Jackson E. McVey and H. E. Northway v. Phillips Petroleum Company

288 F.2d 53, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5122
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 1961
Docket18374_1
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 288 F.2d 53 (Jackson E. McVey and H. E. Northway v. Phillips Petroleum Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson E. McVey and H. E. Northway v. Phillips Petroleum Company, 288 F.2d 53, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5122 (5th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in a negligence action entered in accordance with the special findings of a jury.

Plaintiffs, appellants, were employed at the time of the alleged mishap in the South Houston plant of the Nuclear Products Division of M. W. Kellogg Company. Kellogg manufactured a gamma-ray projector (the “Kel-Ray projector”) which was used to detect latent defects in pipe welds. The projector worked on the same principle as an X-ray machine, the rays being emitted from radioisotopes mounted in the projector. The radioisotopes were small pellets x *4", which were irradiated by placing them in a nuclear reactor. Kellogg obtained the neutral pellets from an independent supplier and sent them to a nuclear reactor at Idaho Falls, Idaho, which was operated by appellee Phillips Petroleum Company under a contract with the Atomic Energy Commission. After sufficient bombardment in the reactor, the pellets were shipped to the Kellogg South Houston facility.

McVey was a laboratory technician and Northway the office manager of the Kellogg South Houston Nuclear Laboratory. They allege that, on or about March 13, 1957, McVey, in the presence of North-way, was opening a shipment of ten irradiated pellets which had recently arrived from Phillips’ reactor, when “there was an unexpected and uncontrolled discharge of radioactive dust into the air inside the Kellogg Laboratory.” Plaintiffs allege further that, as a result of this discharge, which they claim was due to negligence on the part of Phillips, they were exposed to radioactive dust, resulting in severe injuries to their respective persons.

On appeal, the first point of error raised is the refusal of the district court to admit certain evidence offered in rebuttal by plaintiffs. Initially, it may be observed that questions as to order of proof are committed to the sound discretion of the trial judge. 1 And we may also note the rule that rebuttal evidence is generally admissible only to meet the evidence brought out in defendant’s case in chief. 2 Thus, we start with an analysis of those portions of the case for the defendant which the proffered evidence purported to rebut.

The first witness for the defense whose testimony is relevant to our inquiry was L. T. Newby, a County Stream and Air Pollution Inspector of the State of Texas. He recalled visiting the South Houston facility on March 18,1957, approximately five days after the alleged exposure incident involved in this case. He noted that at the time of his visit no one told him of contamination in the area. His testimony was corroborated by his cohort, Mr. Douglas. Dr. Emmert, the first of several medical witnesses, next appeared for the defense. Dr. Emmert. could find no physical evidence of exposure to radiation on the part of McVey on March 13,1957. Mr. Hawkins was the *55 next witness whose testimony is relevant. He was a former office employee at the Kellogg Nuclear Laboratory, and he testified that on a day in March 1957 the alarm bell went off in the laboratory, and at that time Mr. Northway was in the office and not in the laboratory where the alleged exposure incident took place. Hawkins also testified that McVey checked himself for traces of radiation on that day in March 1957, and that he found himself contaminated. Defendant then offered as a witness one Bradley, a representative of the manufacturer of an air monitor device which was in the Kellogg hot lab in South Houston and measured radiation in the air. He testified that an alarm bell would sound when the machine registered above 2,000 counts per minute, although that level was not considered dangerous, Bradley interpreted various charts on which the air monitor recorded the level of radiation in the air. On March 13, 1957, he found a sharp rise in counts per minute from 3,000 to 8,000 — an increase which would normally have set off the alarm bell. Bradley testified that this level was probably due to the fact that sources (i. e., isotopes) were being moved around. He then translated the 8,000 count per minute reading into one-third of a micro-curie, which is about three times the amount of radiation given off by a wrist watch with a radium dial. On March 14, the monitor rose to a reading of 10,000 counts per minute — “typically the thing we see following a period in which these capsules have been opened and the personnel are working with them.” On the basis of his readings of three charts offered in evidence, covering the periods of August 6-September 8, 1956, October 1-November 1, 1956, and March 11-April 30, 1957, Bradley estimated that the total radiation detected by the monitor was one-fortieth of “the amount that these people — that would have been marginally hazardous for these people to have breathed continuously, not only during their 40 hours a week of occupation, but 168 hours a week throughout their lives. So that a very substantial safety factor is involved here, a very substantial safety factor.” After Mr. Bradley, a Dr. Allen testified for Phillips. On the basis of his examinations of McVey and Northway following the alleged March 13, 1957 incident, Dr. Allen concluded that “there was no significant exposure to radiation * * *. They had none of the symptoms that I could refer to radiation syndrome * * Dr. Allen was followed by an eye specialist, Dr. Goar. He testified that, because of their shape, he did not believe the “opacities” observed in the eyes of McVey and Northway were caused by irradiation. He also noted that “severe enough radiation to produce lens changes would cause epilation, falling out of the lashes * * (In their case in chief, plaintiffs had put in testimony that these opacities were early radiation cataracts.) Next came Dr. Gamble, a hemotologist. On the basis of his blood studies, he found that neither Northway nor McVey were exposed to any significant amounts of radiation. Another physician, Dr. Collins, confirmed that Northway exhibited none of the symptoms of significant radiation exposure. Dr. Harris, an expert on the biological effects of radiation, confirmed this conclusion on thé basis of the symptoms manifested by plaintiffs, stating that in his opinion “there was no significant radiation injury in either one of these cases.” Dr. Hasterlik agreed.

In addition to this testimony, the defendant introduced the readings from each of the plaintiffs’ pocket dosimeters for the week ending Friday, March 15, 1957. These meters make daily records of the amount of radioactivity to which the wearers are exposed. McVey’s total exposure for the week ending March 15 was 270 milliroentgens. Northway’s dosimeter recorded 45 milliroentgens for the same week. The maximum permissible weekly accumulation is 300 milliroentgens. These exposure readings were confirmed by weekly reports of exposure to radiation taken from the film badges which appellants wore. For the week ending March 15, 1957, McVey’s film badge reflected exposure to 270 milli *56 roentgens of radiation, North way’s to 15 milliroentgens.

The proffered rebuttal evidence consisted of testimony by a representative of Tracerlab, an organization specializing in the detection and measurement of radioactivity. In late April 1957, Tracerlab made an examination of the Northway and McVey residences and discovered substantial amounts of radioactivity both in their homes and on their clothing.

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Bluebook (online)
288 F.2d 53, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 5122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-e-mcvey-and-h-e-northway-v-phillips-petroleum-company-ca5-1961.