Hamilton v. Keller

229 N.E.2d 63, 11 Ohio App. 2d 121, 40 Ohio Op. 2d 289, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 420
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 9, 1967
Docket1339
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 229 N.E.2d 63 (Hamilton v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Keller, 229 N.E.2d 63, 11 Ohio App. 2d 121, 40 Ohio Op. 2d 289, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 420 (Ohio Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*123 GubbNsbt, P. J.

This is an appeal by the Administrator of the Bureau of Workmen’s Compensation from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Allen County determining that the plaintiff, appellee herein, is entitled as the widow of one Charles Hamilton to participate in the State Insurance Fund, which judgment was entered by that court on her appeal tried to the court (a jury having been waived) from a decision of the administrator denying reconsideration of his disallowance of her claim.

It is undisputed that plaintiff’s decedent was at the time of his death 49 years of age and employed by defendant Hanco Oil Company, an appellee herein, as a manager of one of its filling stations; that his duties, in addition to the usual duties of servicing customers’ cars and cleaning and maintenance about the station, included the duty of removing snow from the station premises at such times as it fell and accumulated; that on December 27, 1961, he reported for work at approximately 5:30 to 6:30 a. m. and was observed thereafter shoveling snow intermittently throughout the morning while not engaged in the servicing of customers’ automobiles; that according to the records of the State Climatologist the temperature rose from fifteen to thirty-five degrees Fahrenheit on December 27, and some witnesses estimated the temperature to be approximately 17 or 18 degrees during the period of time Mr. Hamilton was shoveling snow; that according to the same records snow flurries on December 27 built up a prior accumulation of snow of 1.5 inches to an accumulation of 2.5 inches (although some witnesses testified to an accumulation of six or more inches of snow in the vicinity of the station); that, although Mr. Hamilton had never complained to anyone else, including his wife, of any symptoms indicative of heart or circulatory disease or impairment and appeared to be in general good health, he had complained to a fellow employee once or twice within a period of six to eight months before his death “that his chest bothered him”; that according to the same employee, at about noon “He [Hamilton] said his chest was bothering him, and he went in and he stepped into the back room,” “He was leaning up against the cash register, and he was holding his chest,” “He was broke out in a sweat, and then I went out to the drive to take care of another car,” “and when I came back in, he had fallen or he fell after I arrived back in the station, I don’t remember which”; *124 that thereupon an ambulance was summoned which took Hamilton to a hospital where he was pronounced by hospital attend-ents as being dead on arrival; and that Dr. Noble, the county coroner, who thereafter arrived at the hospital, determined, without dissection, that death was due to ‘ ‘ acute myocardial infarction. ’ ’

As a witness for the plaintiff, Dr. Noble testified, among other things, that acute myocardial infarction “results from the slowing down of the normal blood supply carrying oxygen to a heart muscle and this sudden diminishing blood supply and oxygen carrying power causes damage to the heart muscle itself”; that antecedent causes are usually present in connection with myocardial infarction which “can be several different things,” including overweight, hardening of the arteries “that changes the walls of the blood vessels in the coronary circulation of the heart,” high blood pressure, overactive thyroid, valvular heart disease, and changes in the aorta; that myocardial infarction is the damage or the condition damaging the heart muscle itself; that in his opinion Hamilton’s ‘ ‘ activity in the cold air and the shoveling helped precipitate his myocardial infarction and the eause of death”; that physiologically, in lay terms, “first we assumed that this man had to have some type of change in the coronary arteries due to hardening of the arteries or something that made this an abnormal vessel,” “then you put him in the situation where he is exerting himself, and shoveling snow is not considered light exertion, with the added component of cold air, and it throws too much strain on the heart muscle since this vessel is not carrying enough blood with oxygen to it, to the muscle itself, and at that time it can happen in several different ways, but if the muscle is damaged because of direct lack of oxygen and blood there would be a sudden embarrassment of normal supply to the heart muscle and it results in a myocardial infarction”; that “I am assuming he had damaged coronary circulation of some kind”; that “in my opinion it would be almost impossible” for a man who “has an absolutely healthy, unimpaired and undeteriorated heart and circulatory system to die of an acute myocardial infarction at such a time”; that “I don’t know which of the conditions existed”; and that I am assuming that “he had to have an advanced case of arteriosclerosis of the artery.” (Emphasis added.)

*125 As an expert witness for the plaintiff, Dr. Eusoff testified, among other things, that acute myocardial infarction “is sudden death of a portion of the heart muscle as a result of that portion of the heart muscle being deprived of its blood supply, interruption of flow of blood through one of' the coronary arteries which are the arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle”; that “from the facts given me in this hypothetical question it is quite obvious that this man died of a heart attack,” “Furthermore, in this hypothetical question there are indications that he has some symptoms relative to coronary vessel insufficiency or inadequate blood supply to his heart prior to this time, but on the date in question, December 27, 1961, this man was exposed to cold and vigorous exercise, the cold due to the elements and the vigorous exercise concerned with shoveling snow,” “Both these elements have a deleterious effect upon the arteries supplying blood to the heart muscle, ” “ The cold itself will cause blood vessel spasm and the exertion entailed in shoveling snow will further augment or aggravate that spasm to such extent to occlude or narrow one of these arteries sufficiently as to interrupt the flow of blood to the heart muscle thereby relating this acute myocardial infarction and sudden death which occurred in this case, thereby relating his death to the causes in question.” (Emphasis added.)

The first five of the assignments of error of the appellant administrator were argued together in his brief and concern whether the medical testimony presented at the trial is sufficient to sustain the judgment, the administrator claiming that Dr. Noble’s testimony supplied and assumed facts as to which there was no proof (see Gerich v. Republic Steel Corp., 153 Ohio St. 463) and that Dr. Rusoff’s testimony was based on a hypothetical question incorporating generalities and inaccuracies rather than specific facts, for instance, reference to a “cold” day in December, to a “substantial” amount of snow on the ground, and to the decedent’s shoveling snow for approximately “thirty minutes” when he became ill.

On cursory examination there appears to be considerable “bootstrapping” or circular reasoning in Dr. Noble’s testimony, i. e., it seems that he concludes that the cause of death was an acute myocardial infarction because that would probably follow from a pre-existing coronary circulatory insufficiency *126

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 N.E.2d 63, 11 Ohio App. 2d 121, 40 Ohio Op. 2d 289, 1967 Ohio App. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-keller-ohioctapp-1967.