Mid-South Insulation Co. v. Buckley

396 So. 2d 7
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1981
Docket52403
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 396 So. 2d 7 (Mid-South Insulation Co. v. Buckley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mid-South Insulation Co. v. Buckley, 396 So. 2d 7 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

396 So.2d 7 (1981)

MID-SOUTH INSULATION COMPANY and Fireman's Fund Insurance Company
v.
Dependents of Casey BUCKLEY, Deceased.

No. 52403.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

March 25, 1981.

*8 Michael L. Knapp and Gary Jones, Daniel, Coker, Horton, Bell & Dukes, Jackson, for appellants.

Dan McCullen, Butler, Snow, O'Mara, Stevens & Cannada, Jackson, for appellee.

Before ROBERTSON, P.J., and BROOM and BOWLING, JJ.

BOWLING, Justice, for the Court:

This appeal involves death benefits under the Mississippi Workmen's Compensation Act sought by the widow of Casey Buckley, deceased. He died on September 26, 1975, primarily as the result of lung cancer precipitated and caused by breathing asbestos during the course of his employment. The paramount question in the appeal is whether or not appellant-carrier, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, the workmen's compensation carrier for the deceased's employer Mid-South Insulation Company, during a part of the period of exposure to asbestos, is obligated to pay workmen's compensation benefits to the widow.

We first should place in mind certain dates. Casey Buckley began working for appellant Mid-South Insulation in 1957. Prior to that date, he had worked for various insulation companies since 1938. He worked regularly and solely for Mid-South from 1957 until August 1967, when his health condition required a complete stoppage of insulation work. From that time, until his health and bodily infirmities led to his death, he did odd jobs such as selling used cars.

From 1957, when Buckley began employment with Mid-South until March 30, 1967, the workmen's compensation carrier was appellant, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company. From March 30, 1967, until Buckley was forced to stop working in August 1967, the workmen's compensation carrier was Employer's Mutual Insurance Company of Wisconsin. The primary question is which of these companies has the obligation of paying all or part of the workmen's compensation benefits undisputedly owed Buckley's widow?

The evidence heard by the administrative judge and included in the appellate record practically is undisputed. A discussion of that evidence is necessary before considering the law applicable thereto. The first witness was the claimant and widow, Mrs. Evelyn Ellis Buckley. She and Mr. Buckley were married in August 1929, and lived together continuously until her husband's death. She related the history of her husband's employment with Mid-South during the ten-year period in question. She described his appearance when he would return home from work, stating that he would have white dust all over his clothes and face; that this situation existed every day, as he worked with asbestos every day. She testified that in the early 1960's he started developing respiratory problems and breathing difficulty. He had developed shortness of breath and a lot of congestion in his chest and lungs. He did a lot of coughing. He started losing weight. The condition got no better and he was seen various times by physicians in Jasper County, the home of the deceased and his wife. He began to lose his strength and endurance. He would have extreme difficulty breathing and sleeping at night and would have to use items such as hard candy and cough drops to be able to sleep. Mrs. Buckley had not noticed her husband's complaints until the early 1960's. They both thought that during those years he was developing a severe case of bronchitis.

Witness James Vernon Baker testified that he had been an asbestos insulation worker since 1954. He had worked for long periods of time with the deceased. He described *9 the working activities around asbestos and how the workers breathed it continuously, with it filling their noses and throats. They would continually have to be blowing their noses and coughing.

The records of the University Medical Center were introduced in evidence concerning the treatment of the deceased during his terminal illness. These records were interpreted by witness Dr. James D. Hardy, who had been head of the Surgery Department at the University Medical Center for twenty-two years. The first of 1975 he began examination and treatment of Buckley for what obviously was a lung condition that could not be diagnosed at that time. He testified that Buckley was becoming increasingly short of breath and that the situation became so bad that he determined to recommend an operation to open the chest to try and diagnose the disease. This was done and Dr. Hardy found "a widespread lumpiness of his lung and a lot of whitish-looking scarring on the pleural surface, that is the lining outside the lung and we sent lots of this material over there [to the laboratory] thinking for sure it was cancer, but actually they did not see cancer but they saw asbestos bodies." This operation was on June 23, 1975. Afterwards Buckley got no better and nothing attempted to be done for him was successful. He kept going down until his death, as stated. In a report to Mrs. Buckley, Dr. Hardy stated that Buckley had "severe and extensive lung disease, in addition to his malignant tumor and that this was related to exposure to asbestos dust." In answer to a hypothetical question involving Buckley's exposure over the years, heretofore set out, to asbestos dust and the history as previously related by Mrs. Buckley, Dr. Hardy stated "I believe if he was exposed to dust over that period, yes, I assume it would have an effect on him." When asked about the causal relationship between the asbestosis and resulting death, and whether or not the asbestosis was a contributing factor to the death, Dr. Hardy stated, "I think it had a great deal to do. In fact, it was the cause of his demise." Dr. Hardy testified that once asbestos was breathed into a person's lungs, it tended to stay there and that it took "a long time, a good long time" for it to cause its maximum effects.

Appellants presented only one witness, Dr. Jon Michael Beall, who practices internal medicine in Jackson. He had never seen the deceased, but had seen and examined the medical records. He was first shown an x-ray report that was introduced in evidence by appellants. This was a report dated July 27, 1966, from the Jasper General Hospital, interpreting an x-ray taken of Buckley while a patient. The x-ray according to the report showed "interlobar pleural thickening on the right between the middle and lower lobes. There is a moderate amount of fibrosis in both lungs and there are a few scattered calcifications." The x-rays were introduced into evidence.

Dr. Beall was asked a lengthy hypothetical question that included testimony hereinbefore related and a more detailed history of Buckley's work around asbestos most of his adult life. Dr. Beall was then asked whether or not, based on that question and the x-rays and reports introduced in evidence, he had an opinion as to "when Mr. Buckley had asbestosis?" His answer was "on the basis of the information that we have available, I think that the clinical diagnosis of asbestosis could have been made, at least by this x-ray, in July of 1966." Dr. Beall then described the findings on the 1966 x-ray, although misinterpreted by the local doctors, that were compatible with a lung condition caused by asbestos. The doctor definitely made a clinical diagnosis of asbestosis present in Buckley's body in July 1966, and in his opinion Buckley had asbestosis at that time.

Originally claims were filed against the employer and both carriers. A non-suit was taken and a settlement effected between the claimant and Employers Mutual Insurance Company of Wisconsin, who as stated, was the carrier from March through August 1967.

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