Maryland Casualty Co. v. Dawson

75 F.2d 431, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2953
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 1935
DocketNo. 7497
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 F.2d 431 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Dawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Dawson, 75 F.2d 431, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2953 (5th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

FOSTER, Circuit Judge.

Appellee filed suit in a state court against appellant as insurer under a policy of workmen’s compensation insurance, issued to the National Lumber & Creosoting Company of Texarkana, to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board of Texas on a claim for compensation, arising from the death of her husband, Will Dawson. The cause was removed to the federal court by appellant, was tried to a jury, and resulted in a verdict for appellee, upon which judgment was entered awarding her compensation at the rate o'f $11.75 per week for a total period of 360 weeks. Error is assigned to the overruling of a motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendant, to the denial of a new trial, and to the overruling- of a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto: This last assignment has been abandoned. No other errors are assigned.

It is not disputed that the amount awarded is correct, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, but appellant contends that Will Dawson was not injured in the course of his employment and died from natural causes; and that appellee failed to sustain the burden of proving she was entitled to compensation.

It is conclusively shown that Will Dawson had been working for the creosoting company for more than 20 years, was a good careful worker, and prior to his last illness was a strong healthy man. He was a regular member of a gang consisting of four laborers whose duty it wasTo handle cross-ties and to load them from tramcars into railroad cars. Dawson and his có-laborers were negroes. The creosoted ties weighed from 160 to 170 pounds. He died June 1, 1930. Except as to this, there was sharp conflict in the evidence. The theory of plaintiff was that the accident occurred on Thursday, May 22, 1930. The theory of defendant was that no accident occurred at all and the last day Will Dawson worked before his death was on Friday, May 16th. The case was tried in January, 1934.

[432]*432As the case presents a close question of fact, the material evidence may be somewhat briefly stated. In substance, it was this: Fannie Dawson, appellee, testified that her husband went to work on May 22d and was in good health; that he came home in the afternoon and told her he was about half dead and his head and back hurt and he cbm-plained of much pain; that she took him into the house and found marks on his back and head; that she called one of her neighbors and got some liniment and rubbed him the best she could and did not call a doctor until May 27th, when she called Dr. Thompson, a negro; that Dawson wás then almost unconscious; that she also called Dr. Matthews and Dr. Smith to attend her husband; that she was asked by Howard, the plant superintendent, to allow a post mortem, consented, and delayed the funeral a day for that purpose. Dr. Matthews testified he was a chiropractor; that his medical studies embraced all branches except materia medica and surgery; that he had been practicing 24 years in Texarkana; that he was called to see Will Dawson one time, in May, 1930, but he could not fix the date; that he found him in severe pain and thought he was in a dying condition; that Dawson died the next morning; that he went over his lungs with a stethoscope and found heavy congestion and his breathing was labored and heavy; that he examined his spine and found heavy congestion near the kidney nerve,, around the tenth dorsal vertebra, which .is above the belt line, just below the points-of the shoulder blades; that after going- down the spine it looked to him like there,-had been possibly an injury to the spine and he found a malalignment of the spinal column. , He also said Dawson’s condition could have been caused from disease.

- Charlie Davis testified that he lived at the plant, had worked for the creosote company for'8 or 9 years, first as an extra man until Dawson’s death, when he succeeded Hid as a regular; that he had known Dawson for 3 or 4 years and worked with him on the last day he was there, loading creosote ties into a railroad car from a tram; that Dawson was carrying the ties into the car; that there was a little accident; that Dawson let a tie fall on him, “as he went to heave the' tie he throwed it in one place and it fell in another place”; that the tie hit him about the belt line. Except for the testimony of Cal Ferguson, which'was immaterial, this was all the evidence offered by plaint-iffi • ■

Defendant offered the following evidence : Dr. Smith testified that he was called to see Dawson, but did not recall the dates. He made three or four visits but they were in the last day or two of May. When he first visited him, he was a very sick man, unconscious, and unable to answer coherently when he tried to arouse him,, and he gave no detailed history of his illness; that he had bronchial pneumonia and a urinalysis disclosed that he had inflammation of the kidneys or Bright’s disease; that it was hard to say what was the exact cause of his death, he had so many things, any one of which might have killed him, either bronchial pneumonia or Bright’s disease was sufficient, and he attributed his unconsciousness to cerebral hemorrhage; that he found no evidence of traumatic injury; that he examined Dawson’s spine but could not have told whether any of the vertebrae were out of line without an X-ray. Dr. Smith gave a certificate of death from cerebral apoplexy, which said contributing cause was “usual.” He also testified that an injury could produce a cerebral hemorrhage and pneumonia and in a great many instances that is what does produce them. Dr. Thompson testified that the first visit he made to Dawson was on May 18th and he was complaining of pains over his body and he had some slight bronchial trouble and cold and he called it grippe; that he was told that Dawson had been sick about 2 or 3 days; that he made another visit on the 21st and his condition was the same. He had no records. On cross-examination he was shown a memorandum he had made in October, 1930, in which he stated that he visited Dawson on the 24th of May. Har-land, the clerk who kept the time sheets of the laborers, which were made up weekly, testified that the last day Dawson worked was Friday, May 16th. However, the records were not produced, and he could not say accurately who worked in the gang with Dawson. He further stated Fannie Dawson came to see him after her husband died, expressed the opinion he had been hurt, and asked if the company would bury him. Cat. Harris, B. D. Curry, and Charlie Wright testified they worked in the same gang with Dawson on the last day he worked; that they did not see any accident and Dawson made no .complaint of having been hurt; that they were loading ties from the tramcar into the railroad car; that Davis was not in the gang; that Curry and Wright were lifting ties onto the shoulders of Daw[433]*433son and Harris. The testimony of these witnesses was indefinite as to the date of the last day Dawson worked. Harris further testified that after Dawson got down in bed he went to see him the next day and Dawson told him he got a lick in his right side while he was working out there; said a tie hit him in the side and he was not able to talk any more that it was hurting him so bad. Howard, the plant superintendent, testified that the last day Dawson worked was Friday, May 16th; that he was a tie carrier and was paid by the piece; that it was a rule of the plant that if an employee was hurt it should be reported to the foreman and the first aid man; that no report was made as to Will Dawson; that Will was a good safe worker, had been there a long time and knew the rules; that he had a habit of not wanting to work on Saturdays and came to him on Saturday, the 17th, and said

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75 F.2d 431, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-dawson-ca5-1935.