Kellum v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.

49 F. Supp. 816, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 14, 1943
DocketNo. 2583
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 F. Supp. 816 (Kellum v. Bethlehem Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellum v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 49 F. Supp. 816, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739 (D. Md. 1943).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

This case arises upon a petition of the claimant to review and set aside an order of the Deputy Commissioner of the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission appointed pursuant to the provisions of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.A. §§ 901-950 inch, wherein an award of compensation was denied the claimant for loss of eyesight.

The jurisdiction of the Deputy Commissioner in the present case is not questioned. He has filed in the case his findings of fact upon which his order is based, and they are not disputed in so far as they relate to the occurrence and character of the injuries suffered by claimant, and to the medical treatment which claimant received for them. The Deputy Commissioner rejected the claim for compensation for the reason that he found claimant’s injuries had no causal relation to his loss of vision.

The facts found by the Deputy Commissioner, as the result of rather extensive testimony taken before him, may be summarized as follows:

Claimant began work for the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Baltimore, in August, 1940, and was assigned to scaling rust from ships, after having undergone the usual physical examination to which this Company was accustomed to subject its employees, including an eye test. On December 16 and 18, 1940, claimant was engaged in removing scale from the hull of the S. S. Bethore which was in the steel company’s dry dock undergoing repairs, and in the course of this work particles of scale got into claimant’s left eye. Claimant was treated by his employer’s first aid service on the premises, the pupil of his left eye was dilated, and a very small foreign body was removed from the cornea of that eye. But he continued to have trouble with his vision and on December 21st he was referred by the Company’s plant physician to the Wilmer Institute, Johns Hopkins Hospital, for examination. This disclosed that with respect to the right eye the optic nerve was somewhat edematous, the retina veins congested and gorged, and also the optic nerve of the left eye indicated there was some beginning of edema, or swelling, of that eye; that the left eye at that time as corrected by glasses was practically normal, but that the claimant’s vision was so bad in the right eye, namely 20/200s, that he was industrially blind, i.e., he could see only at twenty feet what he should have been able to see at two hundred feet.

Subsequent to the examination in December, 1940, just referred to, the claimant returned to work, but was given a milder type of employment, namely, sweeping up around the plant. On January 31, 1941, he was assigned to the work of applying a cement wash to water tanks on the S. S. American Sailor which was then in dry dock. On that day, claiming that some of this wash had gotten into his eyes, he was given first aid treatment at the plant and was then again sent to Johns Hopkins Hospital for further examination and treatment. In April, 1941, he remained in the hospital for a week and then continued to receive treatment as an out patient for a number of weeks, which included neurological treatments, in order to ascertain what, if any, other conditions might be affecting his eyesight. By April the left eye had deteriorated to some extent and the right eye had deteriorated greatly, and by July, sight in the left eye had disappeared almost completely, that is to say, vision in that eye was only 5/200s, and was worse in -the right eye, namely, 3/200s. During this extended period of hospital observation and treatment, among the doctors who attended the claimant were the same doctors who had examined and treated him in the previous December.

[818]*818On April 1, 1942, formal claim for compensation was filed with the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission by the claimant, based upon alleged loss of vision in both eyes and inability to return to work. At the hearing of this claim before the Deputy Commissioner in May and June, 1942, the testimony was taken of two of the physicians who had treated the claimant’s eyes following the injuries to them in both December, 1940, and January, 1941. Testifying on behalf of the employer, they both stated that claimant’s loss of vision was neither caused nor in any sense aggravated by the injuries received in the course of his work, but that his loss of vision had been brought about by some independent, pre-existing condition involving the optic nerv.e — by some disease of the central nervous system such as multiple sclerosis, that is, that the impairment was organic rather than .'traumatic in origin.

Following the taking of testimony before the Deputy Commissioner, the claimant, with the approval of counsel for both parties, was referred to the United States Public Health Service, United States Marine Hospital, Baltimore, for additional examination. This was made by the surgeon in charge, who reported his findings to be that the claimant was suffering from bilateral central scotoma which had destroyed central vision and which resulted from pathology in the optic nerve — known as retrobulbar bilateral neuritis, of organic and not of traumatic origin, that is, not the result of any external injury to claimant’s eyes.

Still another examination of claimant was made at the instance of the United States Public Health Service by a well known Baltimore neurologist who had not theretofore seen the claimant. This neurologist’s findings were to the effect that preceding claimant’s first eye injury in December, 1940, there had been present a toxic neuritis of the optic nerve' on both sides, more marked on the right than on the left, with some disturbance of vision at that time, of which, however, claimant was not conscious until dilatation of the pupil of the left eye had been produced, in the course of treatment given him in December because of the foreign body in his left eye, thus interfering with the vision of that eye; and that then, for the first time, the claimant became conscious of his impaired vision, because up to that time his left eye had seemed to afford him satisfactory vision. In short, this neurologist reported that he did not believe claimant’s trouble was due to multiple sclerosis or to any other disease of the nervous system, but to optic neuritis of toxic origin which antedated the eye injuries which are the basis of the present claim. He declined to express ah opinion as to whether such injuries might have aggravated such neuritis, since, as he • said, this was a question for the ophthalmologist.

In addition to the foregoing verbal and written testimony, the Deputy Commissioner had before him the testimony of the claimant himself and of one other "physician, a neurologist and psychiatrist, who appeared on behalf of claimant and who had examined claimant on November 15, 1941, and several times thereafter. This physician disagreed completely with the diagnoses of all of the other physicians. He testified that, in his opinion, the injuries which the claimant had suffered to his eyes in - the previous December and January were the cause of his loss of vision, and that he found no evidence of multiple sclerosis or any organic disease of the claimant’s nervous system such as might account for his blindness.

The well established principle that must govern this Court in reviewing the action of the Deputy Commissioner is that it is not the weight of the evidence that controls, but merely whether there is substantial evidence present in the record as it comes from the Deputy Commissioner that supports his conclusion. That is what is meant by the language of the Act (Sec. 21(b), 33 U.S.C.A.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F. Supp. 816, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellum-v-bethlehem-steel-corp-mdd-1943.