Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. v. Byrd

60 So. 2d 645, 215 Miss. 234, 5 Adv. S. 13, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 558
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1952
Docket38496
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 60 So. 2d 645 (Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. v. Byrd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. v. Byrd, 60 So. 2d 645, 215 Miss. 234, 5 Adv. S. 13, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 558 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

*239 Alexander, J.

This is an appeal from an award of compensation with medical and hospital expenses under our Workmen’s Compensation Act. Pending the appeal, the former appellee died and the cause has been revived in the name of the widow and other heirs. The original claimant is herein for convenience referred to as the appellee. The shipbuilding company will be referred to as appellant.

Appellee was employed by appellant as a chipper, which involved chipping off the burrs or irregularities left in the process of welding. For this purpose, he was furnished with an electric chisel which worked automatically with compressed air. The device weighed between twelve and fifteen pounds and required its operator to brace himself against the recoil since a constant forward pressure was necessary to chip away the surplus metal. This procedure resulted in a continuous and heavy vibration. The area in which appellee was required to work was a space of only two by three feet in the inner bottom of a ship. In order to brace himself, he was re *240 quired to place Ms back against a narrow piece of metal designated as a strongback.

Appellee, after a physical examination by appellants’ physician was employed and reported for work on April 20, 1952. On the two following days, Saturday and Sunday, he did not work. He resumed work on the 23'rd and on the 24th, after working in the manner described, he suffered a sharp pain in his back. At midnight, he quit work and went home, at which time he found that he had lost the sense of feeling in his feet. A numbness extended up nearly to the knee. The following morning, he stated that “My legs went out from under me.” On the 25th, he consulted a doctor of his own choice, Dr. Benson, who, after being given a history of appellee’s case, told him that “his work was causing it.” However, appellee went back to work that evening. The following day was a legal holiday and he remained away, but again consulted Dr. Benson and received some treatment for loss of function. On the 27th, he consulted another doctor and was catheterized and reported for work. His condition was then such as to require that he be assigned to less arduous tasks. On that day, he told appellant’s foreman, Ware, that he was paralyzed in his legs and received a written slip from the foreman which authorized his quitting of work and served to authorize the guard at the gate to identify and readmit him later to the yards. This written slip contained only the word “.sick” as explanation for his laying off. He then went to the Jackson County Hospital where he received some treatment. His condition of partial paralysis continued and he went to the George County Hospital at Lucedale, where he remained two days. On the third day, he was carried to Mobile and after X-ray examination, he underwent an operation, performed by Dr. Patton. Further operative procedures were carried out the following day. He returned to the George County Hospital on May 6th and remained there for three or four weeks. He was then removed to his home, where he was confined for ap *241 proximately four weeks. A second attack required further confinement in the George County Hospital, where he remained about a month. This chronicle of events, though extended, furnishes a background for the determination of the assignments of error to be considered.

The attorney-referee, after hearing the testimony, found the injury compensable. This finding was affirmed by the Commission, and upon appeal to the circuit court, its finding was affirmed. From this judgment, the appeal is taken.

It is first contended that the injury is not compensable because it is not an accidental injury. The contention is properly phrased since Sec. 2 (2) of Chap. 412 of the Laws of 1950 defines,“injury” as accidental injury.

(Hn 1) The Commission is amply warranted in its finding that the injury to appellee was caused by the pressure of his back against the metal bar or strongback. This pressure, augmented by the recoil of the automatic chisel with its constant vibration, bore upon a congenital angiomatous malformation and resulted in a thrombosis. The resultant interference was, according to the attendant physicians, the cause of the paralysis. It was found that the abnormal mass of blood vessels was- a dormant condition unknown to the appellee or to the appellant’s physician who gave him a physical examination prerequisite to his employment. So that we may proceed at once to examine whether an injury, activating a preexisting disease or physical abnormality is an accidental injury within the meaning and purpose of the Act, when such combination of causes with a resultant injury occurred while the employee was performing his duties in the customary manner. The distinction sought is that between an unexpected cause and an unexpected result. The latter is here conceded, as well as the fact established by the Commission that the injury arose out of and in the course of the employment.

*242 In determining whether the canse was unexpected, we must turn our attention to the cause itself. The ultimate cause of the disability was established to be a thrombosis resulting in paralysis. This condition was, in turn, the result of the damage to the abnormal and diffused mass of blood vessels near the base of the spinal column designated as an angioma. Pursuing the causal chain, this damage was the result of trauma. Such trauma was caused by the steady and rather severe vibration of the chiseling tool whose vibrations were transmitted to the strongback against which appellee was braced. The cumulative sum of such successive vibrations practically and scientifically add up to a cumulated impact differing from a single blow only in the circumstance that the cumulating impulses are transmitted progressively. When it is realized that an external injury requires both an external object and a physical target, to say that the thrust of the body against a fixed object differs in principle from a moving object cast against a fixed body is to he overwhelmed in an exercise of pure semantics.

It may well have been predicted that cases involving accidents arising out of unusual results from usual means would plague the courts with contradictions. There still appear vestiges of common law concepts which search at once for negligent conduct, and adjudge liability upon the basis of foreseeability. The rationale of our Workmen’s Compensation Act disavows negligence as a test of liability hut allows compensation “without regard to fault as to the cause of the injury.” Sec. 4, Chap. 354, Laws of 1948, as amended by Sec. 3, Chap. 412, Laws of 1950.

It must be conceded that some courts have denied compensation where a preexisting disease is lighted up by incidents of the work being performed. Such authorities are cited by counsel. With them, however, we can not agree. It was here testified that it was the nature and manner of the work which caused the injury *243 and that the disability was the result of trauma. Let it be supposed that a workman is assigned to a job upon a ladder. His safety depends not alone upon the strength of the rung upon which he stands but also upon the strength of the hones which support his legs.

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Bluebook (online)
60 So. 2d 645, 215 Miss. 234, 5 Adv. S. 13, 1952 Miss. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingalls-shipbuilding-corp-v-byrd-miss-1952.