Pocahontas Fuel Co. v. Godbey

66 S.E.2d 859, 192 Va. 845, 1951 Va. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 8, 1951
DocketRecord 3861
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 66 S.E.2d 859 (Pocahontas Fuel Co. v. Godbey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pocahontas Fuel Co. v. Godbey, 66 S.E.2d 859, 192 Va. 845, 1951 Va. LEXIS 232 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal presents for review an award of the Industrial Commission of Virginia against Pocahontas Fuel Company, Inc., appellant, which granted to John M. Godbey, appellee, compensation for partial disability due to silicosis.

The award carried into effect the majority opinion of the Commission to which one Commissioner dissented. 1

It is conceded that appellee was suffering from silicosis and was partially disabled when he ceased working for the company, but appellant denies that it is liable to him.

Appellant asserts:

(1) That appellee’s occupational disease did not arise out of and in the course of his employment as required by section 65-42, Code of Virginia, 1950. In this connection appellant insists that the evidence does not show that he was “injuriously exposed to the hazards of the disease” while in its employ, and thus his silicosis and disability have no causal connection with his employment by appellant;

(2) That appellee failed to give written notice of his occupational disease to appellant as required by section 65-48, Code of Virginia, 1950.

The evidence disclosed that since sometime in the year 1915 appellee had worked continuously in coal mines for several employers until he became partially disabled while in appellant’s employ and was forced to cease work on September 10, 1948.

Throughout these thirty-three years of employment his work had been principally that of loading coal except for a period of about two years, i. e., 1929 to 1931, when he operated a coal-cutting machine for the Pocahontas Corporation. His last and only employment by appellant was from June 21, 1946, to September 10, 1948. During these twenty-seven months appellee was en *848 gaged in loading coal four hundred and seventy-four days and in doing other work in the mine eighteen days.

It does not appear that any dust count was made in the mine during the time that appellee was employed by appellant, and thus the percentage of free silica present is undetermined. However, it is shown from appellee’s testimony and that of two other witnesses that throughout this period of slightly more than two years he was often exposed to sand dust of considerable concentration and density. He describes his exposure thus:

“Q. During the period from June, 1946, until September, 1948, when you quit, did you come in contact with any dust working in that mine?
“A. I believe I done it.
“Q. What kind of dust?
“A. Sand dust.”
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TP W W TV W IP W
“Q. Any dust you could notice?
“A. Yes, sir.”

Witness D. C. Slagle worked with appellee for about five or six months. Two months of his employment were in 1946 and the other three or four months were not long prior to the date appellee ceased work. ' He described the sand dust that obtained at times and the condition under which they worked as follows:

“Q. How heavy was the dust?
“A. You couldn’t hardly see across the cars.”
The material parts of the testimony of Doc G-reear, the other witness who worked with appellee in the mine, follows:
“Q. How dusty is it out there to you?
“A. Sometime it is pretty dusty.”
“Q. Did you come in contact with dust?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Will you tell us how and where you did come in contact with dust?
“A. I didn’t come into as much dust as he did. He was janitor. What he did was load a car of sand and rock and go up a half mile and load a car of coal.
“Q. What kind of dust is it?
“A. Sand dust and rock dust.”
# # #
. “Q. Could you see the dust in the air?
*849 “A. Couldn’t even see your buddy bardly.
“Q. What kind of rock is in that mine?
“A. Sandstone and draw rock. It was all dust.”

Tbe evidence further discloses that when appellee entered appellant’s employ, he was given a medical examination, and he was at that date apparently in good health and had experienced no known ill effects from his work.

In June, 1948, appellee began to cough and felt some weakness and shortness of breath. These symptoms were not then so pronounced as to cause him to cease work, but did prompt him to secure and X-ray examination by the mobile unit. The result of that X-ray is not disclosed by the record, but early in September, 1948, he called upon Dr. Sproles, the physician who made physical examinations of the company’s employees. Upon examination by that physician, he was advised to report to Blue-field Sanitarium, and he was X-rayed at that institution on September 13,1948. This X-ray actually disclosed some evidence of silicosis and also the possibility of tuberculosis. Appellee was not made aware of the fact that he might be suffering from silicosis, but was merely told that his trouble was tuberculosis and was sent to Pineerest Sanatorium, Beckley, West Virginia, for treatment for that disease.

He entered that institution on November 8,1948, and remained there until January 5, 1949. During that period additional examinations and X-rays were made to determine just what was appellee’s condition, and upon his discharge on January 5,1949, he was for the first time advised that a diagnosis of silicosis had been made, and that he was suffering from that disease.

On January 13,1949, appellee called again upon Dr. Sproles, who was still acting as medical examiner for appellant. His remuneration is paid by the employees through appellant by means of a check-off withheld from their pay. However, he is furnished a home by appellant and required to examine its employees and pass upon and report to the company upon their physical fitness and ability to work. In short, he acts as the company’s physician for examination of prospective and actual employees as well as to report upon the physical fitness of any employee who has been off duty because of ’sickness or injury.

The visit made by appellee to the physician was for the purpose of having him fill out “an insurance blank” needed by appellee to obtain disability payments on a group insurance policy *850 in which he was a beneficiary. On that date he presented to Dr. Sproles a statement from Pinecrest Sanatorium which disclosed that he was suffering from silicosis.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.E.2d 859, 192 Va. 845, 1951 Va. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pocahontas-fuel-co-v-godbey-va-1951.