National Zinc Company v. Hainline

1961 OK 6, 360 P.2d 236, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 10, 1961
Docket39009
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1961 OK 6 (National Zinc Company v. Hainline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Zinc Company v. Hainline, 1961 OK 6, 360 P.2d 236, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 331 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

The present proceeding was instituted under the provisions of the Occupational Disease Amendment to the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 85 O.S.Supp., 1959, Sec. 3, Sub-divisions 7 and 16.

Claimant is a laborer, 55 years of age, who from April, 1936, until some ten months prior to his discharge, worked in close proximity to zinc-processing equipment at petitioner’s smelter in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. When increasing weakness prevented him from performing regular duties in the production department, he was assigned, in March, 1957, to lighter work in the bathhouse of the plant where he acted as a janitor. No longer able to continue in any capacity, he left petitioner’s employment on February 16, 1958.

Claimant is presently afflicted with a disease of pulmonary emphysema, the etiology of which is admittedly unrelated to his employment. It consists in distention of air cells and loss of elasticity in lung tissue. The condition is termed “insidious in its onset” and progressive in its development. Although claimant had experienced some difficulty in breathing since 1955, the affliction was not positively diagnosed until early in 1958. Compensation was sought on the theory that claimant’s exposure to fumes, smoke and dust containing some of the toxic substances enumerated under the occupational disease' statute, 85 O.S.Supp., 1959, Sec. 3, Sub-division 16, irritated, aggravated and accelerated the course of his *238 emphysema. It is undisputed that claimant is unable to perform any manual labor. The contested issue below related to the cause of his disability.

Depositions of three physicians form a part of the record. Two of them testified for petitioner. Dr. B, an expert witness for claimant, related in unequivocal terms that the long and continuous infiltration of noxious dust, as well as toxic materials emanating from the processing and smelting operations precipitated an aggravation and acceleration of claimant’s disease process. He emphasized the irritating quality of these substances, which, regardless of their toxic level, have an appreciably harmful effect on the course of emphysema.

Dr. A’s testimony, elicited on behalf of petitioner, is in substantial accord with that of Dr. B. Another physician for petitioner, Dr. L, explained that mercury, zinc, lead and cadium do not harmfully affect human lungs as their toxic action operates on other parts of the body. He conceded, however, that certain “nuisance dusts” are present in the air around the plant premises which are composed of “fine particulate matter” and “droplets of dust and fumes”. These substances, he related, while irritating to the lungs, do not cause “permanent irreversible damage to this organ”, unless their suspension in the air exceeds the “threshold limit” of fifty million particles per cubic feet.

There is lay testimony in the record that claimant, while engaged in the production department of the plant, was working in close proximity to furnaces emanating fumes and smoke from the processing of zinc and some lead. An occupational health study was made of the smelter operations by the joint effort of federal and state .authorities. The ■ survey, completed in October, 1953, was introduced in evidence and indicates that, while exposure to zinc and other metals' from fumes and smoke did not exceed-the “threshold limits” (human .tolerance level), the toxic metals were present everywhere in the dust in appreciable and measurable quantities.

The State Industrial Court entered an award for the claimant and petitioner seeks review.

It is contended that mere occupational aggravation of emphysema, a condition which in its inception was unrelated to claimant’s employment, does not, under our statute, constitute “poisoning” from metals enumerated in 85 O.S.Supp., 1959, Sec. 3, Sub-division 16, and may not in and of itself be regarded as a “disease” within the meaning and purview of the Occupational Disease Amendment.

85 O.S.Supp., 1959, Sec. 3, Sub-division 16 provides in pertinent part:

“The following diseases shall be deemed to be occupational diseases: (a) Poisoning by * * * (16) Lead * * * (28) Zinc.”

The terms of this enactment do not restrict its applicability to any specified pathology produced by exposure to the enumerated toxic substances. The provisions only designate the source from which harm must originate and declare that “poisoning” thereby shall constitute a compensable disease.

The term “poisoning” is not defined in the statute and has not heretofore been construed by this Court. As employed in lay parlance, as well as by medical writers, it denotes any morbid condition, local or general, produced by poison and is not limited in its use to cases where toxicity causes a systemic (general to the body) poisoning to the human organism. Watkins v. National Electric Products Corp., 3 Cir., 165 F.2d 980.

Since the Legislature did not see fit to restrict the scope of “poisoning” to any designated vocational pathology, and in keeping with the principle that the provisions of our- Workmen’s Compensation Act should be liberally construed, we are constrained to hold that “poisoning” within the meaning of the quoted statute, extends to any morbid condition produced by one of more of the enumerated toxic agents, which, either on inhalation, absorption, ingestion or contact, results in a harmful or *239 deadly effect on human organism, whether it be general or local. See Watkins v. National Electric Products Corp., supra, and the cases cited therein.

The occupational disease provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law are clearly an integrated part of the entire Act and must be construed in the light of the same liberal principles as are applied in cases- of injury or death from accidental causes. It is settled law in this jurisdiction that disability from an accidental injury which aggravates or accelerates a dormant disease is compensable, even though the physical condition of employee pre-disposes him to, or increases, the harm of a particular injury. We can perceive of no valid reason why a different rule should govern a situation, where, as in the instant case, the morbidity from compensable exposure to toxic substances as defined by statute, rather than an accident, augments or accelerates a disease upon which it is superimposed, so as to ultimately produce disability. In both instances the entire disability arising from the cumulative effect of a compensable harm combined with a non-occupational illness, interacting upon each other and operating together, furnishes the proper basis for an award. Marlar v. Marlar, Okl., 353 P.2d 17.

The provisions of the occupational disease statute of Kansas, which bear a marked resemblance to our own, were construed by the Supreme Court of that State in a similar manner. In Weimer v. Sauder Tank Company, 184 Kan. 422, 337 P.2d 672, it was held that an aggravation of emphysema traced to and precipitated by inhalation of toxic fumes from a metal enumerated in the Act constituted “poisoning” and an occupational disease within the meaning of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 6, 360 P.2d 236, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-zinc-company-v-hainline-okla-1961.