Leake v. City of Fulton

316 S.W.3d 528, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 1106, 2010 WL 2898787
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 27, 2010
DocketWD 71821
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 316 S.W.3d 528 (Leake v. City of Fulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leake v. City of Fulton, 316 S.W.3d 528, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 1106, 2010 WL 2898787 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

KAREN KING MITCHELL, Judge.

The City of Fulton (“Fulton”) appeals from a final order of the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (“Commission”) awarding benefits to Linda Leake (“Widow”), the widow of decedent Alan Leake (“Leake”). We affirm the order of the Commission.

Procedural and Factual Background

Leake was a captain with the Fulton fire department and had been with the department for twenty years. On April 30, 2006, Leake was called to the scene of a three-car automobile accident. While no one in the accident was badly injured, one of the automobiles involved had to be removed from the roadway, and Leake and two others pushed the vehicle to the side of the road. During the time that Leake was assisting at the scene of the accident, the light rain that had been falling became very heavy, and hail started to fall. The rain was so heavy that it ran into the raincoat of police officer Mark Moses, who was also assisting with the accident, and it shorted out his radio. Shortly after the vehicle had been removed from the roadway, Officer Moses and Leake were dispatched to a more serious accident nearby.

The second accident was a single truck that had skidded off of a highway, gone over a guardrail, and tumbled to the bottom of a steep embankment. The driver of the truck had been ejected on the way down the embankment and had come to rest in an algae-covered concrete drainage ditch, right next to his truck. By this time the rain had ended and the sun had come out, making the air hot and humid.

Leake scrambled down the steep embankment through shin-deep thick wet grass to get to the ejected driver. Leake, Officer Moses, and others began performing CPR on the man, with Leake using the rescue breathing bag. The rescue efforts were especially difficult because of the large size of the driver, the fact that the driver’s airway and the breathing device were obstructed with the man’s vomit, the fact that the driver was wedged against his vehicle, the wet and slippery condition of the concrete drainage ditch, and the hot, humid weather. The rescuers worked frantically for some time until the ejected driver was able to be put on a backboard. Then Leake and the other rescuers carried the man up the other side of the embankment to a waiting ambulance. This side of the embankment was less steep, but longer in distance. The trip up the embankment was difficult, and Leake slipped once on the way. When the man had been placed into the ambulance, Leake returned to the bottom of the culvert to retrieve his tools and then climbed back up the steep side of the embankment to get back to his vehicle.

*530 When Leake reached the road, he climbed back over the guardrail and asked for some alcohol to clean his hands. Then, suddenly, he said that he felt dizzy, the color left his face, and he collapsed. Officer Moses believed that Leake was possibly having a heat stroke because of the weather, their exertion, and the fact that Leake was wearing his firefighting gear, which consisted of large rubber boots, heavy insulated pants, a heavy insulated coat, a shirt, and a helmet. The other rescuers on the scene removed Leake’s firefighting gear and began trying to resuscitate him. Although he briefly began breathing again, the attempts to save his life were ultimately unsuccessful, and Leake died at the scene.

Widow applied to the Division of Workers’ Compensation for death benefits following Leake’s death. At the hearing, Widow testified that Leake had not been diagnosed with or treated for any heart disease before his death. Widow also testified that Leake had been able to perform his job without any difficulties and that he had been fairly active outside of his employment, doing work around the house and boating.

Leake’s medical records were also admitted into evidence and showed that Leake had not been diagnosed with or treated for heart disease. They indicated that Leake had been recommended to follow a healthy diet and to stop smoking, but he had not been placed on any medications for cholesterol reduction or blood pressure control.

Officer Moses testified at the hearing. He relayed the events as set forth above and offered that in his twelve years as a police officer, the April 30, 2006 vehicle rescue that he and Leake worked was the most physically demanding and emotionally challenging that he had ever experienced. Moses also testified that, as a member of the SWAT team and a former bicycle patrol officer, he had been in good physical shape but that he had never before felt fatigue at the level he experienced following the April 30 rescues. Moses left the Fulton police force shortly after Leake’s death and now works as a fraud investigator for the Division of Workers’ Compensation.

Dr. Jerry Kennett, an expert for Fulton, reviewed Leake’s medical records and his autopsy report and concluded that Leake’s death was primarily caused by his underlying cardiovascular disease. Dr. Kennett opined that while the work Leake was doing on the day of his death may have been a contributing factor, it was not the major factor that led to his death. Dr. Kennett testified that Leake had a thickened heart muscle with blockage in the three main coronary arteries and that Leake had suffered a prior heart attack, although Leake was apparently not aware of the prior heart attack.

Dr. Stephen Schuman, Widow’s expert, also reviewed Leake’s medical records and his autopsy report, as well as the statements of Leake’s co-workers, and concluded that, although not in optimal health, Leake was medically stable during the time leading up to his death because he had been able to go about his business and work activities without any symptoms. Dr. Schuman opined that Leake would have been able to continue his activity level had it not been for the events of April 30, 2006. Dr. Schuman opined that there were significant, unusual physical exertions on the day in question, emotional stress associated with responding to a severe car accident, and hot and humid weather in which the body cannot dissipate heat, and that all of those factors combined to increase demand on the cardiovascular system for enhanced cardiac output. Dr. Schuman explained that the heart muscle *531 requires more blood flow to sustain the extra work, and if there is any restriction of blood flow because of coronary artery blockage, that blood flow cannot increase to the level that the demand increases, causing a supply-demand imbalance. This creates an electrical instability, which in turn causes a serious arrhythmia, or irregular beating, the most severe type of rhythm abnormality. It was Dr. Schu-man’s opinion that this electrical instability was the cause of Leake’s death. Dr. Schu-man concluded that if the demand had not been there, in the form of the physical exertion, emotional stress, and environmental factors, the electrical event would not have occurred and, thus, that Mr. Leake’s work was the prevailing factor causing his death.

Both experts seemed to agree that Leake’s death was not caused by a heart attack but was the result of an episode of ventricular fibrillation — the rhythm abnormality. Both experts also agreed that both Leake’s underlying, although previously undetected, cardiovascular condition and the conditions of Leake’s work combined to cause the cardiac episode leading to Leake’s death. The experts just disagreed about which factor was the prevailing cause.

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316 S.W.3d 528, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 1106, 2010 WL 2898787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leake-v-city-of-fulton-moctapp-2010.