Parson-Gibson Buick Corp. v. Fox

1931 OK 627, 4 P.2d 38, 152 Okla. 196, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1931
Docket22032
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1931 OK 627 (Parson-Gibson Buick Corp. v. Fox) 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
Parson-Gibson Buick Corp. v. Fox, 1931 OK 627, 4 P.2d 38, 152 Okla. 196, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 678 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

On December 13, 1929, Walter C. Fox was engaged in a hazardous employment with the Parson-Gibson Buick Corporation of Okemah, Okla., in the capacity of' an automobile mechanic, and on said date, while he and another employee were removing from a Buick automobile the rear bumper, which was wired on, he was struck in the right eye with a piece of wire, which he states was about the size of an ordinary clothesline and in his opinion was No. 9 wire. The other employee was working the piece of wire, which was estimated to be about 15 feet in length, back and forward in an effort to break the same. The accident occurred about 3 o’clock in the afternoon, and the claimant testified that he went to Dr. Medford at Okemah, Okla., and that the doctor removed an object about the size of the head of a pin from the right *197 eye; that the eye was sore and there was some bleeding; that he was off duty two or three days and then returned to work, but went with his eye bandaged up about 20 days; that about IS or 19 years prior to the injury he was “hit in the eye with a baseball on the side of the head,” and that his eye was crossed some since that time, not very much: that he could see out of the eye and never observed any difficulty in the vision until after the accidental injury on December IS, 1929, after which his eye became more crossed, and that his vision in same at date of hearing was very dim and that he could not use his right eye in carrying on his work as an automobile mechanic. At the time he was examined by Dr. D. D. McHenry on June 4, 1930, he had what the doctor termed an amblyopic eye, or dimness of vision. The eye at the date of his examination disclosed 20/200 vision in the right eye due to nonuse. The respondent Fox was examined by Dr. Spickard, of Okemah, Okla., on December 13, 1929, at which time the doctor found a little scale on the outside surface of the cornea and there appeared a little burned place on the eyeball. The doctor does not remember whether it was over the pupil or not. From his examination of the small scale removed from the eye he was of the opinion that it was a scale off of a battery and the burn was caused by the acid from the battery. He treated the respondent Fox on December 13th, 14th, 16th, 17th, and on the 20th, and discharged him as “fully recovered.” Dr. Spickard testified that he was the first doctor to treat the respondent Fox, evidently not knowing that Fox had been to see Dr. Medford, but he did not think he first examined Fox on the date of the accident. He also testified that the respondent Fox was cross-eyed before the accident. During the course of his examination he did not observe any indications that a wire had penetrated the eyeball. The only injury he found was the small acid burn caused by the scale, which appeared to have burned the surface of the eyeball to a small extent. Dr. Medford did not testify as a witness in the ease. Dr. McHenry, an eye specialist of Oklahoma City, testified that respondent Fox came to him on June 4, 1930, with a history that he had run a wire the size of a match in his right eye about December 1, 1929, and the eye was blind on account of it. The doctor examined the eyei and found it had been crossed for 30 years, and found the vision of the eye to be 20/200, “the usual loss of vision you get in a cross-eye.” He testified that this 20/200 vision found in the eye could in no way be chargeable to the injury because had any wire or thing been run into the front of the eyeball it would have left some decided sears, and there are absolutely no scars on the front of the eyeball; that the respondent has no pathology at all, he has an amblyopic eye, dimness of vision, because the eye is not used; that if one eye is crossed more than the other, the other usually has pretty fair vision; and that a cross-eye is caused by weakening of some of the .ocular muscles. The respondent Fox further testified that on November 8, 1918, he was examined for entrance in the United States Army; that the examination was made at Okemah, Okla., by Drs. Glass, May & Keys; that Dr. Glass was an eye specialist; and that he was accepted for the army and entered the military service; and that he did not sustain any injury prior or since to his eye. However, he must have been mistaken in this answer, because he testified at the same hearing that he was “hit in the eye with a baseball on the side of the head” about 18 or 19 years before the alleged accident involved in this action, and that after that his right eye was a little crossed, but not nearly so much as it was after the accident. He also testified that he had been working as an automobile mechanic for about 8 years, most of the time at Okemah, Okla., and that he worked for the Parson-Gibson Buick Corporation from about the 27th of July, 1928, until the 5th 'of April, 1930, at which time he was laid off on .account of the business not justifying the company in continuing him at work. Respondent Fox also testified that his cross-eye did not bother him before the accident; that he had frequently gone hunting prior to the accident, that he aimed with his right eye, and that he did not observe any difficulty in his vision. Roy Fox, a brother of and about three years younger than Walter O. Fox, the respondent, testified that he had gone hunting with his brother frequently, and went quail hunting with him on or about Thanksgiving Day, prior to the date of the alleged injury, in December, 1929, and that his brother used his right eye to aim; that he knew Walter O. Fox was a little cross-eyed before the accident, but was much worse since. Dud Smith testified that he had known Walter O. Fox about 7 years; and that his eye was crossed, but “one could just barely notice it.” However, the record as a whole discloses that all of the persons who came in contact with the respondent Walter O'. Fox observed that his eye was crossed.

*198 The petitioners submit this cause on petition to review upon four specifications of error:

“1. That the said order is contrary to law.
“2. .That said order is not supported by any competent evidence.
“3. TJhat the State Industrial Commission erred over the objections of petitioners, to wit: it piarmitted witnesses to testify as to the extent of premanent disability the claimant had in his eye when said witnesses! were not qualified as experts to testify on said subject and that your petitioners cannot set out said evidence in full at this time for the reason that it has not been able to obtain a transcript of said evidence.
“4. That said order on its face makes a finding that the claimant suffered a permanent partial loss of the right eye and further found that the claimant was totally disabled and made an order allowing total disability to said eye; that said order is conflicting and erroneous in said matters.”

Fox continued in his employment until April 5, 1930, after the injury in December, 1929, and did not file notice of injury and claim for compensation until May 12, 1930. His memory as well as his vision appears to be defective. In his original claim for compensation he gave the date of the injury as December 3, 1929. At the first hearing, page 9 of the transcript, the following questions were propounded to him and he gave the following answers:

“Q. In the course of your employment did you sustain an injury? A. I did. Q. On the 21st day of December, 1929? A. I did. Q. What was the nature of the injury? A.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 627, 4 P.2d 38, 152 Okla. 196, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parson-gibson-buick-corp-v-fox-okla-1931.