La Count v. General Asbestos & Rubber Co.

192 S.E. 262, 184 S.C. 232, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1937
Docket14507
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 S.E. 262 (La Count v. General Asbestos & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Count v. General Asbestos & Rubber Co., 192 S.E. 262, 184 S.C. 232, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 153 (S.C. 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of tire Court was delivered by

Mr. Cities Justice Stabrer.

In this action which was brought under the statute for the benefit of the heirs and distributees of Ray L. La Count, deceased, damages are sought in the sum of $50,000.00. The defendant owns and operates a plant in the County of Charleston for the manufacture of asbestos products; -and La Count, it appears, for some years and up until about the middle of 1929, was in its employ and worked in the spinning room where the asbestos was manufactured and woven into asbestos cloth, etc. The plaintiff alleged “that the method of work and process used by defendant corporation, its agents and servants, is and was highly dangerous to the physical wellbeing of its employees, particularly to the throat and lungs and other sensitive organs of the body in that the process of stripping, carding, weaving and spinning said asbestos, asbestos rock dust is given off in such large quantities as ultimately to affect the throat and lungs and other sensitive organs of the body; that as a result of the working of plaintiff’s decedent, said Ray L. La Count, *235 in the presence of said dust, his throat and lungs became so greatly affected and injured that he developed what is known as pneumoconiosis or more properly asbestosis, an affection of the throat and lungs caused by the inhalation of said asbestos dust, so that the said Ray L. La Count became permanently disabled from following any useful work or avocation, was made sick and ill, and shortly thereafter died.” It was also alleged that the injuries and death of plaintiff’s intestate were due to and caused by the negligent and wanton acts of the defendant, among others, in failing to provide a reasonably safe method for carrying on the work; in omitting to provide proper ventilation or other means of exhausting the asbestos dust from and about the place in which La Count was required to work; in failing to furnish him a mask or other like protection for his throat and lungs, and in not warning and instructing him of the dangerous character of the asbestos dust.

The defendant, answering, denied all acts of negligence and wantonness with which it was charged, and alleged that “the plant of the General Asbestos & Rubber Company was conducted and operated in accordance with the advice of specialists in the manufacture of asbestos produces and that every precaution and every safety method which this defendant had been able to ascertain had been employed in the operation of its plant and that if the plaintiff had been affected, as alleged in the complaint, it was occasioned through no fault or negligence of this defendant.”

On trial of the case, when all the testimony was in, the company moved for a directed verdict in its favor upon the following grounds: “That there is no testimony in support of the allegation of the complaint that defendant caused La Count to become permanently disabled and die. That the only reasonable inference to be drawn from the testimony is that the proximate cause of his death was edema of the lungs, caused by injection of lipiodol, because there is no material evidence that, if true, would tend to establish the issue in the mind of a reasonable juror. Because only *236 one reasonable inference can be drawn from the testimony, and that is that La Count’s death was due to the injection of lipiodol, and therefore it becomes a question for the Court and not a question of fact for the jury.” The motion was granted, and from judgment entered on the verdict the plaintiff appeals.

Pneumoconiosis is defined by Webster as a “disease of the lungs caused by the habitual inhaling of minute mineral or metallic particles, as of coal dust in anthracosis, quartz dust in silicosis, etc.” Asbestosis, as it appears from the testimony, is comparatively a new word invented to designate the particular disease due to the inhalation of asbestos dust. It seems that this disease is almost certainly fatal; and the appellant argues that the defendant knew, or in the exercise of due care should have known, the hazards of one working in such dust, and under the duty imposed upon it by law, the company should have adopted such means and methods as were -necessary - to protect La Count, its employee, against the dangers to which he was thus exposéd.

The main question presented for our decision is whether the trial Judge erred in directing á verdict for any of- the reasons stated as the grounds of the defendant’s' motion. In other words, was there any testimony from which it might be reasonably inferred that the defendant was negligent in the operation of its plant and, if so, was such negligence the proximate cause of La Count’s death?

The plaintiff, the widow of the deceased, testified that her husband had worked as a spinner with the defendant company from 1925 to 1929, and that he died in January, 1930; that he had not been ill before he came to Charleston, but got sick some time in 1928; that he had shortness of breath and a continual cough; and that he weighed about 125 pounds when he began work there but only about 105 at his death. On the issue of defendant’s negligence, Jess Tolbert, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he worked in the spinning room of the defendant’s plant; that there was quite a lot of dust flying around at times in the spin *237 ning room, the room in which La Count cdso worked; that this dust was everywhere ■ in the room and that when he and the other workers would leave for the day, their clothes “looked kind of like we had been in a snow storm”; that the company had no apparatus or machines in the spinning room for the elimination of the dust, and did not furnish any gas masks in that room for protection against it ;• and that, so far as the witness knew, no one in the spinning room had ever been informed that the inhalation of this dust was dangerous. Ernest Davis, a witness for the plaintiff, who had worked for the defendant company from 1926 to 1933 in its spinning department along with La Count for a part of the time, testified to the same effect.

We.think that this testimony — although there was very strong evidence offered by the defendant to the contrary-;— tended to establish certain of the specifications of negligence alleged in the complaint as to the operation of the company’s plant, especially with regard to its spinning room where La Count worked; and if it was also reasonably inferable from the testimony that such alleged negligence was the proximate cause of La Count’s death,' then the plaintiff was entitled to have the case submitted to the jury.

The evidence as to this issue, the cause of the death of plaintiff’s intestate, we have considered with painstaking care. It is undisputed that at the time of his death, La Count was only 27 years of age. He had formerly worked on a farm, and as a spinner in a cotton mill at Athens, Ga. The plaintiff stated, as we have already pointed out, that the deceased was in good health when he began to work for the defendant about the middle of the year 1925; but that later, in 1928, he became ill, suffering from shortness of breath and a severe cough; and that he also began to lose in weight. Jess Tolbert testified to the same effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.E. 262, 184 S.C. 232, 1937 S.C. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-count-v-general-asbestos-rubber-co-sc-1937.