Parks & Hull Appliance Corp. v. Reimsnyder

9 A.2d 648, 177 Md. 280, 1939 Md. LEXIS 254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 29, 1939
Docket[No. 43, October Term, 1939.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 648 (Parks & Hull Appliance Corp. v. Reimsnyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parks & Hull Appliance Corp. v. Reimsnyder, 9 A.2d 648, 177 Md. 280, 1939 Md. LEXIS 254 (Md. 1939).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In the month of January, 1936, Charles Rudolph Reimsnyder, the appellee, was employed by the Parks & Hull Appliance Corporation, one of the appellants, as a helper in the employer’s business as a distributor for Westinghouse refrigerators and electrical appliances. During the spring and summer of that year the principal work of Reimsnyder was that of delivering and installing refrigerators, and in servicing or performing general work in connection with them.

The mechanism of the refrigerant is sealed and in one unit, and in event of the failure of the unit to function, it was necessary to remove the mechanism from the *283 refrigerator and take it to the plant of the employer, from which point it was usually shipped to the manufacturer for overhauling and repair. At times, when a unit would break down, fumes from chemicals used as refrigerants, among them sulphur dioxide, would escape, thereby endangering the health of those inhaling these poisonous gases; and the employer, recognizing this contingency, provided gas masks for those of its employees engaged in the line of work indicated.

Reimsnyder testified that on July 7th, 1936, in company with a fellow employee, he was sent to change a unit on an old refrigerator in which one of the gas lines had been broken, and from which gas had been escaping for some time within a small basement room where the work of removing the unit was performed. At the time there was only one gas mask available, and this was used by the fellow employee, with the consent of Reimsnyder.

Testifying as to the incidents connected with the above mission, the appellee stated that during the course of the operation the fumes were so intense as to render him quite sick. It was an unusual case and caused him to go out and rest in his truck. After being in the open air a while, he felt better, and returning to the scene of his work, completed the job of removing the unit. He then testified as follows: “Q. What effect at that particular time did this sulphur dioxide gas have upon you? A. At that time I got very sick and it seemed like it clogged my breathing system, and I developed a cough, and it made me very sick. At that time it got me so badly that I couldn’t hardly breathe.”

The testimony of the appellee tends to show that usually the fumes due to the escape of gas were mild, and did not affect him; and he attributed the intensity of the presence of gas in the instant case to the fact that pitch, which was generally placed around the gas lines of a unit, had broken away from the lines, thereby enabling the gas to escape in greater volume.

Further testifying, the witness stated that, after the above occurrence, every time he came in contact with *284 the gas, a cough and irritation in his chest would develop; that the cough gradually grew worse each time, “blood started to come with his phlegm,” and each time he ' coughed he had a sensation more or less like a cold. He continued to work with the same employer until December 9th, 1936, and his first visit to a doctor was in November of that year. On December 11th, 1936, an X-ray of the appellee’s lungs was made, which showed symptoms of tuberculosis; and upon the advice of a specialist he was admited to a hospital on December 16th, for the purpose of having one of his lungs collapsed. He left the hospital on December 24th, 1936, and remained home under the care of a physician until the spring of 1937. According to the appellee, he did not discuss the matter of his claim for compensation with the agents of his employer until the spring of 1937. At that time he saw Mr. Roche, the treasurer, and Mr. Ford, the cashier, of his employer, on several occasions, “and each time I would ask them, they would either say that they would do something for me or see about it, or put it off in some other way.”

“Q. Did Mr. Roche tell you to do anything about compensation? A. Well, each time — one time I would go in and he wouldn’t be there and I would ask Mr. Ford, * * * and the last time I asked him what I was to do about it * * * and he said he would see what he could do about it. “The Court: Who told you that? A. Mr. Roche. * * * I would ask either Mr. Roche or Mr. Ford about compensation, and the last time I asked him about it he told me he would see what he could do, and then * * * he told me the only thing he could do would be for me to write him a letter stating my claim to him.”

The appellee then testified that he complied with the above request on October 5th, 1937, and his letter appears in the record. By it, he advised his employer of his continued illness, “due to adverse working conditions” while in such employment, and expressed a desire to apply for compensation. By agreement of counsel, other correspondence was read into the record as follows:

*285 On October 11th, 1937, Mr. Roche wrote the appellee that a letter received by him from appellee’s doctor was extremely weak, and suggested that: “In view of the tone of his (the doctor’s) letter, it will now be necessary for you to write us, making your claim for compensation in that way. We will then use your doctor’s letter to support your claim and submit the same to our insurance attorneys.” On October 23rd, 1937, Mr. Roche, as treasurer of the employer and in its name, wrote the appellee acknowledging the letter of October 5th, 1937, and stating: “Due to the fact that we have never had any complaint whatever from our employees, relative to ‘adverse working conditions,’ we will appreciate your being more explicit, so we may be in a position to determine the merits of your claim. In view of the fact that any claims made by you must be referred to the compensation commission, we will appreciate your making sure that all letters you send are signed, as typewritten signatures can scarcely be considered in such a matter.” On October 26th, the appellee replied to the next above letter, detailed the circumstances of his illness, and expressed the request that the matter be given immediate attention because of the great need of the writer for some compensation. The latter letter was followed by a letter dated October 27th, 1937, signed by Mr. Roche as treasurer of the employer, in which the appellee was advised that all correspondence between the parties had been referred to Mr. Luden Lowndes, a representative of the firm carrying the employer’s compensation insurance. The letter concluded with the statement that the matter was then out of the employer’s hands and in the hands of its insurance agents. And the record reveals, according to the testimony of the appellee, that on October 29th, 1937, he called on Mr. Wells of the insurer’s firm, who filled out a statement of the claim which the appellee signed; that Mr. Wells told the appellee he would refer the claim to the insurance company and let him know in a short time later when he would hear from them; that a week or ten days later, Wells called the appellee, *286 told him to come to see him, and that when he did see him he was told by Wells that he was then unable to do anything with the company, but that he would see Dr.

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9 A.2d 648, 177 Md. 280, 1939 Md. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-hull-appliance-corp-v-reimsnyder-md-1939.