Goodwin v. Sinclair Pipe Line Co.

12 P.2d 842, 136 Kan. 8, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 9, 1932
DocketNo. 30,495
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 842 (Goodwin v. Sinclair Pipe Line Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodwin v. Sinclair Pipe Line Co., 12 P.2d 842, 136 Kan. 8, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 3 (kan 1932).

Opinion

[9]*9The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The proceeding was one by a workman to obtain compensation for personal injury. The commissioner of compensation denied compensation. The district court awax’ded compensation for permanent disability. The employer appeals, and contends there was no substantial evidence to sustain the judgment of the district court, which was for $309.43 accrued compensation, and for $6 per week for 355% weeks, a total of $2,442.86.

The workman was injured on March 28, 1930, and did not work for seven or eight days. No claim for compensation was made for that injury. On the advice of a physician the workman returned to work and worked until July 15, when he was laid off because of a reduction in the employer’s laboring forces. Commencing July 24, claimant worked for a railroad company for three days. In October he did some light work, and from October to the time of the hearing before the commissioner, which occurred on October 29, he did no heavy work.

The claim for compensation was for an injury receivéd on July 11, four days before plaintiff was dischax-ged. The foreman testified he had given instructions to his men always to come to him if they got hurt. The foreman could not say he had given this instruction to the claimant personally, but a witness for the claimant who was working with the claimant testified "that instruction was out up there.” On and after July 11 the foreman was accessible, but claimant said nothing to him about the injury. The claimant said he told some fellow workmen, but he made no complaint to anyone in authority. The claimant made no attempt to get in touch with his foreman until he left the employment of the railroad company. He said he saw the foreman playing golf one evening, but did not interrupt him, and finally wrote a letter to the foreman about the last of July. A demand for compensation was made on August 14.

The injury in March consisted of a broken rib. Claimant testified as follows:

“I had pain in the chest before, when I got hurt on the 24th [March 28], and that pain was there until I got hurt on the 11th of July. The pain would be constant for a long time, and would then come and go; and I had this pain off and on from along in April until now; my chest was discolored — black and blue — when I was hurt the first time.”

Claimant further testified that after the injury in March he [10]*10shirked, at times, in doing his regular work — had to shirk heavy-lifting some. He also testified he had lost about thirty pounds in weight since April, and was restless at night.

The written claim for compensation was filed on September 25. As indicated, the claim was for the injury sustained on July 11 The claim stated the claimant was injured while engaged in lifting a sack of cement, and described the injury as follows:

“Refractured ribs that had been fractured while worldng for the company in the latter part of March. This injury produced intercostal neuritis and lung trouble.”

Claimant testified the injury occurred while he was unloading cement from a box car to a wagon. His first account was that he picked up a sack, and kind of wrenched himself, and “felt like something busted in here” (indicating). He had to let the cement down to the floor, he stood there a few minutes, and then worked the rest of the day — was not able to work, but had to do it. He was hurt in the chest and back.

Claimant’s second account of the accident was that the cement was “kind of jammed in behind,” he pulled it out, “and something caught me in the back there” (indicating). He let the sack down to the floor. He got hurt on the inside a second time, and it “hurt a little worse the last time [July 11] than it did the first time” [March 28],

Claimant’s third account of the accident was that the sack was kind of jammed in, he had to use force to get it out, “sort of jerking it loose,” and “something popped.”

The examiner then tried to find out where the claimant was injured. The examiner had him stand up and indicate, and he pointed to his chest. The examiner asked a physician who was present to describe the region, and the physician said: “Precordial region, over the heart, anterior to the axillary line.” The following then occurred, the examiner asking questions and the claimant responding:

“Q. You felt that popping in your chest — wasn't in your back? A. The popping was in here — strained my back.
“Q. How do you mean — indicate your back? A. Right here (indicates).”

A witness for claimant testified as follows:

“I was working with claimant somewhere along about July 11, at Sycamore, handling cement; three of us were working, taking it out and putting it on a wagon. He and I were working the north end of the car, and switching around had bumped the sacks in further, and hard to get at; I seen him working, and [11]*11all at once he let his sack down; I asked him what was the matter, and he said he hurt his back and chest.”

The claimant testified he was hurt on the 11th of July, just before noon; he continued working that day, and he worked up to the 15th, when he was laid off. He also testified he went to Doctor Morehead on the 12th. This was contrary to his own testimony, to the testimony of Doctor Morehead, and to the testimony of claimant’s wife. Doctor Morehead was not consulted until the latter part of July. Mrs. Goodwin testified her husband went to work on the 12th of July, worked four or five days after he was hurt, and consulted a doctor after he was laid off. Evidently what claimant had in mind was that he consulted a doctor the next day after he was hurt the first time.

Mrs. Goodwin testified her husband was hurt in April [March], and got some better, but he was doctoring all the time, and had been restless since he was hurt in March. She noticed loss of weight and changed physical appearance, and he seemed worse after he was hurt in July. Claimant testified that on July 11 a violent pain struck him “all of a sudden,” that the injury affects him so that if he happens to move just wrong the pain catches him, and that it has weakened his physical strength.

A fellow workman testified for claimant as follows:

“I worked with claimant at Sycamore in July. I did not know anything about him getting hurt. He might have told me, but I did not see him get hurt.”

Another workman testified for claimant as follows:

“I worked with claimant for the Frisco railroad at Neodesha in July, 1930. We were working on the section and he was tamping ties. He worked three days, and quit on the 24th [26th] day of July. He did his work good; he did not complain of any pain that I know of. The next morning after he quit he told me he was not feeling well and had a hurting in his side.”

Claimant consulted Doctor Morehead in the latter part of July, and the only inference derivable from the evidence is that the consultation occurred after claimant quit working for the railroad company on July 26. Doctor Morehead testified he examined claimant and found a lump on the upper part of the chest, in the precordial region just below the nipple — quite a lump, on what he would say was the fifth or sixth rib. There seemed to be a marked callus at that place, large enough to be seen by the eye. The callus was not excessive. He could feel the' callus.

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

Related

Hill v. Etchen Motor Co.
56 P.2d 103 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1936)
Lee v. Lone Star Cement Co.
46 P.2d 864 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 842, 136 Kan. 8, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-sinclair-pipe-line-co-kan-1932.