Guy F. Atkinson Co. v. Webber

131 P.2d 421, 15 Wash. 2d 579
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1942
DocketNo. 28755.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 421 (Guy F. Atkinson Co. v. Webber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guy F. Atkinson Co. v. Webber, 131 P.2d 421, 15 Wash. 2d 579 (Wash. 1942).

Opinions

1 Reported in 131 P.2d 421. Robert Webber, husband of Hazel Webber, died as the result of a coronary thrombosis October 11, 1940, while working for Guy F. Atkinson Company, a corporation. He was forty-two years of age, and was working for the company as a caterpillar tractor (or "bulldozer") driver on the construction known as the Mud Mountain dam. He was on the night shift from twelve midnight to eight a.m. He went to work at midnight, October 10th, and about seven-thirty o'clock on the morning of October 11th, a fellow employee observed him lying on the ground near his tractor, evidently suffering severely. He was assisted to a nearby automobile and taken to the employer's camp hospital, where he died in a few minutes.

December 16, 1940, Hazel Webber, the workman's widow, filed with the department her claim for a pension, and in due time the supervisor allowed the claim, charging against the employer's cost experience the amount of four thousand five hundred dollars. From this award, the company appealed to the joint board, which, October 27, 1941, sustained the order of the supervisor. From this order the company appealed *Page 581 to the superior court, where the action was tried, with the result that findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment were entered reversing the order of the joint board, from which judgment the department of labor and industries and Hazel Webber, the widow of the deceased workman, have prosecuted separate appeals to this court.

The department assigns error upon the entry of one finding of fact and several conclusions of law; upon the allowance to respondent (the employer) of an amount as attorney's fee, to be paid out of the administrative fund of the department; and upon the allowance of certain witness fees to respondent.

Appellant Hazel Webber on this appeal finds herself in a rather peculiar position. The department allowed her claim, which is, of course, the matter of primary concern to her. Whether or not the department charges to respondent a certain sum by way of cost experience is to appellant Hazel Webber immaterial. In her brief, Mrs. Webber states that she does not understand that the superior court intended its judgment to go farther than to reverse the decision of the joint board charging a certain amount as cost experience to respondent. The judgment which the superior court entered reversed without qualification

". . . the orders of the supervisor of industrial insurance and of the joint board sustaining the same in connection with the death of Robert Webber, and finding his death to have been the result of an industrial injury,"

while in the employ of respondent. The superior court remanded the cause to the department for the purpose of complying with the court's findings and judgment. By its appeal to the superior court, respondent brought before that court for review the decision of the joint *Page 582 board affirming the supervisor's action upon Mrs. Webber's claim, respondent appealing "from each and every ruling made in connection therewith."

In view of our conclusion upon the merits of the controversy, this matter need not be further noted.

The deceased, Robert Webber, was a thoroughly competent bulldozer operator, and May 7, 1940, entered the employment of MacDonald Building Company, which was placing a fill on the state capitol grounds, at Olympia, preparatory to the erection of the structure now known as the Transportation building. On the date mentioned, Webber's machine, while he was operating the same, was caught in an earth slide and carried about twenty-five feet down an incline. The bulldozer was turned upside down, Webber being caught underneath, none of the weight of the bulldozer, however, resting upon him. He was rescued by fellow workmen and taken in an ambulance to the hospital. While caught under the bulldozer, Webber was in serious danger of suffocation, he having been thrown face downward in loose sand. The doctor who treated Webber made no X-ray examination of his chest or lungs, but advised Webber to remain in the hospital at least overnight. It appears, however, that, notwithstanding this advice, Webber went to his home in Tacoma. At a later date, Webber called at the doctor's office, but the doctor did not see him. The doctor testified that, in the course of his examination of Webber, he observed no heart enlargement or murmurs. His examination of the heart was by stethoscope only, and it appears that bad heart conditions may exist which would not be disclosed by that method of examination.

Dr. W.B. McNerthney, a Tacoma physician of many years' experience, was called to the Webber home either on the night of the accident or the evening of *Page 583 the following day, Webber complaining of soreness of his chest and nervousness, stating that he had been buried in dirt. Another stethoscopic examination of the heart was negative. The doctor ordered the patient to stay in bed to rest, and gave him some medicine for his nervous condition. The next day the doctor found the patient improved, and about ten days later examined Webber at his office, finding no symptoms of heart injury or any other difficulty.

Mrs. Webber testified that, after her husband was injured by the earth slip, he remained home for about a week, and never resumed employment with the MacDonald Building Company; that he complained of pain, sometimes in his chest and sometimes in his stomach. Whether Mr. Webber was employed after the accident referred to and until he entered the employ of respondent, July 27, 1940, is uncertain. He was regularly employed by respondent from the date last mentioned until his death, and worked regularly until the evening of October 9th. On that evening, Webber advised his employer that he would be unable to take his shift that night. Concerning this matter, Mrs. Webber testified that, about one o'clock in the morning of that day, Webber went to the kitchen for a drink of water, and fell face down upon the floor. A doctor was procured three or four hours later, he testifying that in his opinion Webber had suffered a coronary attack, either a spasm or occlusion. The doctor advised Webber not to return to work, and instructed him to consult a physician before attempting to work again. Notwithstanding this, Webber reported for work, and as above stated, died on the morning of October 11th.

Mrs. Webber stated that, during the period he worked for respondent, her husband had often complained of pain in his chest and his stomach, and that, *Page 584 from the time of the accident, while he was working for the MacDonald Company, to his death, sand sometimes appeared in his saliva.

During the night of October 10th-11th, Webber was operating his tractor in keeping dirt in proper quantities in front of a shovel, and in keeping level a dirt road or path which was being used by trucks. It does not appear that the work was particularly heavy, or that management of the very large tractor required any great exertion on Webber's part. Sometimes the tractor would have no particular duty to perform, when Webber would stop by the roadside to await some occasion to start the machine again. The shift would end at eight o'clock a.m., and between seven-fifteen and seven-thirty, Webber was discovered lying on the ground, in great distress, by George Potvin, a fellow employee, the tractor not having been in operation for about fifteen minutes. Webber was in very bad condition, Potvin and another workman summoned to help him anticipating that he might die then and there.

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Guy F. Atkinson Co. v. Webber
131 P.2d 421 (Washington Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 421, 15 Wash. 2d 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guy-f-atkinson-co-v-webber-wash-1942.