Pate v. St. Louis Independent Packing Company

428 S.W.2d 744, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 727
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1968
Docket32886
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 428 S.W.2d 744 (Pate v. St. Louis Independent Packing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pate v. St. Louis Independent Packing Company, 428 S.W.2d 744, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 727 (Mo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis affirming an award of the Industrial Commission of this State in favor of the employee and claimant, Ernest Pate. The employer appeals. We will refer to Mr. Pate as the claimant and to the employer by that designation. We have determined claimant’s motion to dismiss this appeal should be overruled and will rule this appeal on its merits.

In appeals of this nature we are to view the record in the light most favorable to the findings of the Industrial Commission considering the favorable inferences which it had a right to draw from evidence before it. We will state the evidence in accordance with that rule except as to such portions of the transcript as it may be necessary to set forth in order to fully understand the employer’s allegations of error and the evidence pertaining thereto. Riggs v. A. P. Green Fire Brick Co., Mo. App., 376 S.W.2d 635; Mo.Digest, Workmen’s Compensation, ®==1939.

As originally filed the claim alleged the accident occurred in August of 1963 and defendant raised the question of the Statute of Limitations in its answer since the filing occurred on September 10, 1964. At the hearing before the referee claimant amended his claim and at trial testified the accident occurred “about” September 24, 1963. His testimony was he slipped on a piece of liver at work that day while pulling a *747 wheelbarrow type hand-truck with the result the handle of the truck jabbed or jammed him in the back causing him to fall forward. He felt a terrific pain in the lower part of his back but returned to work. The pain got worse and about forty-five minutes later he went to the dispensary and saw a nurse whose name he did not know. He told her he had “just had a fall” and hurt his back. The nurse wrote a report and gave him some pain pills whereupon he returned to work. At trial he identified the witness Jo Ann Scott as the nurse he saw on this occasion. Her testimony was that he did not see her about this accident nor concerning any complaints of injury to his back. She testified that she and Nurse Cothran were the only nurses working at the Company dispensary at this time. Claimant further testified that he came back to the dispensary between 2:30 and 3:00 o’clock on that same day and then saw both Mrs. Scott and Mrs. Cothran. The nurses sent him home, gave him some pills, and instructed him to see his family doctor. Again he was not examined. The dispensary records show the claimant was in the dispensary on October 1, 1963. The notation then made reads as follows : “States pains first started in neck 9-23-63, then spread to arms 9-25-63 now is in his back.”

Claimant went straight from work to see Dr. Younge, his family doctor. His testimony was Dr. Younge was about seventy years old and that when he tried to explain to him what happened Dr. Younge wouldn’t listen. He was given a heat treatment that day by Dr. Younge who also tested his reflexes and gave him an examination that lasted approximately one-half hour. He did not return to work the next day and after another visit to the doctor entered the hospital and stayed from October 7, 1963 until October 18, 1963. He did not describe the accident in detail to Dr. Younge or to anyone at the hospital. While in the hospital the only treatment he received was a hard bed and pills. X-rays were taken. The hospital record shows a notation as of October 8, 1963 by Dr. Younge as follows: “ ‘This man works for the Independent Packing Company. On the first of this month he came to my office with severe lumbo-sacral pain. He was treated but got no result and so he was sent to the hospital. He does quite a bit of lifting on the job, but does not know if this has anything to do with his back trouble.’ ” The hospital records also contain notes signed by the nurse on duty reading: “ ‘conscious and rational, CC (chief complaint) back injury, advised; * * ” The final diagnosis was lumbo-sacral sprain. The dispensary records are silent as to any accident such as that described by the claimant and Nurse Cothran testified that if claimant had described such an accident she would have entered it in his record. He was off work from October 2, 1963 to November 12, 1963. When he returned to work he did the same work as he had done before his alleged injury. He continued to visit the dispensary but the records show that after he returned to work his chief complaint was to his neck and he made no complaint about his back until February 4, 1964. Claimant testified he continued having pain in the lower part of his back and on January 15, 1964 he gagged while brushing his teeth; he coughed while in a leaning position with the result that he had sudden sharp severe pain across his lower back. He went to see Dr. Younge about three days later and reported this incident and received heat treatment and pills. He was again admitted to the hospital on February 4, 1964 and stayed until the latter part of that month. The hospital records note the teeth brushing incident but again are silent as to any alleged accident such as the one described by the claimant. When he came out of the hospital he went to the Company doctor who informed him he had the symptoms of a ruptured disc. The claimant did not tell the doctor about slipping on the piece of liver. The pain he experienced during this time was the same type of pain he had when he fell in September and which had continued since then. The treatment at the hospital consisted of heat, bed rest, and *748 oral medication. Claimant’s testimony was that no one at the hospital asked him how he was injured and so he told no one.

As soon as he was released claimant went to see the Company doctor. After claimant signed a statement he would be financially responsible for the bill, the Company doctor made an appointment for him to see a Dr. Morgan. Dr. Morgan examined claimant and recommended that he buy a back support and stay off work for two weeks when he should return for another examination. On March 12th Dr. Morgan wrote a letter to Dr. Maghee, a physician employed full time by the employer, in which he noted the following history: “The patient states he had the first episode of back pain in September of 1963 while lifting at work.” In response to this letter he received the following: “Dear Dr. Morgan: Please refer to your letter of March 12, 1964 regarding the above named patient. In your statement concerning the onset of this pain, our records do not show any notation of injury. Therefore, I do not think that this could be accepted as a compensation case readily. Accordingly, I would suggest that this be handled as an illness. This man’s insurance will cover diagnostic x-rays to a limited extent and, should he need additional hospitalization and treatment, the same would apply. May I suggest that your letter be re-submitted without reference to the controversial statement noted in the above paragraph. Very sincerely yours, ST. LOUIS INDEPENDENT PACKING COMPANY /s/ D. E. Cozart for Ralph V. Gieselman, M.D., Medical Department”. Dr. Cozart is employed by Dr. Maghee. Dr. Cozart denied any knowledge of this letter. Dr. Morgan then wrote under date of March 26 stating: “In reviewing this man’s past history and previous record, it would appear that the pain he is having at this time is entirely different than the previous episode. The onset of the present illness was sharp and sudden while bending over brushing his teeth on February 4, 1964.

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Bluebook (online)
428 S.W.2d 744, 1968 Mo. App. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pate-v-st-louis-independent-packing-company-moctapp-1968.