Fair Stores v. Bryant

118 So. 2d 295, 238 Miss. 434, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 424
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1960
DocketNo. 41391
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 118 So. 2d 295 (Fair Stores v. Bryant) 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
Fair Stores v. Bryant, 118 So. 2d 295, 238 Miss. 434, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 424 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

The Fair Stores, a partnership composed of Joe Engel and George Mitnick, of Jasper, Alabama, employer, and its insurance carrier, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, have appealed from a judgment of the Circuit [437]*437Court of Clay County affirming an order of the Mississippi Workmen’s Compensation awarding compensation benefits to Mrs. T. A. (Martha W.) Bryant for temporary total disability resulting from an accidental injury suffered by the claimant on October 7, 1957, while engaged in the performance of her duties as an employee of the partnership.

The record shows that, on October 14, 1952, the claimant sustained a back injury in the lumbosacral area, while engaged in the performance of her duties as an employee of the Fair Store in the City of West Point. She was examined and treated for the injury by Dr. John R. Mullens, Jr., and during the next succeeding several months by other physicians and surgeons. She was not totally disabled as a result of the injury, but continued to suffer disabling pains; and underwent surgery for a herniated disc. Dr. Charles L. Neill performed the operation and removed the herniated disc sometime during the month of July 1953; and the claimant returned to work on the 9th day of September 1953. Compensation benefits and medical expenses were voluntarily paid by the employer during the period of time lost from work, as evidenced by Commission Form B-31 executed by the claimant on October 26, 1953, and filed with the Commission on December 1, 1953. No payments of disability benefits were made to the claimant after the last mentioned dated.

On April 19, 1958, notice of another injury and claim for compensation benefits was filed by the claimant with the Commission. In that notice the claimant stated that she had suffered a second injury on October 7, 1957, while engaged in the performance of her duties as an employee of the Fair Store at West Point; that she had stumbled over a footstool while at work in the Fair Store at West Point, and had “either aggravated her original injury or suffered a new injury to her back,” as a result of which she was suffering pain and loss of wages and A^as in need of medical attention and hospitalization. The [438]*438case was listed as a controverted matter and was set for hearing on May 14, 1958.

The claimant testified during the hearing before the attorney-referee that she reinjured her back on October 7, 1957, when she tripped and fell over a footstool in the shoe department of the store while she was helping to unpack and store in their proper places packages of merchandise which had been unloaded at the rear end of the store building. She had a box of merchandise in her arms and did not see the footstool until she had stumbled over it. She uttered an outcry when she fell over the stool. Two other employees who were helping to unload the merchandise heard her outcry and came to the place where she had fallen. She told them that she had hurt her back, and she called Dr. John R. Mullens, Jr., on the phone and told him about her pain and asked that he give her something to relieve her pain. A few days later the pain became so severe that she called Dr. Mullens and requested him to come to her home. She was in bed at that time. He gave her a shot to relieve the pain and told her to get back on the hip traction which she had used at the time of her 1952 injury. She stated that she continued to work at the store until the store was closed on January 8, 1958, but she had been under treatment of a doctor since October. Finally, Dr. Mullens sent her to Jackson for examination and treatment by Dr. Neill. The claimant stated that she had been totally disabled since she quit work at the Fair Store in January.

Two other witnesses, Mrs. Mary Winter and Mrs. Frances June Drummond, who were working in the Fair Store at the time the accident occurred corroborated the claimant’s statement concerning her fall over the footstool. Dr. John R. Mullens, Jr., who treated the claimant after her injury in 1952, testified that the claimant called him over the telephone in October 1957 about her injury. She told him that she had fallen and had injured her back. He examined and treated her for the injury. [439]*439He found that she was suffering from a sciatic nerve type of pain, spasm of the muscles in the hack, and pain radiating down in the leg, and he prescribed medication and traction. Dr. Mullens stated that in his opinion the injury of October 7, 1957, definitely aggravated the claimant’s previous condition, and at the time of the hearing he was of the opinion that she would have at least 50 per cent total disability.

A letter written by Dr. Charles L. Neill, Neuro-surgeon of Jackson, dated April 14, 1958, and addressed to the Claims Manager of the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, the insurance carrier, was also offered in evidence. In that letter Dr. Neill stated that the patient had been hospitalized and examined with spine x-rays and myelogram in February 1958; that there was no evidence of a recurrence of her herniated disc, nor was there any evidence of nerve root pathology. Dr. Neill made a detailed statement of the pathological findings as a result of his examination and treatment of the claimant, and then stated that he had advised the claimant “to go home, stay on a hard-surfaced bed and wear a brace”, that she had done this and was not any better but not any worse. In that letter Dr. Neill referred specifically to the reports which he had forwarded to the claims manager on February 12 and March 15, 1958, for additional information concerning the claimant’s condition during the months of February and March. Dr. Neill also stated, “I hope that this is clear as I did not make it clear in my previous reports that she did have an on-the-job, new injury”' — referring to the accident of October 7,1957. Dr. Neill’s letter dated April 14, 1958, contained a full report of the claimant’s condition at the time he examined her on April 11.

The only substantial testimony offered on behalf of the appellants to discredit the appellee’s claim that she had received a second injury on October 7, 1957, was the testimony of a court reporter who identified the tran[440]*440script of a statement of the claimant taken by W. E. McKinley, an agent of the insurance carrier, on February 21, 1958, while the claimant was in the hospital at Jackson. During the interview the claimant was questioned at length about the injury which she received in October 1952 and the treatment which she had undergone for that injury, and also any other injuries which she might have received, including a minor injury resulting from an automobile accident in Alabama during the month of May 1957. She was asked whether she had reinjured her back since October 1952, and her answer was, “No, not to my knowledge.” She was then asked when her back began to bother her this time. Her answer was, “Oh, it’s been way over a year,, I guess.” The claimant was then asked, “Did your back just get gradually worse?”. Her answer was, “Yes, when I first had the operation I felt much better. I got up and could get about and it didn’t hurt too much. A couple of years after that, it got to hurting. Now, I can’t sleep on my back. Of course I’ve got medicine in me now.”

At the conclusion of the hearing the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 So. 2d 295, 238 Miss. 434, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fair-stores-v-bryant-miss-1960.