Hoag v. Kansas Independent Laundry Co.

215 P. 295, 113 Kan. 513, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 12, 1923
DocketNo 24,469
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 215 P. 295 (Hoag v. Kansas Independent Laundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoag v. Kansas Independent Laundry Co., 215 P. 295, 113 Kan. 513, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 144 (kan 1923).

Opinion

[514]*514The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one for compensation. Judgment was rendered for the defendant on the opening statement of counsel for plaintiffs, and they appeal.

The material portion of the opening statement follows:

“Mr. Hoag was at that time a man of about 54 years of age; he had always enjoyed good health, and up to the time of sustaining this injury was in good health; he had been employed as engineer for a number of years, and had been employed by the Kansas Independent Laundry Company, the defendant herein, for a number of years as engineer; as a part of his employment, and in the line of his duty, he did, on Sundays, go over to the plant of the defendant and clean out or wash out the boilers. I think the evidence will show they have two boilers there, that he was the engineer and prepared these boilers, cleaning them out, for the following week, for the business of the following week.
“The evidence will show that on this particular Sunday, which was July 18, 1920, he went to his duties as was his custom, that he went into the boilers, and the evidence will show that he cleaned both of them out, and that when he came out he was overcome with the heat. The evidence will show that he had never before been overcome by heat in cleaning out these boilers. I do not mean by that he was prostrated right there, but that he was overcome by the excessive heat of these boilers, which had never occurred to him before, and that as a result of which he was physically disabled right then and there, and contracted pneumonia; that is to say, right then and there the evidence will show his powers of physical resistance were reduced to such an extent that the pneumonia germ, known in the medical world as pneumococci germ, immediately set in motion, and caused pneumonia, and, on the 25th day of July, 1920, he died.”

The opening statement as originally made was amended by counsel for plaintiffs, to withstand the expected motion for judgment, and the amended statement, as it appears above, is to be taken as presenting the plaintiffs’ evidence in the case.

Under the Kansas statute, compensation is allowed for personal injury by accident only. (Gen. Stat. 1915, §5896; Laws 1917, ch. 226, § 27.) The meaning of the word accident was sufficiently discussed in the case of Gilliland v. Cement Co., 104 Kan. 771, 180 Pac. 793. In that case a workman breaking rock in a quarry with a heavy sledge suffered a pulmonary hemorrhage. In the opinion it was said:

“The circumstances were clearly such that the jury would have been authorized to relate the hemorrhage to blood pressure intensified by vigorous muscular exertion. Relating the hemorrhage to physical exertion, rupture of the pulmonary blood vessels by force from within was as distinctly traumatic [515]*515as if the canal had been severed by the violent application of a sharp instrument from without.” (p. 773.)

In the case of Monson v. Battelle, 102 Kan. 208, 170 Pac. 801, the plaintiff had an unhealed wound on his foot. His work obliged him to wade through foul water. Infection occurred, necessitating amputation. It was held the result produced by contact with the infectious foreign matter in the water constituted an injury which, being an untoward event not expected or designed, was caused by accident. In support of the decision a case was cited in which it was held that typhoid fever, resulting from taking into the system typhoid bacilli contained in polluted drinking water, was attributable to accident.

In the case of Gilliland v. Zinc Co., 112 Kan. 39, 209 Pac. 658, a workman who had become overheated drank ice water, which caused congestion of the vascular system which killed him within an hour. It was held his death resulted from accident.

It is now generally recognized that what is known as heat stroke is an accident, within the meaning of compensation laws, and frostbite has been placed in the same category.

When personal injury by accident has occurred, compensation may be recovered for disability and disease consequent upon the injury. Thus in the case of Bidnick v. Armour & Co., ante, p. 277, the plaintiff suffered a hernia, by accident. He recovered for disability occasioned by milk leg resulting from a surgical operation to relieve the hernia.

The workman was an engineer of experience, and was engineer at this plant, in charge of operating and cleaning the boilers. Therefore he knew about the heat of boilers. On this occasion the heat was excessive. Excessive in relation to what? Either in relation to the usual temperature when the boilers were cleaned, or in relation to ability to withstand the heat incident to cleaning the boilers. In either case, the engineer was inattentive to or misjudged effect of the temperature on his power of endurance. For this reason, what happened to him was Unexpected, and if what happened had been an identifiable injury then occurring, the event could have been described as personal injury by accident.

The heat of the boilers overcame the workman. It did not overcome him to the extent of prostrating him, but it disabled him. The disability consisted in weakened power of physical resistance to pneumonia micro-organisms, which at once became active, causing [516]*516pneumonia, of which he died seven days later. He did not unexpectedly come in initial contact with pneumonia bacteria by washing the heated boilers, as the workman’s wounded foot came in contact with infectious matter in foul water, and the pneumonia bacteria were not intruded into his system by washing the heated boilers, as the workman received typhoid bacilli in drinking water. There was no definite physical lesion producing a specific kind of disability, such as occurs in heat stroke. There was nothing resembling the sudden hyperemia which resulted from- taking ice water into a superheated stomach. There was nothing resembling hernia, bringing a surgical operation and milk leg in its train. Disease-producing bacterial activity was stimulated by a favorable condition; the favorable condition was lowered physical resistance to cause of disease; the lowered physical resistance was produced by work in excessive heat; and in the last analysis the question is whether unexpected reduction of resistance to a bacterial disease, resulting from performing work under some misjudged or ignored circumstance or condition, constitutes personal injury by accident. The court is of opinion the question should be answered in the negative.

Pneumonia may follow a surgical operation, and may follow the breaking of a limb. The shock lowers vitality to such an extent that militancy of the bacteria prevails. Lowered vitality may also come from exhaustion from heavy work, from fatigue from long hours of work, and from a great variety of other causes which expose a workman to pneumonia and other diseases. The result is, there is a twilight zone between clear personal injury by accident, which is covered by the compensation act, and sickness, which is not covered. The subject is illustrated by one of the cases cited by the plaintiffs. On the evening of August 24, a workman danced, became heated, and then chilled. On the afternoon of August 26, he strained his back. The next day he went to bed, and on September 6 he was taken to a hospital, where he displayed symptoms of pneumonia of two or three days’ duration. His vitality was lowered, his condition debilitated, and he was delirious.

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Bluebook (online)
215 P. 295, 113 Kan. 513, 1923 Kan. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoag-v-kansas-independent-laundry-co-kan-1923.