Janousek v. Western Star Mill Co.

440 P.2d 616, 201 Kan. 380, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 11, 1968
DocketNo. 45,204
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 440 P.2d 616 (Janousek v. Western Star Mill 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
Janousek v. Western Star Mill Co., 440 P.2d 616, 201 Kan. 380, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 379 (kan 1968).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kaul, J.:

In this workmens compensation case the district court denied an award to the wholly dependent wife of Frank L. Janousek, deceased, whose death, on February 24, 1965, resulted from a cerebral hemorrhage.

Decedent had worked for respondent, a self-insurer, for nineteen years. His duties consisted of filling orders by lifting and loading bags of grain onto a conveyer belt in respondent’s feed mill. He was fifty-six years of age, five feet, nine inches tall, and weighed 215 pounds.

On the morning of his death, decedent arose at the usual time, around 6:15 a. m., he appeared normal to his wife and son, Frank, Jr., the other occupants of the home. After breakfast, at approximately 7:15, decedent went out to start his automobile. It failed to start and he returned to the house and asked his son to come out and push the automobile out of the driveway. The temperature was about zero degrees and a three-inch snowfall was on the ground. The snow had been removed from the Janousek driveway but remained on the street where it had been churned into slush the day before. The slush had frozen in a rough manner during [381]*381the night. Decedent’s automobile was parked in front (toward the street) of the son’s automobile. Both automobiles were headed toward the street on the driveway which inclined slightly toward the street. The son got into his automobile and Mrs. Janousek, hereafter referred to as claimant, got into decedent’s automobile. The son started his automobile and pushed that of decedent down the driveway and just into the street. At this point the front bumper of the son’s automobile and the rear bumper of decedent’s automobile did not match and the latter could not be pushed further by Frank’s automobile. Since decedent’s automobile had not started, and blocked the son’s automobile from entering the street, it was necessary to push, by hand, decedent’s automobile out of the driveway. Claimant guided decedent’s automobile while the decedent and the son pushed it several feet to a position along the street curbing, clearing the entrance to the driveway.

At this point, claimant and her husband drove the son’s automobile to work, a distance of about three and one-half miles. They stopped en route to pickup a co-employee. Claimant testified that when they proceeded about half way to the mill her husband put his hand to the side of his head and said “Oh, I’ve got the funniest pain in my head.” They arrived at the mill at about 7:55 a. m. Upon arriving decedent told claimant that he had left his glasses at home and asked her to get them.

Decedent checked in on the time clock shortly before 8 a. m. He was seen by a number of co-employees, several of whom spoke to him before he went to work. All of the co-employees, with one exception, testified they noticed nothing unusual about decedent’s appearance when he reported to work. Paul Bell testified that decedent looked unusual and may have been pale but he thought it was because decedent was not wearing his glasses.

After checking in, decedent and his fellow employee, Roy Throne, went to their working area on the third floor of the mill. Throne read the work orders for the day. The first order was to load out twenty 50-pound bags of grain, ten of one kind and ten of another. The decedent walked around behind a stack of grain bags to reach the bags of grain called for in the first order. He lifted ten bags, approximately four feet up and over a stack of other grain bags, and handed them to Throne, who then transferred the bags to a conveyer belt. After lifting the first ten bags, and passing them to Throne, decedent told Throne he had a terrible headache, and Throne suggested that he get some aspirin. Throne testified that, [382]*382at this time, decedent looked “land of flushed from bending over, kind of red.” Throne and decedent then loaded ten more bags of feed on the conveyer belt, each lifting five of them. At this point decedent told Throne “I believe I’ll go take some aspirins,” and left the working area. Throne testified it was around 8:15 a. m.

Decedent was next seen in the basement by several co-employees; whether he rode the elevator to the basement or went down the stairs is unknown. A co-employee, Cecil Pederson, saw decedent sitting on a five-gallon bucket, he appeared chalk white with beads of perspiration on his face. Pederson asked decedent “What’s the matter Frank?” decedent replied "I’ve got a hell of a headache.” Pederson inquired if he should call Mrs. Janousek or Gary, decedent’s son, who also worked at the mill. The decedent answered it would not be necessary that he would be all right in a minute. Pederson then left the area. Decedent was next seen by co-employees, Paul Bell, John Van Dorn and Jack Plunkett.

Punkett testified that decedent looked pretty sick so he decided to call Gary.

Decedent was taken by ambulance to the hospital about 8:30 a. m. He was unconscious on arrival at the hospital and died at 5 that afternoon. On arrival at the hospital he was examined by Dr. Robert Weber, a specialist in internal medicine. Dr. Weber testified that he obtained from claimant and her son the history of decedent’s case, relative to pushing the automobile and his complaining of a peculiar type of headache on the way to work; and that after decedent had been at work for a while he started vomiting and became unresponsive.

Dr. Weber further testified as follows:

“At the time that I first saw the decedent as I stated earlier, I felt that he had a cerebral hemorrhage as a result of the history which I obtained from tire wife and son. I felt that this had occurred prior to his going to work. How much work he did that morning was not factually available to me as stated in your hypothetical situation. I would still feel that the hemorrhage had occurred prior to his going to work, that it did occur with the exertion of pushing the car. How much effect the work which he did would have on the hemorrhage would be conjectural. Is that a good word. Would be purely conjectural. It is not unusual for a patient that has a cerebral hemorrhage to have a period of 20 to 40 minutes during which time he is conscious. The onset of the symptoms are gradual but progressive and obviously any strenuous activity might affect this. How much he was capable of doing after he got to work would even be a question with his cerebral hemorrhage. I can really only state the facts as I obtained them at the time, and at the time of my [383]*383examination with the history available. I felt that this had occurred prior to his going to work.”

Dr. Weber’s opinion was that lifting the bags of grain had no effect upon the preexisting condition but on cross-examination he admitted that lifting the bags would be exertion which would increase the blood pressure, resulting in some increase in the bleeding.

Dr. Weber also testified that in the absence of an autopsy it was impossible to determine whether the. hemorrhage resulted from a ruptured aneurysm or from preexisting hypertension and arteriosclerosis.

Dr. Weber’s examination revealed decedent’s blood pressure was 170 over 100, his pulse rate of 64 and regular at the time of admission. A spinal tap was performed and the lumbar puncture revealed the spinal fluid pressure to be 600 millimeters of water and the fluid was grossly bloody. The presence of the amount of blood in the spinal fluid indicated a rather massive cerebral hemorrhage.

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Related

Ford v. Robert S. Wise, Inc.
451 P.2d 251 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
440 P.2d 616, 201 Kan. 380, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janousek-v-western-star-mill-co-kan-1968.