Nichols v. Kansas State Highway Commission

508 P.2d 856, 211 Kan. 919, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1973
Docket47,002
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 508 P.2d 856 (Nichols v. Kansas State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Kansas State Highway Commission, 508 P.2d 856, 211 Kan. 919, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 479 (kan 1973).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fontron, J.:

This appeal is from a judgment denying a widow’s claim for benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act for the death of her husband. The death of the decedent, Harold L. Nichols, is alleged to have resulted from a myocardial infarction.

*920 The facts surrounding the death have been stipulated. For some fourteen years the decedent was employed by the respondent, Kansas State Highway Commission, performing highway maintenance work in general. He was classified as Highway Maintenance I. From spring to early fall he performed mowing work. After the mowing season was over until spring Mr. Nichols was involved in a variety of general maintenance work such as truck driving, flagging, erecting snow fences, snow removal operations, repairing guard rails, etc. Each year for about thirty days during March and April the decedent, along with other highway maintenance employees, filled cracks in the highway. This work consisted of walking over the highway and filling the cracks with liquid tar from buckets weighing approximately twenty pounds.

Approximately twenty days prior to April 15, 1969, decedent saw a doctor for what the doctor said was a cold. On Friday, April II, 1969, he and other members of the highway crew began their annual filling of highway cracks. The decedent was tired when he got home that evening and co-employees testified that his hands had begun to swell that day. The next two days the decedent did not work, but on Monday, April 14, he worked the entire day, but was still tired. On the following day Mr. Nichols grew more fatigued and he looked terrible. A co-employee let him drive his truck while the co-employee took his place and filled cracks. The decedent finally became so ill he went home, and he died in a hospital later that evening.

An award of compensation was entered by the examiner in favor of Mrs. Nichols. On review, the director set the award aside even though he found there was sufficient evidence to establish a causal relationship between the work the decedent was performing and his resulting death. The basis for the director’s denial of compensation was that the exertion of the work being performed by the decedent was not more than his usual work in the course of his regular employment and, hence, that the case would be governed by the 1967 heart amendment to K. S. A. 44-501 (now K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 44-501). On appeal to the district court, the decision of the director was upheld and his findings were adopted. This appeal followed.

A bit of background needs to be supplied. K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 44-501 defines the obligation of an employer under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (often referred to herein as the Act). For present purposes the statute provides:

*921 “If in any employment to which this act applies, personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment is caused to a workman, his employer shall, subject as hereinafter mentioned, be liable to pay compensation to the workman in accordance with the provisions of this act. . . .”

This identical language was originally contained in Chapter 218, Laws of Kansas 1911, and has appeared verbatim in subsequent re-enactments.

In a succession of decisions stretching over the years this court had held that either disability or death attributable to heart or circulatory ailments was compensable as resulting from accidental injury under the Act where the stress or strain arising out of and in the cornse of a workman’s usual employment was the sole or a contributing cause of the injury, even though a preexisting heart or vascular condition may have been a predisposing factor. (Gilliland v. Cement Co., 104 Kan. 771, 180 Pac. 793; Mein v. Meade County, 197 Kan. 810, 421 P. 2d 177; Pinkston v. Rice Motor Co., 180 Kan. 295, 303 P. 2d 197; Hanna v. Edward Gray Corporation, 197 Kan. 793, 421 P. 2d 205.) Our decisions in such respect seemed to be in harmony with the majority rule in this country. In 1A Larson’s Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 38.30, pp. 541, 551, the author states:

“The preponderance of jurisdictions that now accept the usual-exertion rule in heart cases is almost two to one over those that reject it. . . .”

It was in 1967 that the Kansas Legislature amended K.,S. A. 44-501 by enacting the heart amendment which is involved in this appeal. It reads as follows:

“. . . Compensation shall not he paid in case of coronary or coronary artery disease or cerebrovascular injury unless it is shown that the exertion of the work necessary to precipitate the disability was more than the workman’s usual work in the course of the workman’s regular employment.”

There are two prongs to the claimant’s attack on the trial court’s judgment denying compensation. She first contends the heart, or 1967, amendment is not a restrictive amendment limiting application of the Act with respect to heart cases in general, but rather that the enactment extends coverage of the Act to cases of coronary disease, a malady which formerly had not come within the scope of the Act. She argues that adoption of the amendment did not disturb or overrule our case law as to cardiovascular injury, but that it brought heart disease cases under the sheltering umbrella of the Act, and she insists the amendment’s limitations apply only to cases of heart disease.

*922 In support of this theory claimant notes the use of the disjunctive “or” in the first portion of the amending statute: “Compensation shall not be paid in case of coronary or coronary artery disease or cerebrovascular injury. . . .” (Emphasis supplied.) Her argument proceeds somewhat along this vein, as we understand it: Coronary artery disease is a condition separate and distinct from cerebrovascular injury and the legislature intended to distinguish between fire two in workmen s compensation cases; that the legislature intended, through its amendment of K. S. A. 44-501 to add coronary artery disease to those compensable occupational diseases which are fisted in K. S.A. 44-5a02 while subjecting such disease to the limitations of the amendment; at the same time the legislature did not intend to change the decisional law relating to cerebrovascular or cardiovascular injury, or to subject such injuries to die limiting factors of the amendment.

We are unable to give a convoluted meaning to the amendment. K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 44-501 deals with injury by accident, not by disease. The term “accident” as used in the Workmen s Compensation Act has been defined as an occurrence which is undesigned, sudden and unexpected, and normally of an afflictive or unfortunate character, which is often but not necessarily accompanied by a manifestation of force. (Pinkston v. Rice Motor Co., supra.) It is logical to assume that had the legislature intended to bring heart disease, as such, within the ambit of the Workmens Compensation Act, the amendment would not have been added to K. S. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
508 P.2d 856, 211 Kan. 919, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-kansas-state-highway-commission-kan-1973.