Hayzlett v. Westvaco Chlorine Products Corp.

25 S.E.2d 759, 125 W. Va. 611, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 37
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1943
Docket9453
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 759 (Hayzlett v. Westvaco Chlorine Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayzlett v. Westvaco Chlorine Products Corp., 25 S.E.2d 759, 125 W. Va. 611, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 37 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Riley, President:

Myrta Clair Hayzlett, administratrix of the estate of R. H. Hayzlett, deceased, instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County her action for the alleged wrongful death of her decedent against Westvaco Chlorine Products Corporation, decedent’s employer. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant and entered judgment thereon. This writ of error is prosecuted to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County reversing the trial court’s judgment.

*612 The declaration, containing four counts, alleges that decedent died on July 14, 1940, while on active duty as an assistant carpenter in the sulphur department of defendant’s plant in South Charleston. The first count alleges that defendant furnished decedent an insecure, unclean, unsafe and unsuitable place in which to work; the second alleges that defendant, knowing decedent was subjected during his employment to exposure to sulphur dioxide gas and poisonous and noxious gases, smoke and fumes, neglected to warn and instruct decedent as to the hazards incident to his employment; the third count alleges that, though under a duty to do so, defendant neglected to supply decedent with good, proper, safe and suitable machinery, tools, and appliances to be used by him in his said employment; and the fourth count alleges that defendant neglected to provide sufficient ventilation in the part of the plant where decedent was required to work.

The trial court, as his remarks to the jury in directing a verdict reflect, entertained the opinion that plaintiff had failed to prove either actionable negligence, or that decedent’s death resulted from his exposure to sulphur dioxide gas or other noxious gases or fumes; and the circuit court, in a written opinion made a part of the record, held that the question of negligence, as presented by the instant record, was properly one for the jury, and that a sufficient causal connection between the inhalation of poisonous gases and decedent’s death had been established if the death certificate, showing the cause of death as due to coronary thrombosis, had been introduced in evidence instead of a stipulation between the patties that such certificate would show that death resulted therefrom, and remanded the case for a new trial in order to permit the introduction of such certificate, citing in support of his action La as v. Lubic, 101 W. Va. 546, 133 S. E. 142; Campbell v. C. & O. R. R. Co., 111 W. Va. 358, 163 S. E. 31; and Code, 16-5-21, the last providing, in substance, that the facts set forth in a properly certified death certificate are prima facie correct.

*613 The record discloses that decedent was employed by defendant at its chemical plant in South Charleston, as an assistant carpenter from December 15, 1939, to the time of his death. From January 1, 1940, according to his work record, he served in defendant’s sulphur department intermittently for a total of thirty-six hours, and during the same period had passed through the sulphur plant seventeen times going to the building in which he worked, which is known as the “Zaremba” building. His work sheet likewise discloses that he worked during that period for quite a number of hours in a building in which chlorine gas was manufactured, but the record does not disclose that he had been subjected to exposure to chlorine gas.

There is evidence that decedent was in good health until two and a half or three months prior to his death, when he began to cough and sneeze, his eyes became irritated, he suffered with sore throat and larnyx, became very thirsty, began to tire easily under exertion, suffered pains in his chest, and loss of appetite, did not sleep well, and his urination was impaired. During the afternoon of July 10, 1940, he was exposed to sulphur dioxide fumes, and was required to leave his place of work in order to get fresh air. Decedent’s wife, Myrta Clair Hayzlett, testified that she laundered his working clothes twice a week for at least two months prior to his death, and on these occasions the clothes had on odor of sulphur. After decedent’s death silver coins, which his wife had given him on the morning of the day he died, had become blackened during the day. It is clearly established by the record that late in the afternoon of July 14, 1940, decedent was engaged in one end of the sulphur building in close proximity to an open window, having the dimensions of eight by eight feet, at the end of the building, and that suddenly he fell backwards and died shortly thereafter. No autopsy was had, and the doctor who attended him during his last few moments of life was not called as a witness. As above noted, the parties stipulated that the death certificate showed decedent’s Cause of death to be coronary thrombosis. Dr. O’Dell, who had known dece *614 dent for approximately twenty .years and had treated him in April, 1940, for a cold, testified that until such treatment he had known decedent to be a man of good health, and that on that occasion, which was his last treatment of decedent, he did not find him afflicted with any heart ailment.

The interior of the sulphur building is variantly described in this record, but it may be said that the building contained two rows of vats placed on stands a short distance from the floor; that there were vents along the roof of the building for the purpose of permitting fumes to escape, and that at times the sulphur would spill on the floor of the plant and catch fire, creating a dangerous situation as to sulphur fumes; and on other occasions workmen would clean the vats, at which times decedent and other workmen were wont to leave the building until the air had cleared.

A controlling question in this case, we think, is whether plaintiff has introduced sufficient proof from which a jury may determine that decedent’s alleged exposure to sulphur dioxide gas and other noxious gas or fumes resulted in his death. If plaintiff is entitled to prevail on this question, she must do so upon the testimony of Dr. George Grisinger, who, in response to a hypothetical question which sought to have the witness testify whether the inhalation of sulphur fumes and chlorine gas had “any direct or indirect etiological relationship to decedent’s death”, answered, “From the facts set forth in the hypothetical question, my answer would be that it was due to prolonged exposure, which is, in a sense, a chronic exposure”. The question addressed to Dr. Grisinger assumed the following facts: That decedent died on July 14, 1940, at the age of forty-eight at defendant’s plant; that he had been employed and worked in defendant’s plant for seven months before he died; that he had good health until two and a half or three months prior to his death, when he began to and did experience the symptoms concerning which Mrs. Hayzlett testified; that on July 10, 1940, he had worked from 12:30 to 4:30 o’clock in the afternoon in *615 the carbon bisulphide plant where there were sulphur fumes; that decedent had to leave his place of work in said plant and get out in the fresh air on several occasions, by reason whereof he spent only about half of his time in the afternoon of that day in the plant.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 759, 125 W. Va. 611, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayzlett-v-westvaco-chlorine-products-corp-wva-1943.