Mead v. American Smelting & Refining Company

363 P.2d 930, 90 Ariz. 32, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 136
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1961
Docket7194
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 363 P.2d 930 (Mead v. American Smelting & Refining Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mead v. American Smelting & Refining Company, 363 P.2d 930, 90 Ariz. 32, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 136 (Ark. 1961).

Opinion

*33 LOCKWOOD, Justice.

Petitioner seeks by certiorari to overturn respondent Industrial Commission’s Award for Non-Compensable Claim. In April, 1958, petitioner Mead, suffering from asthma and a pulmonary disease known as emphysema, filed his claim for compensation, which was denied by respondent Commission in November, 1958. Timely protest and petition for rehearing followed, several lengthy hearings were held, and in September, 1960, the Commission presented its Amended Findings and Award for NonCompensable Claim. The Commission found, inter alia, that:

“ * * * 6. The ore dust and odor of reagents within the mill building where claimant performed his duties did not exist in hazardous quantities, nor was claimant exposed to hazardous conditions of odor or dust in his working premises within the mill building.
******
“9. Claimant in June of 1957 transferred to the filter plant. In performance of his duties therein he constantly wore a respirator and was not exposed to injurious amounts of dust or odors. ******
“11. Claimant returned to work for the defendant employer in August of 1957 as a laborer and with the exception of a brief exposure to paint odor he was not exposed to ore dust nor reagent odors; claimant’s respiratory condition worsened progressively and he terminated his employment in January of 1958.
“12. Claimant’s employment with the defendant employer and the conditions thereof did not cause, precipitate or aggravate his pre-existing bronchial asthma, a respiratory disease, nor did his employment or the conditions thereof cause, precipitate or aggravate the claimant’s emphysema, a respiratory disease, or the related respiratory conditions of which claimant complains.”

Immediately thereafter, counsel for petitioner, by letter of September 27, 1960, protested the award and requested the Commission to make a specific finding whether precipitating or aggravating a pre-existing asthmatic condition may constitute an “industrial accident” within the meaning of our workmen’s compensation statutes, A.R. S. § 23-901 et seq. Petitioner’s letter was treated as a Petition for Rehearing and was denied by Order of respondent Commission. This appeal followed, in which it is contended that (1) the Award is arbitrary and not supported by the evidence of record, and (2) the question of whether aggravation of a pre-existing asthmatic condition constitutes an “industrial accident” was improperly ignored by respondent Commission in its denial of the Petition for Rehearing.

*34 In making a determination as to the propriety of the Award, it is necessary to review here petitioner’s employment and medical history. Petitioner was. employed by respondent American Smelting & Refining Company, hereinafter referred to as “the company”, on or about January 12, 1955, as an unskilled laborer. He was examined before being accepted for employment by Dr. Stuart Over, the company doctor, who stated in the Medical Examination Report that petitioner’s lungs were clear and resonant, the “X-ray chest shows no evidence of active pulmonary disease”, and that Mead was “OK for employment.” Dr. Thomas Keely’s X-ray diagnosis for the company was “essentially negative chest.” Petitioner first went to work as a “process laborer” doing cleaning work in the middlings thickener, where the ore is processed in a chemical solution. After about two months he moved into the ball mills section of the mill, where he stayed for about 14 months, working as a "helper” to the ball mills operator for most of the time. His duties as “helper” included tending the so-called “ball mills”, where the ore is ground and mixed with chemical reagents. During this same period, he also did clean-up work where the ore drops from the storage bins onto the conveyor belts, sweeping up the dust in the area around the belt, cleaning parts of the machinery with diesel oil and other chemical substances, cutting a dry sample at the ore drop box, reaching his hand into the box for the sample every hour, and cutting wet bucket samples of ore mixed with the reagents, where he said the fumes had a “loud smell”.

Petitioner apparently was in good health throughout most of 1955, but in December of that year and January of 1956, he began to cough heavily and went to Doctor Goss at the Tucson Clinic, who reported:

“Due to the fact that Major Mead has an acute bronchitis which is aggravating his asthma I believe it would be better if he were given a job not associated with dust and moisture until he recovers from the acute phase of his illness.”

He was transferred then to the pump house where there was less dust but where he was still exposed to the wet ore mixture with the chemicals in it. Despite the transfer, he “passed out” while at work on April 14, 1956, and was taken to the Veterans’ Hospital, where he remained for about two weeks. After this hospitalization, Dr. C. A. Janda, the ward physician, stated:

“As a result of your recent * * * hospitalization, you are hereby informed that our clinical impression is that your major problem is episodal bronchial asthma and anxiety reaction, both of which historically have been present four or more years.
*35 • “Under the circumstances, occupations that involve inhaling certain fumes or dust clouds probably will at times cause recurrence of these two type symptoms. Your occupational rehabilitation should be made accordingly.”

Once again, Mead returned to work, this time in the filter room, where his duties included sweeping up the concentrate under the conveyor belt and spreading the loads around in the truck with a shovel. During this period, Mead was given a recheck examination by Meade Clyne, another company physician, who stated in his Medical Examination Report that petitioner had ■“acute asthma made worse by dust.” Petitioner was only able to remain at work in the filter room for about a month and a half, before being hospitalized by Dr. P. J. Angiulo, who reported, inter alia, that:

“The exciting agents that cause asthma are numerous and varied. Some of the commoner causes are extrinsic substances such as dust and pollens and intrinsic causes such as infection.
“Mr. Mead can trace his present condition to the inhalation of dusts he was subjected to while on the job at the American Smelting and Refining Co.”

Upon discharge, Mead attempted to go back to work on a labor gang outside the mill, but was almost constantly under the care of a doctor and unable to carry on the work after January, 1958.

In April, 1958, petitioner began treatment with Dr. Henry Stanford, a chest specialist. Dr. Stanford made multiple tests and studies of Mead, which showed that his,vital capacity was one-half a normal man’s measurement and his breathing capacity was 31% of normal. Dr. Stanford testified that Mead is more susceptible than others to outside stimuli, particularly to acrid smells as from chemicals, which in certain individuals can produce more irritation than in others.

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Bluebook (online)
363 P.2d 930, 90 Ariz. 32, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-american-smelting-refining-company-ariz-1961.