Ramsey v. STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'R
This text of 173 S.E.2d 88 (Ramsey v. STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COM'R) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Ruth RAMSEY, Widow of Gordon T. Ramsey
v.
STATE WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMMISSIONER, and Badger Coal Company, Inc., a corporation.
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
Stewart McReynolds, Howard Caplan, McReynolds & Caplan, Clarksburg, for appellant.
R. L. Theibert, Charleston, for appellee.
BROWNING, President.
Gordon T. Ramsey, a fifty-nine year old coal miner, employed by the Badger Coal Company, hereinafter referred to as appellant, was on February 22, 1967, pursuing his usual duties in the bottom of a coal storage bin. He was working with one Scott who asked Ramsey to get a file from *89 a tool chest which was situated on the third floor of the cleaning plant. Scott said Ramsey proceeded by a walkway to the fourth floor of the plant a distance he estimated to be one hundred and fifty yards and "assumed" that Ramsey walked down a flight of steps leading from the fourth floor to the third floor near the bottom of which was situated the tool chest. A fellow employee, Fridley, was working on the third floor and stated that about five minutes before he found Ramsey he heard "a loud noise and I didn't even know what it was." The witness had occasion five minutes later to go to the tool chest and found Ramsey about five feet from the tool chest and he stated that he was "right at the bottom of the steps" referring to the steps that led from the fourth floor to the third floor. Ramsey was unconscious. Scott who came to the scene shortly thereafter stated that "there was quite a bit of blood had come out of his nose and this right eye was swelling or had swollen." An ambulance was called, Ramsey was taken to a hospital and was pronounced dead upon arrival. The medical division of the Workmen's Compensation Department called Dr. Ahmet Erinc, a pathologist of Memorial General Hospital of Elkins, and requested him to perform an autopsy. However, the deceased had been embalmed in the meantime. The application of the claimant widow, appellee herein, for benefits was denied upon the ground that her husband's death was "not due to the injury received in the course of and as a result of his employment." The appellee protested, hearings were held and thereafter the commissioner entered an order affirming his previous ruling. On June 30, 1969, the Workmen's Compensation Appeal Board reversed the commissioner's ruling, holding the claim compensable, and on December 8, 1969, this Court granted an appeal.
The controlling issue in this case is not whether the deceased received an injury in the course of and resulting from his employment, that being undisputed, but whether his death was due to trauma or a "heart attack." Dr. Erinc, who performed the autopsy, testified that he found approximately 400 cc's of blood in the chest cavity. He also stated that there "was a hemorrhage behind the pharynx, the upper part of the esophagus * * *." He testified that those findings indicated that "there was some sort of trauma on the body and produced a rupture laceration and rupture of the lung and produced a hemorrhage in the right chest cavity and a bruise on the face * * *." He was asked if his findings were consistent with trauma and his answer was, "Most likely." He stated also that he found some arteriosclerosis but "as far as contributing to death, I don't believe it placed significant at all." He elaborated upon that statement this way: "There was no obstruction or there was no old or fresh or recent myocardial infarction on the heart muscles." He was asked on cross-examination if the deceased did not have "a bad heart condition" and his answer was, "No, he did not have." These questions were asked on redirect and these answers made thereto:
Q. Doctor, in your opinion, what was the cause of death in this case?
A. Internal hemorrhage.
Q. What caused the internal hemorrhage in your opinion?
A. Rupture of the lung.
Q. What caused that?
A. Trauma.
This witness described the swollen cheek to which reference has heretofore been made.
Dr. Joseph E. Martin, Jr., a medical internist, who stated that he had "paid particular attention for the last 18 years to diseases of the chest," had the deceased as a patient in a hospital in Elkins from December 7 through December 10, 1966, that being less than two and one-half months before his death. He stated that he treated deceased "for influenza and a probably [sic] myocarditis and pneumoconiosis, category III." He stated that an "electrogram showed a basically normal sinus rythm [sic] with frequent atrial premature *90 contractions." He explained in his testimony that "premature contractions" are not considered serious and that those with relatively normal hearts often displayed such symptoms upon examination. He stated that the deceased was suffering from "coal miners' pneumoconiosis with no other abnormalities, which means that the heart was of normal size and normal shape." He stated that when the patient was discharged on December 14, "His blood pressure was 136 over 80; there was a regular sinus rythym [sic] without premature contractions at a rate of 68 per minute. There were no abnormal sounds heard at that time." He saw deceased as an out-patient on January 25, 1967, when he found him "in good shape for a miner 59 years of age."
At a continued hearing held in Charleston on April 19, 1968, Dr. Grover B. Swoyer, pathologist at the Charleston Memorial Hospital and Dr. Benjamin Newman, also a Charleston pathologist, testified for the employer. Their testimony was based upon slides which Dr. Erinc had prepared at the time of his post-mortem examination, testimony and other parts of the record of the case, all of which material was furnished to these physicians.
Dr. Swoyer stated that from a review of the material he had available "I did not feel that I could make a definite conclusion on cause of death. I did feel from the study of the protocol and the slides and the rest of the testimony that there was not sufficient evidence to account for this man dying a traumatic death." He further stated: "I really felt that a more likely cause to explain the circumstances of this man's death would have been on a cardiovascular type of thing rather than a traumatic type of death." He stated that there was "a clearly demonstrable degree of coronary sclerosis in a heart which is probably enlarged." Dr. Erinc stated that the heart weighed 400 grams. No witness testified as to the weight or height of the deceased. Dr. Swoyer was of the opinion that the blood which was found upon the post-mortem examination in the chest cavity was the result of trauma resulting from the embalming of the body by the undertaker.
Dr. Newman reasoned from a hypothesis. He stated that there are three common causes of death: (1) poisoning, (2) coronary arteriosclerotic disease and (3) trauma.
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173 S.E.2d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-state-workmens-compensation-comr-wva-1970.