Pero v. Collier-Latimer, Inc.

52 P.2d 690, 49 Wyo. 131, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
Docket1925
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 52 P.2d 690 (Pero v. Collier-Latimer, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pero v. Collier-Latimer, Inc., 52 P.2d 690, 49 Wyo. 131, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1935).

Opinion

*135 Riner, Justice.

This case arose under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Wyoming and the facts involved are not in dispute. They may be stated thus:

Claimant, Leonard J. Pero, some time in March or April, 1931, commenced work for Collier-Latimer, Inc., the employer, as an attendant on a rock crushing machine which was used to supply crushed rock for a highway construction job located some three miles east of Laramie, Wyoming. At that time, so his testimony is, he was in excellent health, about twenty-one or twenty-two years of age, and had shortly before been married.

Pero’s duties as employee were to see to it that the rock was properly fed into the crusher through a chute, which was provided with a gate. He stood on a platform alongside of the machine, with a long rake which he used to push the rock into it. His place was close to the mouth of the crusher, consequently, and about two feet from it, in fact, most of the time. This location was a very dusty one as it was on the east *136 side of the machine and the prevailing winds appear to have come from the west. His clothing, face and hands were all the while coated with the dust which arose from the operation of the crusher. During the eight hours of his working shift he was constantly enveloped with this rock dust. He seems to have been afforded no protection whatsoever from the flying particles and no one appears to have told him that there was any danger entailed through inhaling them until long after he stopped working for Collier-Latimer, Inc.

Allowing for time off due to broken machinery he was engaged in the occupation described for a period of about six weeks. About a week before June 29, 1931, claimant commenced coughing and continued to do so until on that date, or shortly before, he began coughing up blood. He immediately consulted a physician, who diagnosed his condition generally as pneu-monoconiosis and especially as chronic silicosis of both lungs and that it was caused by the “inhalation of sharp, cutting pieces of silica or rock dust, recently ground, and these sharp pieces in the lungs cut into the substance of the lungs and bury themselves in the walls or the lining of the air passages.” This in time produced “an increased fibrosis in the lung tissue— that is, a more marked deposit of fibrous tissue in the lungs surrounding the bronchi and the larger air passages near the hilus of the lungs.”

The workman was ordered by the doctor to stop work at once and to enter a hospital, where he underwent treatment from July 6th to 16th, inclusive, 1931. At the end of that time he was allowed to return to his home under the physician’s care until October 20, 1931. About seven months after he left the hospital Pero obtained work, first as a teamster and thereafter in a grocery store. In the last mentioned employment he was obliged constantly to lift heavy crates. This work necessarily demanded increased expansion of the *137 lungs, with a consequent tearing of the tissues, as the attending physician testified. Pero was obliged to stop this work five or six times for two or three days at a time, and finally, on the physician’s advice, gave it up entirely November 20, 1934. Since that date, until February 8, 1935, the date of the hearing presently to be mentioned, he was unemployed. He at that time had a wife and two minor children dependent upon him.

July 6, 1931, Pero filed his “Employee’s Report of Accident” in the district court of Albany County. In that report he stated that the accident occurred on June 26, 1931, and was caused by his inhaling limestone dust “while engaged in feeding rock crusher.” The nature of the injury was then indicated as “impairment of lungs” and that it had produced temporary total disability. July 23, 1931, the employer filed its report in the matter, wherein the statement was made that the accident was not due solely to the culpable negligence of the employee. The employer did not dispute the workman’s claim for compensation.

By appropriate court order, under date of July 27, 1931, which appears never to have been questioned by any one, claimant was awarded monthly compensation under the state law during the period from June 26, 1931, and, as the order read, “until able to return to some gainful occupation.” This order made the following findings of fact:

“That claimant was injured on the 26th day of June, 1931, at Laramie in Albany County, Wyoming, while in the employ of said employer: That claim has been made for compensation on account of such injury: That such injury was not caused by the culpable negligence of the said Employee and that said injury is described as follows: Infection in lungs, caused from inhaling limestone dust in rock-crusher, which injury has disabled claimant since June 26, 1931; That there were dependent upon said Employee at the time of the *138 accident his wife; That compensation should be awarded on account of such injuries.”

Compensation was duly paid claimant from the State Industrial Accident Fund pursuant to this order until November 26, 1931.

There is found in the record a letter dated December 16, 1931, from another physician than the one who had attended Pero, addressed to the Wyoming Industrial Commission, which bears the file mark of the district court at Laramie, Wyoming, under date of December 19, 1931. In that communication it was stated that Pero had been examined by him on November 9th, and also on December 16th, 1931, and no abnormal lung condition was found.

Thereafter the matter appears to have rested, no further orders being made, no additional compensation paid and no additional steps taken in the case until November 23, 1934, when claimant filed in said court his petition reciting the history of the case and alleging that the petitioner was then “unable to work or follow a gainful occupation.” It was prayed that the court set a day for the hearing, at which it might be determined “whether or not petitioner is entitled to temporary compensation or to permanent partial or total disability.” No adversary pleading seems to have been filed as against this petition.

February 8, 1935, the hearing sought was held, after all parties interested, including the State Treasurer, had been previously duly notified. At that time the claimant appeared by his counsel, the employer was unrepresented and the Assistant Attorney General of Wyoming represented the Treasurer. The claimant and his attending physician both testified. No other testimony or evidence was submitted. The physician whose testimony has already been referred to stated that “without further training or the ability to make *139 his living- in some other line I would say that he (Pero) is permanently totally disabled,” and that before he could engage in any kind of occupation he would have to learn some trade “where he would have a sedentary life in dust-free surroundings.”

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Bluebook (online)
52 P.2d 690, 49 Wyo. 131, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pero-v-collier-latimer-inc-wyo-1935.