Gifford v. Iowa Manufacturing Co.

51 N.W.2d 119, 243 Iowa 145, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 8, 1952
Docket47855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 119 (Gifford v. Iowa Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gifford v. Iowa Manufacturing Co., 51 N.W.2d 119, 243 Iowa 145, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 386 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

The determination of this appeal depends largely upon the facts and they must be set out in considerable detail. The deceased, Clayton Gifford, about forty-two years old, was a welder by trade, but operated a farm near Pleasanton, in Decatur County, Iowa, during the farming season, and worked at his trade in the late autumn and winter. He had been afflicted with diabetes for many years, but took insulin to control it. Sometime prior to March 3, 1947, his physician at Leon, Iowa, Dr. K. R. Brown, sent him to the Department of Internal Medicine, at the University of Iowa, for examination and treatment. On March 3, 1947, Dr. J. D. Gordon of that department sent a *147 report by letter to Dr. Brown of his findings, treatment and recommendations concerning the patient. It confirmed his diabetic condition and stated the dosage of insulin which he should take daily. It stated that the physical examination revealed a well-preserved man who seemed rather slow mentally; the Department of Neurology was of the impression that there was a possibility of neurological disease, but no definite neurological diagnosis was made; that an ulcer on his left big toe had been there for two years and was draining some; and “the neurological examination revealed the absence of the lower deep reflexes at the knee and ankle and definite impairment of pam sensation over the toes and questionably so over the calves of both legs”

On November 7, 1947, the employer had a doctor make a physical examination of Clayton Gifford, and the detailed results thereof are shown on a blank form introduced in evidence. Diabetes is not mentioned but sugar in the urine is noted. One of defendants’ medical experts testified that had he made the physical examination he would have known that the subject was diabetic. There is no contention that the employer did not know it. Gifford began working for the employer-defendant on November 7, 1947, and his last payday was November 30, 1947, at which time his total pay, before deductions, was $153.44. He was one of a number of welders using electric welding equipment. The employees worked in three eight-hour shifts. He and about thirty others worked in the welding department on the second shift from 3:30 p.m. to about midnight. The welding department consisted of a series of booths, each about 12 feet square, the sides of which were of canvas on pipe frames, with one side open. The booths adjoined each other, and each welder had a separate booth. There was an iron table about 2' high; 3' long and 2’ 9” wide in each booth on which the workman performed his welding operations. Other workmen brought in the object or articles to be welded. If they were not at a high temperature when brought in, they became very hot from the welding rods or electrodes used on them. The larger and heavier articles cooled less rapidly than the smaller and lighter ones. The welders wore heavy leather gloves to protect their hands from heat and sparks. When the welding operation on each article *148 was completed the welder placed it on the floor of his booth, and sometimes the booth floor became more or less cluttered before the articles were removed by other workmen. The employer was engaged in making heavy machines and equipment largely of metal, such as stone crushers, asphalt misers and other road-building apparatus. The handling of these heavy metal materials, and the noise of the factory’s operating machinery were so loud and continuous that it was with difficulty that a person could make himself heard.

On. Friday, November 21, Gifford went to work in his booth at about 3:30 p.m. ITe was working alone, as usual. The workers on the shift usually stopped for lunch between seven and seven-thirty o’clock each evening. Another welder, Raymond ''Ronebrabe, worked in the booth just north of Gifford’s booth. He was a witness for the claimant in the hearing before the deputy commissioner. He was asked if it came to his attention that afternoon that something had happened to Mr. Gifford. He answered in the affirmative. He was then asked to state what he . saw or what he heard Mr. Gifford say at the time the accident happened. Defendants objected that the inquiry as to what Mr. Gifford said was “incompetent and calling for hearsay testimony, and no proper foundation laid for its admissibility as res gestae.” It was agreed that the same objection might stand as to all other inquiries to the witness concerning conversations with Mr. Gifford. The witness testified in substance that: before lunch time, about six or seven o’clock, he passed through Gifford’s booth on his way to get some electrodes and Gifford showed him he had burned his right foot, and he asked him how he did it and he told him; he said it had happened a couple of hours earlier; Gifford called his attention to his right shoe; it was discolored and lighter, colored as heat would do; he said he was welding this small heavy piece, and “the piece had so many angles and so much welding, the area was not large enough to carry away the heat, so it stayed hot a long time after he was through, and after he finished welding, [he] brushed it from the table onto the floor and unknowingly when he started the next piece of work he put his right foot against this hot metal, and he did not know he was burned until it was too late, and then he couldn’t get his shoe off quick enough.” *149 The witness said he saw the piece of metal that Mr. Gifford was talking about and that it was flat with upright angles; it was still there'and Gifford showed it to him. He said he saw the shoes which Gifford had on and that they were high work shoes. He said he saw and talked to Gifford everyday afterward, including the last day he worked. He complained that he was not feeling well, as if “he might have the flu or something' like that. He did not elaborate much about the foot.” He said he was in Gifford’s booth about five minutes and that each then went on with his work; that he did not see Gifford when he put his foot against any hot metal; that he did not hear him make any outcry or exclamation, and that it would have to have been a scream or loud outcry to have been heard.

Another witness for claimant at the same hearing was Orville MeShane, a welder working on the same shift with Gif-ford. He said the last time he saw him was the day before or the day after Thanksgiving when he came to get his tools. For about three days before that Gifford would stop at the booth of the witness and say that he was going to the nurse to get his foot dressed. It was at this time that Gifford told the witness that he had burned his foot on a piece of hot iron. The witness also testified that after Gifford’s death he overheard Bonnie Schuler, the personnel manager of the defendant Iowa Manufacturing Company, and an insurance man talking, and “I heard one tell the other they had a statement from Gifford’s doctor at home and the death was caused by the burn on the foot. I couldn’t swear which one of the two men made that statement.”

While Mr. Gifford was in the employment of the defendant company, he, with six or more other roomers, lodged in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Solbrig in C.edar Bapids. He was rooming alone. Mrs. Solbrig was a witness for the claimant at the hearing before the deputy commissioner. She testified that while Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 119, 243 Iowa 145, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gifford-v-iowa-manufacturing-co-iowa-1952.