Holly v. Spartan Grain & Mill Co.

42 S.E.2d 59, 210 S.C. 183, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 3, 1947
Docket15921
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 42 S.E.2d 59 (Holly v. Spartan Grain & Mill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holly v. Spartan Grain & Mill Co., 42 S.E.2d 59, 210 S.C. 183, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 17 (S.C. 1947).

Opinions

FishburnB, AJ.:

This appeal involves a maximum award of $6,000.00 made by the Industrial Commission and affirmed by the circuit court in favor of Roland Holly, the only child and heir-at-law of Roscoe Holly.

Roscoe Holly, an employee of Spartan Grain & Mill Company, located in or near Newberry, died of uremic poisoning or Bright’s Disease in the Spartanburg General Hospital at Spartanburg on May 1, 1945. His son, the claimant, sought compensation on the ground that although the primary cause of his death was a pre-existing disease, yet this disease was aggravated and accelerated by an accidental fall arising out of and in the course of his employment.

The defendants have appealed from the judgment of the lower court upon two grounds: first, that the accidental injury to the employee did not arise out of his employment; and, second, that there is no basis in the evidence for the finding of a causal connection between the accidental injury and the subsequent death of the employee.

The deceased, fifty-four years of age, was working in the manufacturing feed plant of his employer on the morning of April 17, 1945, when he received the injuries complained *186 of. He was employed as a mechanic, and had been working for this company continuously for more than three years prior to his death. His duties required him to repair and oil the motors in the mill, one of which was located near the ceiling on the second floor of the building. This particular motor was reached by ascending a ladder to the height of five or six feet, and then walking on a plank called a “catwalk”, which extended over an open bin about eight feet deep.

He checked in for work on the morning of April 17th about 7:30 o’clock, and proceeded to oil the motor in question. While engaged in this work, or when walking over the catwalk to reach the motor, he fell into the bin beneath him. No one actually saw him fall, but a fellow employee in an adjoining room heard the noise of the fall and heard him call for assistance in getting out. Two of his co-laborers went to the top of the bin and discovered him in a half-standing position attempting to climb out, but he was unable to do so unassisted due to the slippery condition of the bin. They reached down and pulled him back upon the catwalk, and from this position he at once resumed his work of oiling the motor. This catwalk was seven and a half inches in width and two inches thick.

Within a very short time, presumably in less than an hour, he walked without assistance across the plank over the bin and down the ladder to the main floor, and complained that he was sick. Whereupon he was sent by his employer to the company doctor in Newberry. He was assisted to an automobile by one of his co-laborers, who' went with him to Dr Senn’s office.

Dr. Senn was told by the deceased and the laborer who accompanied him, of the accidental fall, and was informed that the accident had just happened. He examined the deceased for physical injuries, and found a bruise or the indication of an injury to the right hip. Dr. Senn testified: “The skin was cut off a place about the size of a fifty-cents *187 piece. The hip, the whole hip had been hit against something.” And he also stated in a note or report made by him which was read into the record: “Roscoe Holly had a fall on pelvis, fell 15 feet on the 17th. X-ray did not show any fracture, but did show large stag horn' calculus in right kidney. He also had hypertension and was badly shocked by the fall.”

Upon his return from Dr. Senn’s office, the deceased took to his bed and grew progressively worse. He was seen by Dr. Senn the following morning, who could not account for his serious condition as arising from his physical injury. It was then that he had the nr-ray made, and discovered therefrom the big stone in the right kidney which practically filled up the cavity. The autopsy report showed not only this large stone in the right kidney, but also that there was a stone in the left kidney, or in the tube leading to the bladder which partially blocked passage.

On April 24th Roscoe Holly, who had steadily grown worse, became semi-conscious, and was taken to the Spar-tanburg General Hospital on the 27th. He remained in this coma or comatose state until his death on May 1st.

The company’s medical witnesses who attended Roscoe Holly in Spartanburg, Drs. Hendricks, Saye and Shirey, testified on direct examination that the deceased had chronic Bright’s Disease, and other related complications leading to uremic poisoning, which was the cause of his death. And further, that this fatal disease was in no way related to or aggravated by the fall on April 17th. The Spartanburg physicians expressed surprise that one so diseased could have lived as long as he did.

However, all of the doctors admitted under examination that the fall suffered by the deceased could have contributed to the sudden onset or aggravation of the disease: Dr. Senn stating that in general any medical testimony is partly conjecture, based upon past experience and study. He expressed .the opinion that the kidney condition had been coming on for quite a long time, and that the fall of the deceased into *188 the bin was coincidental, or probably precipitated an attack. He qualified • this, however, by the further statement that in his condition, the deceased could have had the attack even if he had not suffered a fall.

The medical experts, other than Dr. Hendricks, would not affirm or deny that the accidental fall hastened the death of the deceased. Dr. Hendricks testified in part as follows : ■

“Q. Doctorj a man who was in the condition that you have testified you found this man in, if he had fallen some ten or twelve feet, wouldn’t that tend to aggravate or accelerate the malady you say he had?

“A. Certainly a fall of ten or twelve feet would shock a normal man, much less a person like him.

“Q. And would tend to aggravate any malady he had?

“A. Yes, I will have to say that it would.”

And later in his examination this testimony was given.

“Q. But would you say that a man in his condition, that a fall of ten or twelve feet would aggravate or accelerate any malady which he might have had ? It would shorten his life?

“A. Yes, sir; you have to say that it would tend to shorten whatever life he might have; if it was severe enough.”

We find here, according to the record, a man who prior to his accidental fall, appeared to be perfectly healthy, with a hearty appetite, who had never lost any time from his work in over three years; nor had he complained of any illness. Nor had he ever consulted a doctor for any cause. He suffered a fall and from that time on is incapacitated; grows progressively worse, and dies. The lay mind under such circumstances, in view of the medical testimony, can reasonably arrive at no other conclusion than that reached by the Commission and the circuit court— that the Bright’s Disease was aggravated and accelerated by the accidental injury.

By the testimony of Dh Hendricks above referred to, the cause and effect relation was taken out of the doubtful field *189

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E.2d 59, 210 S.C. 183, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holly-v-spartan-grain-mill-co-sc-1947.