In Re Smith
This text of 236 P.2d 87 (In Re Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re SMITH.
SMITH et al.
v.
SUNSHINE MINING CO.
Supreme Court of Idaho.
H. J. Hull and Sons, Wallace, for appellant.
E. B. Smith, Walter Oros, both of Boise, for respondent.
TAYLOR, Justice.
On Monday, May 10, 1948, at about 2:00 p. m., Clifford D. Smith died in the underground workings of the Sunshine Mine. At the time of his death he was 40 years of age, apparently in good health, and had been for a number of years engaged in manual labor. He commenced working for the defendant (appellant) on or about December 15, 1947. At that time he was given a "pre-employment examination" by Dr. Cordwell, from which it appeared that his heart was then normal. He reported no history which indicated previous heart ailment and had no record of *88 syphilis. At and prior to the time of his death he was engaged in tramming on the 3400 level. The metal mine car which he used weighed about 350 lbs. and carried about 1500 lbs. of ore. He filled the car by drawing ore from a chute, then pushed the car on a 1% down grade for a distance of about 160 feet (the grade increasing to 1¾% over the last 40 feet) to a grizzly where it was dumped automatically by its momentum and the releasing of the latch by the operator. The empty car was then pushed back to the loading station and the operation repeated. In the course of a normal day's work he trammed 40 to 45 cars of ore. On the 10th, after he had trammed about 18 carloads and at about 1:00 p. m., he went to a place on the same level, a short distance from his tramming run, where two other miners, Wright and Murrill, were timbering, and asked their help in righting his tipped up car. After helping them hoist and place a cap (in which operation he did no lifting, but operated the air valve on the tugger) the three went to right the ore car. The car was loaded and tipped up so that it rested on the front wheels and lower front corner of the box-like body.
There is direct conflict in the testimony of Wright and Murrill as to the manner in which Smith helped to right the car. While they lifted on the front end, Wright lifting on the car body and Murrill lifting on a lagging shoved underneath the car, Smith assisted by bearing down on the rear end. Wright testified that Smith pulled down on a piece of lagging pushed under the back end of the body of the car, while Murrill testified that he grasped the upper rear end of the body of the car with both hands and stepped on the lower rear end with his right foot, and then when the helpers hollered "ready", Smith stepped up, adding his weight to the back end of the car. On this point the Board found as follows: "Wright and Murrill lifted on the front end of the car. Murrill used a lagging, and Smith grasping the top of the rear end with both hands, and placing his right foot on the rear of the car. When his helpers `hollered ready' Smith stepped up, lifting his weight off the ground, raised himself up and added his weight to the tipped-up rear end. The righting operation took less than a minute." After the car was straightened up Smith appeared to be "all right" and went about his tramming and the two helpers returned to their own work. At about five minutes before two o'clock, Wright and Murrill, on leaving their work at the end of the shift, found Smith lying on a battery bench a short distance from his tramming run, in a dying condition. His face was black, his pulse weak and he was gasping his last breath.
The tipping of the loaded ore car, in the manner in which this one did, was not a frequent occurrence, one witness saying it happened "occasionally" and another "very seldom".
There is also a conflict in the testimony as to the amount of exertion put forth by Smith in righting the car. It appears from defendant's Exhibit "H", a scale drawing of the tipped up car, prepared by an engineer in the employ of the defendant, that nearly all of the weight of the load and most of the weight of the car rested forward of the front axle, which was the fulcrum point upon which the weight must be pivoted in straightening the car. This would mean that the total weight lifted would be more than 1500 lbs., corroborative of the testimony of Wright, who testified "It takes all that three men can put out to get it back." It also appears from this scale drawing that the point, where Smith was said to have put his right foot on the rear of the car, would be approximately 34 inches above the ground where he stood and that the top edge of the car which he grasped with his hands would be approximately 32 inches forward from the up-ended rear corner where he put his foot and four feet four inches above the ground or floor of the tunnel. From these physical facts it becomes at once apparent that it would be a rather difficult feat for Mr. Smith to step up to add his weight to the up-ended car without at the same time exerting considerable pull with his outstretched arms to assist in raising his weight. Mr. Smith was approximately five *89 feet, nine inches tall and weighed 165 to 170 lbs.
Dr. Wood, witness for the claimant, from a hypothetical statement of the facts, testified that the cause of death was "heart strain very possibly resulting in a coronary block" and that "the type of work he had been doing there would more than likely have a direct relationship, the episode of the tipping up of the car and the righting of it," and "culminated by that, but the man's whole employment, that experience, you could think of it as being the last straw." On cross-examination the doctor testified that in reaching his conclusion he gave considerable weight to the fact as stated in the hypothetical question that Smith "pulled down" on the back of the car and that if all he did was to stand on the back end and add his weight that that would not cause the heart strain. On redirect the doctor testified that pulling down with the arms extended above the head or above horizontal is "one of the quickest things that will produce an attack of angina * * *. That is the condition that has a great deal to do with the development of an angina."
The Board did not specifically determine whether he pulled down or not. On the point of exertion its finding is "it was something more than routine."
Dr. Mowery, who was also the county coroner and who examined the body shortly afterward, testified that the cause of death apparently was heart trouble, and that on the death certificate executed by him he listed the cause as "apparently heart failure and alcoholism probably".
Dr. Cordwell testified for the defendant that he does not believe that Smith's work or the righting of the ore car precipitated or caused his death; that coronary occlusion generally occurs while the patient is at rest and that most attacks are not preceded by unusual strain or exertion. On cross-examination Dr. Cordwell testified that death does not always follow suddenly, depending upon the type and extent of the heart ailment; and that although most thrombi form quite rapidly, it is possible, according to some authorities, for a thrombus to form within one to 24 hours.
There was evidence that Smith had been "on a binge" or "on a drunk" for about four days which ended about ten days before his death, and that he had been drinking over the week end of May 8th and 9th; that he showed some effects of the drinking on the morning of the 10th when he came to work, and after entering the mine slept for about two hours before beginning work. Dr.
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236 P.2d 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smith-idaho-1951.