Pioneer Gas Utilities Co. v. Howard

1932 OK 60, 7 P.2d 435, 154 Okla. 239, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 26, 1932
Docket22694
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1932 OK 60 (Pioneer Gas Utilities Co. v. Howard) 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
Pioneer Gas Utilities Co. v. Howard, 1932 OK 60, 7 P.2d 435, 154 Okla. 239, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 410 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

On April 3, 1931, Frank Howard, as claimant, filed before the State Industrial Commission employee’s first notice of injury and claim for compensation, against Pioneer Gas Utilities Company, respondent, and Globe Indemnity Company, insurance carrier, in which he alleges that between January 20 and 30, 1931, he sustained an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment as a common laborer employed by the Pioneer Gas Utilities Company at Oklahoma City, Okla., caused by carbide blowing in his left eye. The claimant filed a motion *240 to have said claim set down for hearing in which he alleges, among other things', that on the 3rd day of February, 1921, evidently meaning 1931, while in the regular course of his employment as an employee of the Pioneer Gas Utilities Company, he was injured in the following manner:

“While he was using his hands as a funnel helping to fill a carbide lamp, the wind blew carbide into his eye, causing great pain and suffering, and burning the eye”

—and that as a result claimant’s sight has been seriously impaired and that there is great danger of his going blind in the left eye which would make him totally blind, as claimant when he went to work; for above respondent had already lost the sight of his right eye, which was brought to the attention of the respondent and they had full knowledge of his condition at time of their employment of claimant. Upon this motion being filed the claim was set for hearing before the State Industrial Commission at its office in the Capitol Building on May 29, 1931. The respondent and insurance carrier filed their answer in which they denied that claimant received an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, and when the cause was called for hearing before the Commission on May 29, 1931, the respondent and insurance carrier objected to the introduction of any testimony on the part of the claimant for the reason that due notice was not given the employer and insurance carrier within 30 days next after the date the alleged accidental injury was alleged to have occurred, and that no claim for compensation was filed or notice given until April 3, 1931, and for the further reason that such delayed notice has prejudiced the rights of this respondent and insurance carrier. Its abjection was overruled and exceptions allowed and evidence taken on different dates prior to the 8th day of July, 1931, and on that date the State Industrial Commission made and entered its findings and order for compensation in which it found:

“(1) That, on and prior to January 30, 1931, claimant was “in the employ of respondent and engaged in a hazardous occupation as the same is defined by the Workmen's Compensation Law of the state of Oklahoma, and on said date sustained an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, resulting in a partial loss of vision in the left eye.
“(2) That the average daily wage of claimant at the date of said accident was $4 per day.
“(3) That claimant was temporarily totally disabled from January 30,1931, to June 12, 1931, the date of the hearing, less the statutory five days’ waiting period.
“ (4) That claimant, previous to said accident, had sustained the complete loss of use of his right eye, and that as a result of said injury, claimant sustained a 25 per cent, loss of vision in his left eye, which is a partial permanent loss.”

Within the time allowed by law the respondent and insurance carrier commenced this proceeding to review said findings and award, and assigned several errors which they urge for a reversal of the award. The first one argued in their brief is that:

“Claimant failed to give the statutory notice of the alleged injury to the prejudice of your petitioners and the award is therefore contrary to law.”

It was admitted by claimant that he did not give written notice to the Pioneer Gas Utilities Company of the injury as required by section 7292, C. O. S. 1921. His excuse for not doing so was that he needed the work and did not want to lay off. It is claimed, however, by claimant that his failure to give his employer and the insurance carrier the written notice should be excused for the reason that another workman by the name of Earl Veach (Veitch), the generator man, orally notified Mr. Gibson, the foreman on the job, that carbide blew in the eye of the claimant. Mr. Veach upon the trial testified that on two occasions he advised Mr. Gibson that carbide .blew in the eye of claimant. Mr. Gibson testified as a witness at the trial that Veach did not give him any such notice and that he did not have any notice or knowledge of the accident and Mr. Gleason, manager of the Pioneer Gas Utilities Company, with'offices in Oklahoma City, testified that he did not have any notice or knowledge of the accident until about the 3rd day of April, 1931. Dr. G. O. Hall testified that he treated the claimant from the 3rd day of April until the 27th day of April. He testified that the claimant gave him a history that:

“While working for the Pioneer Gas Utilities Company on or about the 25th of January, -1981, claimant was filling an acetyline tank for a welding machine and got some of the carbide in his eye, that he reported the matter, and with no treatment previous, at that time he didn’t think it amounted to much, but he said his eye kept getting worse when he came to me and had quite an inflammation of the conjunctiva, the membrane lining the eye. I noticed one of his eyes already had been removed, he was wearing an artificial eye, and also had a ptery-gium — had little tumor made up by the fold *241 of the conjunctiva inner membrane, that cover the eyeball; and is produced by irritation, it kept growing from the inner side of the eye. up towards the cornea, towards the pupilary, there was quite a little lacrimal, the eye was watering some, minute scar formation in the eye. I treated him up to the 27th of April, there was considerable of this inflammatory had been removed, his eye was in a better condition; the ptery-giums can only be removed ¡by a surgical operation and I advised the Globe Indemnity Company — corporation, I understood carried the insurance on the case, and advised them, and received a letter in which they denied any- liability for the Naim, and decided not to have anything to do with having the man treated.”

Dr. Hall further testified that:

“Pterygiums is caused by any irritating substance, due to dust and wind, pterygium is one of the commonest ailments of the eye, for instance a Texas cowboy, exposed to the wind, developes pterygiums.”

¡He also testified that calcium carbide in, the eye would produce pterygiums. Dr. Hail further testified:

“I don’t think it is possible to form an accurate estimation, the loss of vision, unless you carry on your treatment to the limit; however, as the case stands now, he has probably 25 or SO per cent, loss of this eye.”

He further testified that he thought an operation would correct the defects and reduce the loss of vision to 10 or 15 per cent. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 60, 7 P.2d 435, 154 Okla. 239, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-gas-utilities-co-v-howard-okla-1932.