Lancaster v. Mutual Chemical Co. of America

195 A. 515, 15 N.J. Misc. 744, 1937 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 41
CourtNew Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau
DecidedDecember 7, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 A. 515 (Lancaster v. Mutual Chemical Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lancaster v. Mutual Chemical Co. of America, 195 A. 515, 15 N.J. Misc. 744, 1937 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 41 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

A petition for compensation having been filed in this court on November 28th, 1936, alleging that Elmer Lancaster, deceased husband of the petitioner, Blanche Lancaster, met his death on November 4th, 1936, as a result of chrome poisoning suffered in the course of his employment and arising therefrom while working in respondent’s potassium bichromate plant.

In answer the respondent admits the employment of the deceased Elmer Lancaster from about September 10th, 1926, to about August 28th, 1936; that in the course of his employment as a laborer he was exposed to chrome, but the respondent denies that the petitioner suffered any accident or compensable disease.

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The petitioner testified that she was the widow of the deceased Elmer Lancaster; that she and the deceased lived together as husband and wife; that her deceased husband was [745]*745employed in respondent’s chemical plant at Jersey City over a period of not quite ten years; that throughout the ten years of his employment with the respondent, the deceased worked steadily on all working days except in the summer of 1936 when work was slack he took off Thursdays and remained at home, resting mostly in bed; that in the spring of 1936 he complained of aches and pains in the chest, he coughed, lost appetite and lost thirty or forty pounds of wéight; that he was intermittently treated by their family physician, Dr. Peter E. Ghee, of Jersey City, and that her husband last worked for the respondent on August 28th, 1936, that he took to his bed and was, on or about October 1st, 1936, removed to the Medical Center of Jersey City where he remained until his death on November 4th following. This witness also produced a death certificate obtained from the board of health and vital statistics which was offered in evidence and showed that the cause of death to Elmer Lancaster given as carcinoma of the bronchus, pulmonary edema secondary. This death certificate was also identified by Dr. William H. Longley, Jr., who attended the deceased at the Medical Center and signed the death certificate.

Dr. Peter E. Ghee called as a witness for the petitioner testified that he was a licensed and practicing physician in the State of New Jersey, having practiced for about thirty-nine 3'ears; that in the spring of 1936, Elmer Lancaster came to him at his office occasionally and that he treated him for bronchial trouble and advised him to stop his work and that he thought that whatever the conditions under which he was working were against him; that he prescribed medicine with the idea of soothing his bronchial tubes and to lessen the irritation ; that Lancaster was coughing, that it was a rather hackv and troublesome cough more or less with a certain amount of mucous spitting up. This witness further testified that from August 28th, 1936, on, Elmer Lancaster was unable to report back to work; that ho was a very sick man and that the witness treated him from then on until October 1st, when Lancaster went to the hospital, and that the witness determined that Lancaster was suffering with bronchitis and [746]*746with a pronounced cough and sputum and fever; that subjectively the patient complained of pain in his chest, and that while this witness saw Lancaster at the Medical Center, he did not visit him professionally and that he did not really know the cause of death but that he died from some bronchial trouble evidently. Asked on cross-examination whether he could tell what irritant, in his opinion, contributed or was the cause of the illness for which he treated Lancaster, the doctor said he would not go so far as that, but that he was convinced it was some strong irritant or irritating cause that he was breathing in or taking in through the air, because of the rapidity with which the cough increased, and that, in his opinion, a carcinoma of the lung would not cause the peculiar cough Lancaster had. This witness testified that at no time during his treatment of Lancaster did either Lancaster or he refer to chrome, and that he, the doctor, was never able to determine what irritant caused the irritation of the bronchial tubes, and that he knew nothing about the chemical composition of chrome, and in the opinion of this witness no one knows the cause of carcinoma.

On behalf of the petitioner, Dr. Clarence F. Winchell was called and qualified as a chemist and toxicologist. His testimony was apparently scientific, instructive and would have much probative force on the question of the effect of potassium bichromate on the respiratory organs of the human body if the evidence that potassium bichromate in the instant case in fact had been carried in the air current into the farther recesses of the lungs, namely the bronchus, the bronchioli or down into the alveolar tract.

Dr. Otto Lowry called as a witness for the petitioner testified among other things that chrome is an irritating substance and when it comes in contact with the body and tissues in solution compounds with some of the organic material in the body and acts as an irritant and in sufficient concentration causes ulcers which may be on the skin or on the mucous membrane of the nose or may appear on the mucous membrane of the throat and may produce bronchiectasis in the lungs. The doctor further testified to his belief that inhala[747]*747tion of chrome may have aggravated or activated the existing carcinoma, although he, himself, had never seen any carcinoma that had been produced by chrome.

Dr. Eugene L. Spohn called as a witness on behalf of the petitioner testified he is at present on the cancer service and gynecologic service at the Medical Center in Jersey City as house surgeon on both services; he further testified that he had never examined a patient suffering from chrome poisoning. In answer to the hypothetical question involving sickness and cause of death, the doctor said “there may be a relation between a man employed under the conditions that I have heard and the cause of death,” and the witness further testified that the cause of carcinoma is unknown but it is agreed that “any chemical irritation, any thermal irritation, any mechanical irritation, any bacterial irritation over a continued period of time may aggravate, and by some authorities may even be a cause of the beginning of some types of malignant tumors.” The doctor frankly admitted that in his own experience, he knew of no ease where there had been chrome ulcers in the lungs.

Dr. George White was called as a witness on behalf of the petitioner and testified in part that he knew the deceased; that the respondent manufactured bichromate of soda and oxalic acid, that he treated the deceased at the plant dispensary for acute bronchitis and an erosion of the mucous membrane of the septum of the nose. This witness was recalled on rebuttal in the petitioner’s case and gave further testimony regarding the dispensary records and that the nasal septum perforation was complete and healed in 1932 and so far as that disease was concerned, there was no further exposure thereto during the continuance of the employment of the deceased by the respondent.

Dr. Benjamin J. Macchi was called on as a witness on behalf of the petitioner. The doctor testified that he had occasion to examine about fifteen to twenty patients suffering from bichromate poisoning; that among these patients there were different perforated septums, evidences of chronic bronchitis and that in that series there were four deaths; [748]*748three died of cancer of the lung and the fourth the patient had a chronic nephritis.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 515, 15 N.J. Misc. 744, 1937 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-mutual-chemical-co-of-america-njlaborcomp-1937.