Lay v. Blue Diamond Coal Co.

264 S.W.2d 223, 196 Tenn. 63, 32 Beeler 63, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 406
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 264 S.W.2d 223 (Lay v. Blue Diamond Coal Co.) 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
Lay v. Blue Diamond Coal Co., 264 S.W.2d 223, 196 Tenn. 63, 32 Beeler 63, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 406 (Tenn. 1953).

Opinion

*64 Me. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the day that Lay was first employed as a coal miner by Blue Diamond Coal Company he was found at his place of work by a fellow employee in an unconscious condition. This was on March 9, 1951. He was taken immediately to the hospital, and died there on April 24, 1951. The immediate cause of death was thrombosis.

His widow, in behalf of herself and their five minor children, instituted suit for compensation under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, Code, Section 6851 et seq. Her petition was dismissed by the Judge after a full hearing. His finding was that she had “failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that deceased died as a result of an accidental injury arising out of his employment”. The case is in this Court on the appeal of Mrs. Lay.

It is insisted in behalf of Mrs. Lay that all the evidence, and none of it contradicted, is to the effect that the death of her husband was the result of an accidental injury arising out of, and in the course of, his employment. Blue Diamond Coal Company, the employer, offered no proof. The merits, therefore, of this insistence must be determined by the evidence which Mrs. Lay introduced.

Mr. Lay was thirty-six years old at time of death. He and Mrs. Lay were married sixteen years before. During that interval he had never been sick a day until the occurrence now being considered. In the first year of his marriage his application for employment as a miner with some coal company was denied after a physical examina *65 tion disclosed that lie had high blood pressure. He promptly procured a job as a miner with some other company. He worked as a miner for that company and two or three others in succession continuously until a few months before the happening of the injury here under investigation. His employment as a miner then ceased because there was no more coal in the mine where he was last employed. After working about three months in Detroit, he came home and was given this job by the appellee, Blue Diamond Coal Company. Before giving him the job, its doctor examined him and learned that he did have high blood pressure.

Each miner for this coal company is assigned a particular area called a “room” in which to work. These rooms are considerable distances from the main entrance to the mine. A railroad track runs from this main entrance down through the mine. These rooms are off from, and to the sides of, this track. The miners are transported over this track from the mine entrance by a railroad car of some character to a point in the vicinity of the room to which the miners, respectively, are assigned. There the miners alight from this car and by a cross-entrance proceed on foot to the rooms to which they .are, respectively, assigned.

The distance from the floor to the ceiling of the cross-entrance way with which this case is concerned is approximately forty inches. Therefore, when Lay alighted from the railroad car he was compelled to travel to his room either on his hands and knees or “humped” over in this forty-inch space.

Lay had been assigned room No. 12. Witness Brooks had been assigned room No. 11. They were transported from the main entrance to the cross-entrance on the same *66 car and were let off at the same place. During this trip Lay gave no evidence of feeling ill or of being in pain. Nor had he given ,any such appearance when he left home that morning.

Witness Brooks and deceased proceeded through this cross-entrance to their respective rooms a distance of between 500 and 800 feet. Each traveled this distance on hands and knees or “humped over”, as aforesaid. The uncontradicted proof is that traveling in such a manner “is a right smart harder” and while so traveling the miner is “in a strain all right”.

Witness Brooks entered room No. 11. Deceased walked on to the entrance of room No. 12 in company with his foreman who remained in the room a very few minutes, and then passed through an opening called “leeway” into room 11 where he remained with witness Brooks from three to five minutes. Almost immediately after he left Brooks heard Lay groaning. He called to this foreman, and then went directly into room 12 with the foreman “right on behind” him. Lay was prostrate on his back and unconscious. A shovel intended to be used in his work was by his side. There was no evidence that he did any work after entering the room.

Thus, the uncontradicted evidence is that in not less than five, nor more than ten, minutes after Lay had undergone this strain exacting walk of 500 to 800 feet he was found unconscious at his post of duty. There was no exterior evidence of violence.

Lay was immediately carried to the hospital and placed in charge of Dr. W. E. Smith, an eminent specialist in that branch of medicine which has to do with the circulatory system, etc. of the blood in the human body. As soon as the patient’s condition permitted, Dir. Smith *67 made the examination and test necessary to pinpoint the trouble and its seat. He thereby ascertained that Lay had suffered “a spontaneous rupture of an intracranial artery” at a point where there was “a congenital aneurysm”.

A congenital aneurysm is one “produced by a developmental defect in the wall of the vessel (artery), in which the muscular coat of the vessel is absent at a particular point and allows the weaker lining and coating membranes to bulge upward”. That is, it is a swelling. High blood pressure is more likely to cause a rupture at such a place on an artery than elsewhere on that artery.

At the time Lay entered the hospital * ‘ the back of his eyes showed small hemorrhages of the blood vessels there — indicating increased intracranial pressure”. This condition indicated a high blood pressure.

Physical exertion brings about “an immediate increase in pressure” of the blood. And “any physical exertion taken by a man having a lesion such as Mr. Lay had would increase his blood pressure” and “such increased blood pressure would unequivocally make a rupture of a weak spot in his artery more likely”, according to the testimony of Dr. Smith. He says that such high blood pressure “would continue for a matter of several minutes” after the cessation of the physical exertion which caused the increase. He was found unconscious within a few minutes after he had completed the strain producing journey from the railroad car to the room to which he had been assigned.

Dr. Smith expressed the opinion that there was a direct relationship between the exertion to which Lay had been subjected just before he was stricken and the rupture which was found to exist. It is the insistence, however, *68 of Blue Diamond Coal Company that the undisputed proof is that the canse of Mr. Lay’s death was not a ruptured artery but thrombosis brought on by .an operation on April 19.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W.2d 223, 196 Tenn. 63, 32 Beeler 63, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lay-v-blue-diamond-coal-co-tenn-1953.