Koehring-Southern & American Mutual Insurance Co. v. Burnette

464 S.W.2d 820, 225 Tenn. 147, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 377
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 464 S.W.2d 820 (Koehring-Southern & American Mutual Insurance Co. v. Burnette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koehring-Southern & American Mutual Insurance Co. v. Burnette, 464 S.W.2d 820, 225 Tenn. 147, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 377 (Tenn. 1970).

Opinions

OPINION

McCANLESS, Justice.

Edward L. Burnette filed his petition under the Workmen’s Compensation Law against his employer, Koehring-Southern, and its insurance carrier, American Mutual Insurance Company, on September 10, 1969. He averred that while in the employment of the defendant, he received an average weekly wage in excess of one hundred dollars, that the parties had accepted and were acting under the Work[821]*821men’s Compensation Law, that on April 2, 1969, he had sustained an injury which arose out of and during the course of his employment and that while he was removing a large and heavy sheet of steel from a shearing machine in the defendant’s plant the crane he was using gave way, and he suffered several fractured bones in his left foot and a severe injury to his back and spine.

The petitioner further averred that during the early part of October, 1968, he had suffered an earlier injury arising out of and in the course of his employment when he had moved a heavy load of steel on a wheeled jack on the defendant’s premises and his foot had slipped and he had fallen onto the concrete floor sustaining a fracture of his lower spine and a ruptured in-tervertebral disc, as the result of which accident he had been required to undergo surgery, and that while he had been in a weakened condition from that injury and operation he suffered the latter injury mentioned and by reason of all of which he was now totally disabled, his employer having terminated his employment on July 23, 1969. The petitioner averred that he had been accorded none of the benefits to which he was entitled under the law, and prayed that his rights be adjudicated and that he be given a decree against the defendants for the amount to which he was entitled.

The defendants by their answer filed on October 27, 1968, admitted the injury of October, 1968, but said that the petitioner had made no claim for Workmen’s Compensation benefits as a result of that injury but had made application and received benefits under his employer’s group hospitalization program insured through John Hancock Mutual Insurance Company and under his employer’s group hospitalization program insured through Tennessee Hospital Service Association also known.as Blue Cross. They charged that the petitioner was now estopped to assert a compensation claim on account of his injury of October, 1968. They averred that the petitioner had made a full and complete recovery from the injury of April 2, 1969, that he had suffered no compensable injury as a result of his fall in October, 1968, and that he had been paid all benefits including all medical expenses which had been submitted and which had resulted from his 1969 injury-

The petitioner on February 25, 1970, amended his petition to aver that he had been admitted to the hospital on September 8, 1969, that it had been determined after the removal of some enlarged lymph nodes from the right side of his neck that they were malignant and he was now totally disabled and incapacitated, that this condition had not previously manifested itself and although he did not know that he had been afflicted with cancer before suffering the compensable injuries he averred that if he had been so afflicted the condition was dormant and that the injuries which he had suffered while employed by the defendant had greatly weakened him thereby causing or contributing to the origin and spread of the cancer, and that as a result of which he had become totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. He prayed a decree for his medical expenses and for the amount to which he was entitled because of his total and permanent disability.

The defendant answered the amended petition and denied that either injury of which the petitioner had complained caused, aggravated or contributed to petitioner’s present disability resulting from cancer.

At the hearing before the Chancellor twelve witnesses were introduced; most of them, including the petitioner, testified in person. A few days after the hearing the Chancellor filed a memorandum opinion from which counsel prepared the final decree. The Chancellor found the petitioner to have been totally and permanently disabled as the result of his two injuries and awarded him compensation on that basis and the full amount of his medical ex[822]*822penses. The court did not allow the defendants’ plea of estoppel or their contention that the petitioner had made an election of remedies which precluded his recovery in this suit of benefits on account of the accident of October, 1968.

The defendants have appealed from the court’s decree and have assigned errors, which are:

“1. There is no proof or medical evidence in the record to support the Chancellor’s conclusion that there existed a causal connection between petitioner’s work-related injuries and the total and permanent disability found by the Court resulting from petitioner’s cancer or its spread.”
“2. The Court erred in awarding petitioner medical expenses and temporary total disability payments for the first industrial accident where petitioner had already elected and received nonoccupational benefits under his employer’s group insurance plans.”

Six doctors testified; they describe the petitioner’s condition in much detail. The uncontradicted medical testimony was that in September, 1969, swollen lymph nodes were removed from the petitioner’s neck and upon examination were found to be cancerous, the type of cancer being known scientifically as metastatic, poorly differentiated, squamous cell carcinoma. The cancer was secondary to a primary cancer in some other part of petitioner’s body but which the doctors were unable to locate. Cancers of this type spread through the lymph, the blood, and sometimes directly to adjacent parts of the body. If the cancerous part of the body receives some traumatic impact it is thought that the trauma will cause the cancer to spread more rapidly than otherwise it would. The petitioner’s counsel contend that this happened because of the accident of April 2,1969.

The averments of the petition are fully established by the testimony of witnesses with the single exception of the cause of the origin and spread of the petitioner’s cancer. The case on both sides has been prepared and tried with commendable thoroughness and the doctors’ testimony was most interesting. It appears that none of them knows the cause of the petitioner’s cancer. Much of their testimony is to the effect that its spread might have been or could have been caused by the accidental injury of April 2, 1969, when the large sheet of steel slipped from the conveyer, fractured the toes of the petitioner’s left foot, and caused him to strain his back when he pushed the steel away from his body. The following colloquy occurred between the Chancellor and Dr. Nicholas B. Norris:

“The Court: Doctor, considering the accident of April 1969, in connection with the condition that presently exists physically with regard to cancer, and the —in the petitioner, is it reasonable to conclude, more reasonable to conclude that the trauma, accident of April, 1969, accelerated or aggravated the condition that he is suffering from now or caused it to metastasize ?
“A I think it probably caused it to metastasize, Your Honor, when he was straining to keep that steel off him, and he may have well messed the shoulder up in the right neck at that time.”

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733 S.W.2d 876 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
464 S.W.2d 820, 225 Tenn. 147, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koehring-southern-american-mutual-insurance-co-v-burnette-tenn-1970.