O'Connor v. Pillsbury Flour Mills Co.

267 N.W. 507, 197 Minn. 534, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 889
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 19, 1936
DocketNo. 30,831.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 267 N.W. 507 (O'Connor v. Pillsbury Flour Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor v. Pillsbury Flour Mills Co., 267 N.W. 507, 197 Minn. 534, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 889 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict of $18,000 against defendant in her action for damages founded upon the claim that she became afflicted with pulmonary tuberculosis while employed in one of its mills in Minneapolis, the basis for liability being the alleged violation of *535 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 4172, 4173, 4174, and 4176. These sections relate to heating and ventilating places of employment. Defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding was granted. Judgment was thereupon entered, and plaintiff appeals.

Her employment with defendant commenced in September, 1927. Before being engaged as an employe she was examined by defendant’s physician and was found to be free from communicable disease, including tuberculosis. The nature of her work was to pack flour into two- and flve-pound bags. It required three girls to perform this work. They changed with each other at frequent intervals as to the kind of work they Avere doing — packing, weighing, and sewing or othemvise closing the bags. Plaintiff continued in her employment until February, 1930, when it was found that she was suffering Avith pulmonary tuberculosis. Since then she has been under medical treatment. While her condition is somewhat improved, the evidence leaves no room for doubt that she is far from well. Her case is classified as being “improved.” This the court found “represents a mid-stage of the disease.”

In a memorandum of the most searching, helpful, and comdncing type, attached to the order granting judgment, the court fully covered what it concluded to be the determinative defects in plaintiff’s case. We shall not attempt to include the entire memorandum, covering as it does seven pages of printed matter. The following will suffice:

“It is admitted by the medical experts on both sides that no one can tell Avhen or Avhere the germ that resulted in the disease found lodgment in the body, and their opinions seem to justify the truth in the Avording of a current poster of a tuberculosis organization, ‘Anybody, any time, anyAvhere, may contract tuberculosis.’
“There Avas much flour dust in the room where plaintiff did her work. It Avas not always heated or Arentilated to her satisfaction.
“The experts all classified flour dust as one of the so-called ‘harmless dusts,’ and even included in such classifications the dust found in coal mines, their line of demarcation between ‘harmful’ and ‘harmless’ dusts being that drawn between ‘organic’ and ‘in *536 organic’ dusts. Tlio available records of this locality show that the incidence of tuberculosis is much less among flour mill toorlcers than in the general public. Plaintiff challenges the reliability of those records, but produces no others.
“Plaintiff’s sister began work in the same place and worked there five years. She is not now afflicted with tuberculosis, though she had worked in the same place and worked there twice as long, and in fact slept with plaintiff until the latter was discovered to have the disease.
“There is no record of any other workers in the place having contracted the disease, though some of them worked there many times as long as the plaintiff. The evidence fails utterly to indicate that tuberculosis is a disease occupational to the flour milling industry.
“At the trial eight women or girls avIio worked in the same environment with the plaintiff, ranging in periods of time from two to twelve years, testified, some of them for the plaintiff, some of them for the defendant. The inference is that the other employes making up the full force at any particular time was composed of more short-time workers, .and no evidence has been produced with respect to them. Outside, of plaintiff, none of the workers in that work and in the rooms they used contracted tuberculosis since 1921.
“In the main packing room of the defendant, where men are employed and larger sacks filled, 30 per cent of the men had been there between 15 and 19 years, 40 per cent had been there over 20 years, 94 per cent had been theré over 10 years. No packer employed there has died of tuberculosis since 1920, and there have been but 7 cases of determined tuberculosis since 1921. * * *
“It is the opinion of one medical expert called by the plaintiff that her tuberculosis is chargeable to the' condition of the flour existing in the air in the place in which she Avorked, of improper and inadequate heating and ventilation. The fair import of all of the medical testimony is that one may be harboring the germs of tuberculosis in his system unknown to himself, unless he submit himself to certain medical tests Avliich do reveal the presence of the *537 germ. And one may be in an apparently healthy condition and still have the germs in his system. * *
“It may be possible that conditions existing in the place where she worked did cause a development of the disease with which she is afflicted. But what shall we say of her sister, avIio worked beside her, and twice as long, who slept with her, and yet who did not contract the disease? What shall we say of the other workers, her companions, who worked in the same environment, some of them many times as long as she did, and who did not contract the disease? What shall we say of the lack of incidence of tuberculosis among workers, under tli£ same environment? What shall we say of the well-known appearance of tuberculosis in such surroundings as preclude any element such as is claimed to be the cause of plaintiff’s condition? What shall we say of the cold dwellings of innumerable families with which most of us have had our own personal experience, where the temperature drops far below that claimed here, before the stove or furnace is put into active operation in the morning? What shall we say of the thinly-clad young ladies who leave in a perspiring- condition a warm ballroom to get a bit of fresh air in zero weather ? Or of the school girls who breezily flit from one building to another to attend a class in our institutions of learning ? What shall we say of all those passing ailments of life, the cause of which we know not, but which we do know sap our vitality and make us prey to the ravages of those harmful germs that the medical profession tells us are all about us and in our bodies? We cannot ignore the things that are constantly before us. And in all the multiple environments of life, each freighted with the possibility that it may for the first time be the means of disturbing us to the point of lacle of resistance, can toe with any fair degree of certainty, years afterward, place our finger upon some one long-past incident and say, ‘There, that is the time when my resistance was so lowered that the germs of disease were given an opportunity to multiply in my system.’ To do so lies wholly in the field of conjecture.
“Though giving full faith and credit to the plaintiff’s testimony, nevertheless that faith and credit must be tempered somewhat by *538 her own admissions and retractions, as well as the conclusiveness of records that show she was at least mistaken.

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Bluebook (online)
267 N.W. 507, 197 Minn. 534, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-pillsbury-flour-mills-co-minn-1936.