Herman Neff v. Dravo Corporation

407 F.2d 228
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1969
Docket17247
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 407 F.2d 228 (Herman Neff v. Dravo Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herman Neff v. Dravo Corporation, 407 F.2d 228 (3d Cir. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GANEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal solely from the asserted inadequacy of a verdict and judgment entered thereon in favor of the plaintiff in an admiralty action which was filed for maintenance and cure and given the number of 65-15, combined with a civil action for damages, No. 65-322. In the civil action, under the Jones Act, judgment was entered on a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $25,000.00, and in the admiralty action for $353.21. The district court tried the two actions separately before the same jury, pursuant to Fitzgerald v. United States Lines, 374 U.S. 16, 83 S. Ct. 1646, 10 L.Ed.2d 720. In the admiralty action, the trial judge transferred the consequential damages which followed from failure to pay maintenance and cure to the civil action to be computed along with the damages arising from the injuries on the civil side of the case. A motion for a new trial in the civil action was granted on June 28, 1968, and on October 20, 1968, there was a denial of the appellant’s motion to alter that judgment. Accordingly, there remains only the appellant’s appeal from *230 the verdict which the jury rendered, and the judgment entered thereon in the maintenance and cure action, the civil action for damages being listed for a new trial in the court below.

Herman Neff, the appellant, was sixty-three years of age at the time of trial and had been an employee of Dravo Corporation beginning on August 8, 1947, when he received an injury caused by striking his head on the deck of the ship of the respondent company. He used illness as an explanation of his failure to report for duty from that time on, on various ships, some twenty odd times. His jobs on the various ships of the respondent company were the longest continuous work he had ever done before in his life, some nine years, and before that he had served two terms in the Army and had been, on and off, a migrant worker. He testified that he was in good health when he went to work for the respondent and that his work was almost exclusively in the engine rooms of the various vessels. He testified that the engine rooms contained fumes from the diesel oil, lube oil and also exhaust fumes, which were present at all times when the engine was running and he never recalled a time when there were not fumes in the engine rooms. The fumes had a very strong smell, and could be seen in layers when the sunlight came through the windows. He would feel good when he went back onto the boat on the various times he reported to the respondent company, after time off, but after a couple of days working, the fumes would nauseate him and give him a headache which was the reason, as has been indicated, for his leaving on the number of occasions he did. He went to bed on the night of May 8, 1964, and when he awoke in the morning, he was dizzy and had a headache, as he had been working for three days in a closed compartment painting. On the morning of May 9, 1964, he was compelled to leave the motor vessel, Victory, on which he was employed on the Ohio River, accompanied by another seaman from the vessel, who took him to the respondent’s plant clinic. This was the last time he had been employed by the respondent or any other employer. The clinic sent him to the Public Health Hospital in Pittsburgh, where he was treated in the dispensary, and they sent him from there to the Baltimore Marine Hospital where he stayed some twenty-six to twenty-seven days, from June 7, 1964, to July 7, 1964. He was hospitalized again in the Sewickley Valley Hospital in Pittsburgh, from October 14, 1965, to November 7, 1965, and from that time on he was never treated by a physician until he was examined by Dr. Sherman on three separate occasions, August 17, 1967, October 3,1967, and January 11,1968.

Dr. Sherman testified that he had examined the Baltimore Hospital records and the Allegheny Hospital records and was acquainted with the Public Health records, but had not seen the records at the Sewickley Valley Hospital before he testified at the trial. He testified to the records of the various hospitals, as well as to his own examination of the appellant, but the records had to be repeatedly gone over as Dr. Sherman testified about one hospital record while having another one before him, and it was most difficult to establish dates, as, for instance, the date of appellant’s admission to the Allegheny Hospital, and, generally, the record, as presented, was compiled in a most complicated manner and the briefs on both sides did little to clarify the situation.

The Public Health Service reports, from which Dr. Sherman testified, show that as early as 1950, the appellant had headaches, and this was true during the time he was employed by the respondent on the various ships, although they showed no record of emphysema, which none of the hospital records showed, as will be indicated later, except that taking them into consideration and after his own examination, he made a positive diagnosis of emphysema basing it on the DiBono whistle test and appellant’s shortness of breath.

*231 However, a close perusal of the record discloses that Dr. Sherman testified from the Allegheny Hospital records that appellant’s condition, as of June 10, 1955, was diagnosed as essential cerebral angiitis. The history before his admission shows that the appellant had been cleaning an engine with a solvent, and, passing out, that he received several blows to the head while on board ship; that he was a heavy drinker of alcohol and smoked at least one pack of cigarettes a day. He further stated that the record showed he had a cerebral vascular insufficiency which, as of the date of his testifying, he stated, had not improved. Particularly, Dr. Sherman stated, “I would certainly say it was aggravated and if he was exposed to fumes, it certainly would be aggravated.” He then described the treatment given to a patient suffering from cerebral vascular insufficiency and when asked the direct question whether it would be of benefit to appellant now, he replied, “I question it very very much.” Further, that he was suffering from a diabetic condition and emphysema, and that both conditions could be benefited by medical treatment, but, as to the involvement of the central nervous system, he stated, “Medically, that is not going to help him at this stage.”

Likewise, Dr. Huber, who saw the appellant at the Allegheny Hospital, testified, by deposition, that at the time he treated him it was for a headache and dilated blood vessels on the right side of the forehead.

At the Baltimore Marine Hospital (June 7, 1964, to July 7, 1964), Dr. Sherman read a summary of his condition at the end of his hospitalization, showing (1) cerebral vascular insufficiency, (2) a diabetes glucose tolerance curve showing appellant had diabetes, and (3) a central nervous system involvement. As to the first finding, Dr. Sherman testified that he doubted very much if anything could be done for him now, but, as to the second finding, the diabetic condition, he should have continued medical care to control it and that nothing could be done for him now for his central nervous system involvement. In commenting on this hospital record, Dr. Sherman said that he should have medical attention presently, that he should not be left without help being given him as his condition was progressing and it would terminate in vegetation.

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Bluebook (online)
407 F.2d 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herman-neff-v-dravo-corporation-ca3-1969.