Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Breeden

387 S.W.2d 825, 215 Tenn. 587, 19 McCanless 587, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 636
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 387 S.W.2d 825 (Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Breeden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gluck Brothers, Inc. v. Breeden, 387 S.W.2d 825, 215 Tenn. 587, 19 McCanless 587, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 636 (Tenn. 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. The employee, defendant in error, was found to be totally and permanently disabled as the result of a heart attack, and was awarded benefits accordingly. From the unfavorable holding of the trial judge in the court below, the employer, plaintiff in error has perfected his appeal to this Court.

Two assignments of error are made, viz.:

(1) There is no material evidence to support the judgment of the court; and (2) The petitioner failed to *589 prove the notice required by statute, sucli lack of notice conclusively prejudicing the defendant’s rights.

The facts are that the employee is a totally illiterate man who has worked as a laborer all of his life and has been in the employment of the defendant for approximately twelve years. He worked as a furniture assembler, particularly dressers and chests, and his work required him to lift a ten or twelve pound panel over his head, and to reach over his head with a two or three pound rubber hammer and “knock it down in them holes.”

On Monday, November 11, 1963, while at work, about 1:30 P.M., he suffered severe chest pains, but continued to work for the remainder of the day. The pains continued throughout the night, but he returned to work the following day. The pains continued and the employee, according to his testimony, kept getting weaker and weaker, whereupon at about 4:30 P.M. he sat down in the rest room. “I was sick enough to die, it seemed like my breath was cutting off.”

After work he went to his car and ‘ ‘ a bad spell hit me again,” and he fell into the car where he lay for some time before he was able to drive home. The discomfort continued all night and on Wednesday morning he was taken to Dr. James W. Richardson, who placed him in the hospital and treated him for a heart attack.

The plaintiff’s wife gave essentially the same testimony concerning the pains and illness of her husband. Additionally, she testified that about two and one-half weeks afterwards she contacted the plant nurse and told her that her husband had suffered a heart attack. She also related an incident wherein Jerry Allen, the foreman at Grluck Brothers, came to bring her husband’s last pay *590 check, and she stated that she told him at that time that her husband had suffered a heart attack.

The deposition of Dr. James W. Bichardson the attending physician, was then introduced on behalf of the plaintiff. He testified that the plaintiff had suffered a myocardial infarction, and the onset of the attack was somewhere around the time the plaintiff first had the pains.

“Q. Now, Doctor, you had ascertained the type of employment that Mr. Breeden did, would you tell us whether or not, in your opinion, if you can assume that the things that Mr. Breeden did involved lifting boards weighing approximately 10 pounds over' his head, and then taking a hammer and reaching over his head and hammering the boards, in your professional opinion, would or not that sort of activity aggravate, or initiate, or accelerate a heart attack such as Mr. Breeden had ?
“A. I would say it would probably accelerate it. I’d say at the time the process was going, on in him any kind of physical activity at all would aggravate or accelerate it.
“Under cross-examination by defense counsel:
“Q. Doctor, let’s just get right down to it, from a medical standpoint, in your opinion is there any causal connection between this man’s employment and his myocardial infarction?
“A. Well, let’s put it this way, I don’t think that because he happened to be working for that company made him any more liable to have a heart attack than, say, if he had been working for the Southern Bailway. I just say that at the time he had his attack he was working when the thing started in progress as best as *591 I can determine from the history he stated to me. As he stated, he started having these pains in his arms and chest 2 days prior to the time I saw him — that was on Monday, and they gradually worsened and he worsened, and even after they started on Monday he worked a fnll day, and then he worked another fnll day on Tuesday. It may he that if he had stopped work at dinner time on Monday, they may have gone away, and they might not have come back if he had stayed off for a week or so, I don’t know. All I’m saying is that he was at work and the activity he was performing accelerated or aggravated the progress that began there.” (Emphasis supplied).

The first question raised here is whether the evidence supports the holding that Mr. Breeden’s heart attack arose out of his employment.

In discussing the causal relationship between employment and heart attacks, this Court said in Coleman v. Coker, 204 Tenn. 310, 321 S.W.2d 540 (1959):

“ [We are] committed to the proposition of law that an employee who dies in the course of his employment as a result of a heart attack, although suffering from a previous heart disease, is covered under the Workmen’s Compensation Act even if the result was produced by ordinary exertion and usual strain of the work. (Emphasis supplied).
“* * * if the physical activity and exertion of an employee’s work aggravates a pre-existing heart condition, precipitates the fatal heart attack, and thus hastens his death, such death is the result of accident arising out of and in the course of the employment within the meaning of our Workmen’s Compensation Law. Pat *592 terson Transfer Co. v. Lewis, 195 Tenn. 474, 260 S.W. 2d 182; Heron v. Girdley, 198 Tenn. 110, 277 S.W.2d 402; Cambria Coal Co. v. Ault, 166 Tenn. 567, 64 S.W.2d 18; Lucey Boiler & Mfg. Corp. v. Hicks, 188 Tenn. 700, 222 S.W.2d 19.” 204 Tenn. at 312-313, 321 S.W.2d at 541.

Mr. Justice Swepston, writing for the Court, in Nashville Pure Milk Co. v. Rychen, 204 Tenn. 575, 322 S.W.2d 432 (1958), said:

“Counsel for appellant seems to have pitched his case on the idea that there must have been some unusual occurrence or activity or exertion beyond the scope of the deceased’s ordinary employment activities in order for the death to be compensable. We think this is a misapprehension of our cases. The question is succinctly stated in Patterson Transfer Co. v. Lewis, 195 Tenn. 474, 478, 260 S.W.2d 182, 184, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
387 S.W.2d 825, 215 Tenn. 587, 19 McCanless 587, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gluck-brothers-inc-v-breeden-tenn-1965.