P. H. Reynolds & Co. v. McKnight

148 S.W.2d 357, 177 Tenn. 228, 13 Beeler 228, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 31
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 357 (P. H. Reynolds & Co. v. McKnight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. H. Reynolds & Co. v. McKnight, 148 S.W.2d 357, 177 Tenn. 228, 13 Beeler 228, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 31 (Tenn. 1941).

Opinion

Mb,. Chief Justice, GbeeN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a workmen’s compensation case in which there was an award for the employee as for the loss of one eye. The suit was brought against a subcontractor, petitioner ’s immediate employer, and the general contractor. *230 There was a judgment against both, the liability of the general contractor being made secondary. Both the subcontractor and the general contractor appealed. The court below denied judgment for medical expenses and hospital bill and the employee appealed from this portion of the judgment.

The principal controversy in this court is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the award in favor of the employee, it being insisted by defendants that the loss of his eye was not due to an accident arising out of his employment. The employee was a carpenter and while at work in Nashville sustained a fall in handling a ladder. He suffered a cut over his right eye and in some way received a blow on his left temple, the latter injury raising a considerable knot or lump.

Defendant Reynolds & Company, the subcontractor or immediate employer, sent the petitioner to a doctor. The doctor found it necessary to take some stitches in the cut over the employee’s right eye, but his attention was not directed to the bruise on the left temple. This accident occurred on Monday. In a day or two petitioner went back to his employer’s doctor and the stitches in the wound over the rig*ht eye were removed.

The employee undertook to work some on the day following the accident and for a few days thereafter. During this time he testified that he suffered severe pains at intervals about his left eye and on Saturday, following the accident on Monday, his left eye was giving him so much pain he went back to the doctor to whom his employer had sent him. On examination of the left eye this doctor told petitioner that the case was one for an oculist and petitioner thereupon went to Dr. M. M. Cullom, an oculist of high repute in Nashville, referred *231 to by other oculists testifying in the case as the dean of the profession in this city.

Dr. Cullom found that the petitioner was suffering with a severe case of iritis in this left eye, got from the petitioner the history of his accident, and began treatment of the eye for this affliction. Dr. Cullom was positive in his testimony to the effect that petitioner’s iritis was traumatic in origin and due to the bruise received in the fall on the first day of the week. Dr. Cullom saw evidences of the blow about the left temple'although the lump or knot had passed away.

Dr. Cullom continued his treatment of the petitioner for several weeks and finally dismissed him, the iritis, in the opinion of the doctor, having been cured.

After being dismissed by Dr. Cullom and supplied with glasses, defendant went to Birmingham to obtain employment and undertook to work there. In a short while he began to have trouble with his left eye, his vision being so affected that he was unable to perform his work satisfactorily or efficiently. He then returned to Nashville and reported again to Dr. Cullom where he was examined and Dr. Cullom found that a cataract had formed on this left eye.

The petitioner sustained this injury either the last week in September, or the first week in October. There is a controversy as to the date, to which we shall presently refer again. He went to Birmingham in December and returned to Nashville in January.

The cataract had not sufficiently ripened to permit of an operation when petitioner returned to Nashville in January. It was necessary for him to wait until the May following, at which time Dr. Cullom performed an operation and removed the cataract. The operation, however, failed to restore petitioner’s sight in the left *232 eye and vision in tliat eye lias been so impaired as to render the eye, industrially, a total loss.

Dr. Cullom, to whom the petitioner reported five days after the accident and who treated petitioner’s eye thereafter, as set out above, without any hesitation, ascribes petitioner’s iritis, his cataract, and the loss of his eye to the injuries sustained in his fall. The doctor expresses his opinion that the iritis and cataract were both traceable to the trauma so sustained.

The defendant introduces Dr. W. W. Wilkerson, Dr. J. L. Bryan and Dr. C. F. Hollabaugh, oculists of repute at Nashville, who, upon the history of the case detailed to them, expressed the opinion that petitioner’s iritis and cataract were not traceable to his accident. All these expert witnesses, however, rate Dr. Cullom’s professional ability as of the highest and, as before stated, refer to him as the dean of the profession in Nashville.

Dr. Cullom supports his opinion as to the cause of petitioner’s injuries by quotations from medical authorities. One of the authorities which Dr. Cullom quoted was highly commended by Dr. Bryan. Dr. Wilkerson and Dr. Hollabaugh did not think so well of this authority. Another authority from whom Dr. Cullom quoted was a head man in the Belleview Hospital at New York, and no question was made as to his reputation and standing.

As we have so often pointed out, on appeal in error, a compensation case is considered just as any other case from a law-court. If there is substantial evidence to sustain the finding of the trial judge, such finding will not be disturbed. Certainly the testimony of Dr. Cullom is a substantial basis upon which to rest the award made by the trial judge, particularly as his *233 conclusions seem to Pave support from standard medical authority.

In addition to the foregoing, Dr. Cullom having treated this man almost from the beginning of his troubles, seeing him and so frequently examining him, should have more accurate knowledge with regard to these troubles and their origin than the other specialists without such advantages.

The case for the petitioner is further strengthened by a line of testimony that defendants introduced. Defendants proved that iritis, or at least cataract, was frequently caused by old age, by syphilis, by diabetes, and by other diseases. The petitioner was only forty-seven years of age and several physical examinations, both before and after the accident, showed him to be in sound health, suffering from none of the diseases mentioned. The only suggestion of anything wrong with him was that in two of these examinations a urinalysis showed a slight amount of sugar. Further examinations, however, showed freedom from sugar and there was no claim by anyone that he had diabetes. A process of reasoning by exclusion, therefore, supports the conclusion that petitioner’s iritis and cataract was due to trauma rather than disease. At any rate, there is substantial evidence that the injuries were due to trauma and this court need not go further.

In disposing of the case the trial judge made some oral comment, which appears to have been taken down by the court reporter, and has been preserved in the bill of exceptions. Errors are assigned with reference to certain of these observations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 357, 177 Tenn. 228, 13 Beeler 228, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-h-reynolds-co-v-mcknight-tenn-1941.