Harrison v. Conrad, Unpublished Decision (1-22-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1999
DocketC.A. CASE NO. 16976, T.C. CASE NO. 96-3928
StatusUnpublished

This text of Harrison v. Conrad, Unpublished Decision (1-22-1999) (Harrison v. Conrad, Unpublished Decision (1-22-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Harrison v. Conrad, Unpublished Decision (1-22-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Plaintiff, Gladys Harrison, appeals from a summary judgment granted to defendant, Amcast Industrial Corporation, on Harrison's claim for Workers' Compensation death benefits. For the reasons that follow, the judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.

Gladys Harrison is the widow of Matthew Harrison. Mr. Harrison was an employee of a predecessor of Amcast from approximately 1947 until his retirement in 1978. In 1991, Mr. Harrison passed away due to respiratory failure as a result of cancer of the lung.

Mrs. Harrison filed a claim for death benefits with the Bureau of Workers' Compensation, alleging that her husband's lung cancer and subsequent death resulted from his exposure to certain materials while working at Amcast's foundry. Mrs. Harrison's claim was denied administratively by the Industrial Commission of Ohio on the ground that Mrs. Harrison failed to establish that her husband's death was the result of an injury or occupational disease sustained in the course of and arising out of his employment.

Mrs. Harrison then filed an appeal of the Industrial Commission's decision in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, pursuant to R.C. 4123.512. Mrs. Harrison voluntarily dismissed that action and then subsequently refiled the present action. In her action, Mrs. Harrison sought a determination from the trial court that she was entitled to participate in the Workers' Compensation fund as a result of her husband's death.

Amcast filed a motion for summary judgment in which it asserted that Mrs. Harrison could submit no evidence to establish that her husband's lung cancer was causally related to his employment with Amcast. In support of its motion for summary judgment, Amcast filed the deposition of Dr. Scott Shaw, who was one of Mr. Harrison's treating physicians. Dr. Shaw had been listed by the plaintiff as one of the experts she would call at trial. Dr. Shaw testified that Mr. Harrison was a "heavy smoker" with a 50 to 60 pack/year history of smoking, which equated to smoking one pack of cigarettes per day for a period of fifty years. Deposition of Scott D. Shaw, M.D., Sept. 8, 1997, at p. 11. Dr. Shaw also testified that Mr. Harrison's "major risk factor for developing lung carcinoma was his heavy use of cigarettes." Id., at 13. Concerning the connection between Mr. Harrison's employment and his lung cancer, Dr Shaw testified as follows:

Q. * * * Do you have an opinion as to whether his employment had any causal link to his development of cancer?

A. Yes.

Q. What is that opinion?

A. My opinion is that there are certain environmental and industrial pollutants which can be co-carcinogens in the development of lung cancer. So exposure to any of those industrial or environmental pollutants in combination with cigarette usage would be potentially carcinogenic.

Q. But in this case, based upon your history of a long relationship with Mr. Harrison, at least your office's long relationship, do they have any evidence or do you have any evidence that would suggest that he was exposed to those types of pollutants and that they were a contributing factor or a cause of his lung cancer while working with Dayton Malleable?

A. I have no clear history of what exactly he was exposed to. There are certain things that have been determined as being co-carcinogens, but I'm not sure exactly whether he was exposed to any one of those in particular.

Q. So in none of the medical records that you have or your office has retained do they note that he ever mentioned or that any information was ever collected that he was exposed to any of those co-carcinogens?

A. Right. That's correct.
Q. So you don't have any such evidence?
A. That's true.

Id., at 14-15.

Dr. Shaw gave similar testimony in another part of his deposition:

Q. * * * Even up to the date of this deposition, do you have any evidence that there was any other causative factor involved in this man's development of lung cancer?

A. As of this date, the information that I have suggests that his major risk factor was cigarette usage. He has a history of working in a job which could potentially have exposed him to substances of which I am not aware and that may have played some role in terms of adding to the risk for development of carcinoma, but as I said, I'm not aware of those specific substances and would feel again that his chief cause for the development of lung cancer was his smoking.

Id., at 25.

Upon further examination, Dr. Shaw stated that the reason he could not give an opinion as to whether there was another cause of Mr. Harrison's cancer was not because there aren't other causes, but because he did not know what materials Mr. Harrison was exposed to on the job. Id., at 27. Dr. Shaw further testified that the other types of pollutants or carcinogens that could have caused Mr. Harrison's lung cancer were asbestos, nickel, and radon. Id. He stated, however, that he had not been provided any information from Mrs. Harrison's attorneys regarding any exposures by Mr. Harrison to these substances, and that he had not been provided any information about what Mr. Harrison may have been exposed to while working at Amcast's predecessor. Id., at 29.

Pursuant to Civ.R. 56(F), Mrs. Harrison sought additional time to respond to Amcast's motion for summary judgment. In support thereof, she stated that the issue that was central to the determination of the motion for summary judgment was what materials Mr. Harrison was exposed to while working at the defendant's steel foundry. Mrs. Harrison stated that the facts that were necessary to determine that issue were completely within the knowledge of Amcast. Accordingly, Mrs. Harrison sought additional time to complete her discovery of Amcast on that issue.

In the alternative, Mrs. Harrison argued that the motion for summary judgment should be denied because genuine issues of material fact remained concerning the cause of Mr. Harrison's lung cancer. She first argued that Dr. Shaw did not state that Mr. Harrison's lung cancer was not causally related to his employment, but only that he was unable to make a determination of cause without further information. She then argued that she could present expert medical evidence that her husband's cancer was causally related to his employment. In support of that contention, she offered the affidavit of another of her experts, Dr. Donald Marger. Dr. Marger stated in his affidavit in pertinent part:

Mr. Harrison had a significant smoking history, as well as a history of long-term exposure to ambient pollutants in a steel-foundry environment.

Certainly, the causation of cancer is typically multi-factorial. That is, the development of cancer is probably genetically based with causative environmental factors superimposed.

While smoking is typically the most prominent of these additional, environmental factors; nevertheless, it has also been documented that among other factors, exposure to coal tars and coke-oven emissions is also implicated. Environmental carcinogens such as are present in a typical steel-foundry operation could interact with smoking to increase the risk of developing lung cancer. It is my opinion, based on reasonable medical probability, that this was the case with Mr. Harrison, especially in view of his long-term exposure to the steel-foundry pollutants over a period of many years.

The trial court granted Mrs. Harrison's Civ.R. 56(F) motion for additional time to respond to Amcast's motion for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
Harrison v. Conrad, Unpublished Decision (1-22-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-conrad-unpublished-decision-1-22-1999-ohioctapp-1999.