Hasbrouck v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.

99 N.E.2d 329, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 138, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 411
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 5, 1951
DocketNo. 165320
StatusPublished

This text of 99 N.E.2d 329 (Hasbrouck v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasbrouck v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 99 N.E.2d 329, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 138, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 411 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By WATTERS, J.

The plaintiff, widow of Raymond Hasbrouck, deceased, brings this appeal from the finding of the Industrial Commission disallowing her claim, against the defendant, The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, a self insurer.

The plaintiff claims that her husband, on or about the 24th of August, 1942, while employed as a rubber cement mixer, was unexpectedly overcome by gas or fumes being liberated from a mixing vat containing a solvent consisting of alcohol and benzol, which disabled him in excess of seven days.

Plaintiff further claims that thereafter, in the early part of 1943, her husband was again subjected to extreme heat and fumes of a rayon cement mixer, which again was an unusual occurrence causing him to become wobbly, etc.

Plaintiff’s husband died May 7. 1943, of lobar pneumonia which plaintiff claims was proximately caused by the above [140]*140occurrences. Plaintiff does not claim any aggravation of any preexisting condition.

The Industrial Commission ruled: “That the claim be disallowed for the reason that proof of record does not establish that decedent’s death was the result of an injury received in the course of and arising out of the employment.”

All the necessary steps have been taken to give this court jurisdiction under the law.

The matter was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury.

The plaintiff, over the objection of defense counsel, which objection the referee and this court sustained (page 11 of the record) proffered this answer to a question as to what her husband had told her on or about August 24, 1942, when he picked her up in his car after work. (Answer) “Well he just said he was overcome by these fumes and there was two of the fellows had to take.him over to the fire escape door so he could get his breath.”

That narration if it occurred would seem to fit more into the events later related by other workmen as to the claimed happening of early 1943 rather than the August 24, 1942, alleged occurrence.

This court ruled it out as a self serving declaration and hearsay and not part of the res gestae. The statements of the deceased, Mr. Hasbrouek, to his wife and others were mere self serving narrations of past events.

See 143 Oh St, 421, Schmidt v. Casting Company, at page 423 and 424. The plaintiff had sought to show a statement by the deceased to a watchman, that he fell, as part of the res gestae. The court,held on page 424: “To come within the rule (res gestae) such a statement must be shown to constitute more than a mere self serving narrative of a past event.”

The court also held that the statement must be shown to have been spontaneous and impulsive.

However, even if it should be considered as part of the res gestae under the authority of some Supreme Court opinions, in this court’s opinion it does not prove in any way that the deceased employe suffered an accidental injury under the law.

The same applies to statements made by the deceased to other employes as to this occurrence and the later one claimed to have happened in early 1943. The court has ruled those statements out as not part of the res gestae. (See 143 Oh St 421 discussed above.) However, even if admitted and considered, they do not prove at all an accidental injury under the law. Also the testimony given by the various fellow employe witnesses as to their observations of the deceased, his actions, etc., do not disclose any evidence of an accidental injury under the law.

[141]*141THE LAW APPLICABLE

In 98 Oh St, 34, Industrial Commission v. Roth (1918)

Syllabus (1) “A disease contracted in the natural and ordinary course of employment by a person engaged in a particular calling or occupation, which disease from common experience is known to be a usual and customary incident to such calling or occupation, is an ‘occupational disease’ and not within the contemplation of the Workmens Compensation Act.”

This case was decided of course before §1465-68a GC, etc., were made a part of the Act covering occupational diseases.

Personally I believe the courts often lose sight of the distinction between occupational diseases and the accidental injury part of the Act.

Attention is now called to Syllabus (2) of said Both case as follows:

“The -accidental and unforeseen inhaling by an employe in the course of his employment of a specific volatile poison or gas, resulting in injury or death, is not an ‘occupational disease.’ ”

Roth was painting in extremely cold weather. The paint would not spread, so he was ordered to do something unusual and out of the ordinary. 'He was ordered to heat the paint from time to time to keep it flowing freely so it would spread. In so doing this unusual thing he was overcome by the paint fumes. This the court held was an accidental injury.

Under the present statute, it would no doubt be considered an occupational disease, but then the statute as stated did not cover occupational diseases, so the court probably stretched a point and held it to be accidental injury because he was doing the unusual thing, to-wit, heating the paint. The court held that it was caused wholly by accident and misadventure and not something that a painter would be subjected to in the usual working of his trade. The court stresses too that the employe Roth was not a painter. In other words, Ms usual employment for the employer was not as a painter. (See discussion on page 40).

126 Oh St, 251, Industrial Commission v. Palmer.

Syllabus (1) “Where it is disclosed by the evidence that a workman in the course of his employment was subjected to unusual emissions of carbon monoxide gas upon two specific occasions, and that his disability and death resulted therefrom, an award of compensation under the Workmens Compensation Act will be sustained.” (Emphasis by the court.)

On page 254 the court said in substance that it was the contention of the Industrial Commission that the decedent continuously inhaled carbon monoxide gas over a. long period, [142]*142and that this gradual absorption caused his death, but that that did not constitute an injury.

There the court stressed the unusual emissions of gas on several specific occasions, which made it an accidental injury.

The court also mentioned on page 253 that it was conceded that an injury must be shown because the then occupational disease part of the Workmens Compensation Act did not then include “carbon monoxide” poisoning.

I might mention here also that then and now there was and is no appeal to the courts from a disallowance of an occupational disease claim.

See also 126 Oh St, 645, Industrial Commission v. Helriggle (1933):

“Death from carbon monoxide poisoning compensable— sudden and unusual hazard produced in the coal mine/’

The court said in the short affirming opinion that'the company produced a sudden and unusual hazard in the mine to which the employe was subjected in a peculiar degree. (Emphasis by the court.)

From Nelson v. Industrial Commission, 150 Oh St 1 at page 8:

“Section 35 Article II of the Constitution of Ohio differentiates between injuries and occupational diseases.

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99 N.E.2d 329, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 138, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasbrouck-v-goodyear-tire-rubber-co-ohctcomplsummit-1951.