 15th on, through February into March, for heart trouble. Dr. Chenoweth's more deliberate examination and diagnosis, and his statement of plaintiff's condition, based on his entire treatment of plaintiff from the first to the last, showed that plaintiff had a sense of impending danger; a tense expression of face; paleness; a rapid heart; sweating brows; apprehension; heart murmur; heart dilatation; and a permanent impairment of the heart.

Dr. Chenoweth testified that plaintiff is permanently incapacitated and cannot do any work or engage in sudden exercise. He further testified that "Over-exercise would be the cause of this present condition, and although an infected throat could have caused the heart murmur it could not have caused the dilation." Dr. Tussing also examined plaintiff once, on October 24th *Page 459 following the injury, and found that plaintiff had a defective heart.

Plaintiff has not worked since the date of the injury on December 23rd, except three days of light work at the locomotive works, when he ran a steam hammer. Whenever he attempts to do muscular work the pains return and he complains of being ill. His weight now is 145 pounds.

A hypothetical question predicated upon the evidence offered by the plaintiff was submitted to Dr. Chenoweth and to Dr. Tussing. Dr.

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Related

Johnson v. Industrial Commission
22 N.E.2d 921 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1939)
Conrad v. Industrial Commission
16 N.E.2d 780 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1938)
Industrial Commission v. Luger
6 N.E.2d 573 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.E.2d 633, 51 Ohio App. 454, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 577, 5 Ohio Op. 415, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esmonde-v-lima-locomotive-works-inc-ohioctapp-1935.