Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. Brown

1931 OK 393, 1 P.2d 783, 150 Okla. 299, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1931
Docket21874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1931 OK 393 (Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. Brown) 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
Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. Brown, 1931 OK 393, 1 P.2d 783, 150 Okla. 299, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 374 (Okla. 1931).

Opinions

KORNEGAY, J.

This is a proceeding brought by the Prairie Oil & Gas Company to review an award made by the State Industrial Commission, on the 4th of October, . 1930.

*300 The award found that the claimant received an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment with the respondent below, now the petitioner, and as a result of the accidental personal injury the claimant has been disabled from the date of the accident up to this date, and is still so disabled. It further finds that the respondent below paid claimant one-half wages for a period of five months beyond the five-day waiting periodj entitling the claimant to compensation from July 5, 1928, up to the date of the award.

An inspection of the evidence introduced on behalf of the claimant, and also on behalf of the respondent below, is conclusive, as it seems to us, that the trouble with the claimant below was not an accidental persona) injury arising out of and in the course of his employment with the petitioner. The claimant himself did not act on that theory.

Sometime abopt the first of the year of 1927, the claimant presented a claim for an injury arising out of a fall while he was engaged as a truck 'driver in the employ of the Prairie Oil & Gas Company. Evidently he was settled with for that, and went back to work, though to work of a lighter nature, but he received full pay practically all the time after the injury, up to and including three days of the month of October, 1927.

A first notice of injury and claim for compensation in this matter was filed with the State Industrial Commission on the 17th of September, 1928, and the nature and extent of the injury at that time was “hemorrhage of lungs caused from heavy lifting.” The cause of the accident was given as “lifting flow line, which was being laid,” and the place of the injury was on the Hardjo lease near Newby, Okla., and the time was October 1, 1927. He stated that he was paid one-half wages from date of injury to Juné 21, 1928, but did no work, and his only injury was “permanent affection of the lungs.” There was a further statement that the employer, though requested, had not furnished medical attention, and the names of the attending physicians were Dr. L. J. Moor-man and Dr. A. A. Gregory, both of Oklahoma City. This was signed on the 25th day of July, 1928.

The evidence before the Commission was that of the claimant himself, and of his fellow workmen, and of the doctors, one of whom examined him in January, 1927, and one who examined him in October, 1927. Also, of Dr. King, who examined him several years before, when he entered the employ of the respondent below. Nobody seems to have known anything about the hemorrhage that the claimant stated he had as a result of lifting the flow line except the claimant. All of the employees of the Prairie Oil & Gas Company denied any knowledge of the injury, if an injury occurred.

The claimant evidently accepted what the company styled a “sick benefit” up until June, 1928, and there is nothing in the record to indicate that it was paid to him by virtue of a claim of accidental injury, sustained on or about October 1, 1927. The claimant’s own version of the matter indicates that the accidental personal injury was an afterthought, as being the foundation of his trouble. His symptoms, as detailed, indicate most clearly a pulmonary tuberculosis. At page 29' of the transcript, he says:

“Yes, I have hemorrhages at any exertion, such as lifting or hard work.”

His claim was that the doctors, about the first of the year, told him that he had bad tonsils and this caused a bronchial hemorrhage, and that by operating and removing the tonsils, he would be all right. He claimed that the hemorrhage occurred about 5 o’clock in the afternoon while they were working on the Hardjo lease, and that they finished about 5:30 or 6 o’clock. His claim was that, after he lifted the pipe, he felt a strain and had a hemorrhage. He gives the date of his injury as October 1, 1927, though from the time books it must have been two or three days before October 1st. He drew pay for three days in October

In response to a question of.the counsel, on page 35, on being asked to describe how the hemorrhage occurred, he says:

“A. When this hemorrhage occurred was right after left some 20 or 30 minutes possibly, and I was with Claude Wadley, Oharlie Deprew, and Jack Peppermet, but I didn’t tell those boys about it, but I went right to George Farbro, the superintendent, and showed him my condition, showed him blood on a piece of paper, which he carried out; his wife said she was afraid of germs; that was on Saturday night, some eight or nine o’clock. Q. At that time did you tell fiim you had strained yourself? R. Yes, sir. Q. From lifting on this flow pipe? A. Yes, sir. Q. I will ask you, Mr. Brown, whether or not you have ever received compensation from the Prairie Oil & Gas Company for your injury of October the first? A. Nothing, only half time for some seven or eight checks, only compensation I ever received. Q. I will ask you whether or not you were put under a physician and offered treatment after that second injury? A. On October the third I went to Mr. Wolf at Tulsa; he sent me to Doctor Mangam in the Mayo Building, and I am not positive. I believe he sent me to Doctor Lehvine for an X-ray. * * * Q. In order to refresh your *301 memory, the report from Doctor Lehvine to Doctor Mangam and I will ask you whether or not that is the first information you ever had, that the first they ever gave you that they thought you had tuberculosis \ A. That is the first time. Q. That made October 5, 1927? A. After this examination, I went back to Doctor Mangam at the Mayo Building that is the first time I really knew I had turberculosis, then, in November I saw the report. Q. You didn’t see this report in October? A. No, sir. Q. Saw it the following November? A. Yes, Doctor Mangam told me after I took this I had T. B. on Octobei 6, 1927. Q. Did you ever have knowledge of the fact that you had T. B. prior to that time? A. I never had any T. B. prior to that time, and neither has any of my folks or relations.”

His admitted associates on the work knew nothing of the accident, and he states that he did not inform them of the hemorrhage. From the course of the examination, conducted by the attorney for the claimant, it is evident that a hemorrhage occurred, according to the version of Mr. Brown, while he was at the house of Mr. Earbro. At page 85, the counsel puts to Mr. Earbro the question :

“Q. Isn’t it a fact, Mr. Earbro, that the reason you sent him to Tulsa was on account of that strain and him having a hemorrhage in your house? A. He had the hemorrhage, I sent him to Tulsa. I told him that 1 would see — I asked him to go to Tulsa, and I told him I would have to take it up' with the higher officials.”

Further along, this question was asked:

“Q. I asked you when he cáme over there and had that hemorrhage, did he tell you what caused the hemorrhage? A. Yes. Q. What did he say? A. He said he had T. B.”

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Related

Stillwater Milling Co. v. Mott
1948 OK 195 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1948)
Continental Oil Co. v. Pitts
1932 OK 536 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 393, 1 P.2d 783, 150 Okla. 299, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prairie-oil-gas-co-v-brown-okla-1931.