Rust Engineering Co. v. Ramsey

76 S.E.2d 195, 194 Va. 975, 1953 Va. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 1953
DocketRecord 4074
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 76 S.E.2d 195 (Rust Engineering Co. v. Ramsey) 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
Rust Engineering Co. v. Ramsey, 76 S.E.2d 195, 194 Va. 975, 1953 Va. LEXIS 166 (Va. 1953).

Opinion

HudgiNs, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal presents for review an award entered by the Industrial Commission of Virginia against Bust Engineering Company in favor of C. C. Bamsey for injuries resulting from an alleged accident.

C. C. Bamsey, hereinafter designated “claimant,” was an iron worker, employed during a part of February, 1949, by Bust Engineering Company, hereinafter designated “employer,” on a construction job at Beusens, near Lynchburg, Virginia. Between 9:00 and 10:00 a. m. on Wednesday, February 9, 1949, claimant complained of being sick. William I. Belcher, his foreman and immediate superior, observed that he was pale and “looked funny,” and advised him to stop work and lie down in the “shanty.” Later in the day Belcher took him to a physician’s office in Lynchburg.

Claimant, in his deposition taken on October 26, 1950, approximately twenty months after the alleged accident, said that after he went into the doctor’s office on February 9, 1949, he “just passed out,” and did not remember anything until “just a few months” before that date (October 26,1950).

Doctor H. B. Luttrell stated that “this man came into my office Feb. 12, 1949. At this time he complained of numbness in right arm. He stated that this numbness followed an injury a few days previous (he was lifting a heavy object at the time). Examination at this time showed weight 241 lb., chest negative, blood pressure 128/80, trace, blood Wassermann negative. Two days later when seen in his home blood pressure had gone up markedly. He was disorientated,.in fact in a semiconscious state. He appeared to have weakness in both right arm and leg. This weakness was probably due to Cerebral Hemorrhage. It is possible the hemorrhage was due to the injury. I did not see this man after Feb. 14,1949.”

Doctor Charles Gr. Fox testified that when he examined claimant in his home in Pulaski on February 14, 1949, he found his blood pressure was 195/110. He was unable to speak except for a few disconnected phrases. The doctor, basing his opinion *977 the history of the case as given by the patient, said claimant had. “had a cerebro-vascular accident, most likely of venous origin” and that he was paralyzed after February 17,1949; that after following the clinical course outlined for the patient in his home, claimant’s blood pressure declined and his condition improved.

Employer’s first contention is that claimant is not entitled to compensation because he did not prove an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.

The only testimony tending to prove that there was an accident arising out of and in the course of the employment emanates from claimant himself. He testified he was 49 years of age and that on February 9, 1949, while he and four co-workers were lifting a conveyor or “a section of L-beam” (weighing from 500 to 700 pounds), the hold of one of the workers slipped and “he gave up his hold on it and I carried it on. There was one man on my side and three on the other side.” Claimant testified further that thereafter he was “feeling bad,” his right arm hurting him, and that on the advice of William I. Belcher, his foreman, he went to a “shanty” and stayed about an hour, when Belcher took him to a doctor’s office in Lynchburg where he became unconscious.

Claimant introduced as witnesses in his behalf Walter Parrish and R. W. Bruce, two men who were helping him lift or unload the steel beam, and J. A. Jones, a master mechanic who was working for the same employer, and who was in close proximity to the five men who were unloading the beam. None of these witnesses testified that he was aware of an accident, or knew of any unusual or fortuitous circumstance resulting in injury to claimant. Parrish said that after the. beam was unloaded, claimant remarked that he had caught all of the load. He saw claimant staggering and upon being asked what was wrong, claimant said he was ‘ ‘ dizzy. ’ ’ R. W. Bruce testified that claimant told him that the foot of one of the workmen slipped, throwing the weight of the beam on him. Later he heard claimant complain of a pain in his back.

Jones testified that he knew nothing about an accident, but that on the night of February 9,1949, claimant asked him to rub his arm and while doing so, claimant asked him “did you see those boys throw the load on old Apple?” (a nickname for claimant). On the same occasion claimant told him that the doctor had treated him for an upset stomach.

*978 These witnesses were present at the time claimant claims' to have injured and were in position to see any unusual occurrence that may have taken place. All they knew of an accident was what claimant told them after the beam had been unloaded. Claimant, in his deposition and in his testimony, gave two accounts of how he sustained an injury. One was to the effect that while the five men were unloading the beam the hold of one slipped and he (claimant) had to carry the whole weight on his side. The other is that the conveyor slipped off the truck and he “caught hold of it and went on down with it and it was too much for me.” Neither of these two accounts is in accord with the self-serving declarations that he made to- three of his co-workers. The result is that we have various different accounts of how the alleged accident occurred, all emanating from claimant himself and uncorroborated by any other evidence..

It is incredible that an accident could have occurred in any of the ways described by claimant without the knowledge of any of the four men who had hold of the same beam at the time.

Section 65-94 of the Code provides “that an award of the Commission shall be conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact.” In applying this section, we have repeatedly held that the Industrial Commission’s finding of fact which is sustained by credible evidence is binding upon this court. A. N. Campbell & Co. v. Messenger, 171 Va. 374, 199 S. E. 511; Stump v. Norfolk Shipbuilding Corp., 187 Va. 932, 48 S. E. 2d 209; Lynchburg Foundry Co. v. Irvin, 178 Va. 265, 16 S. E. 2d 646.

In Byrd v. Stonega Coke, etc. Co., 182 Va. 212, 220, 28 S. E. 2d 725, after stating the foregoing rule, we said: “The converse of this proposition is equally true; namely, if there is no credible evidence on which the Commission’s finding of fact is based, then such finding is not binding upon this court. The question then becomes a question of law. ’ ’

Mr. Justice Eggleston, speaking for the Court in Holt v. Stone, etc. Engineering Corp., 179 Va. 625, 629, 20 S. E. 2d 498, said: “ * * * an award which is unsupported by the evidence is illegal and should be set aside.”

Employer’s second contention is that the evidence does ■not prove that the alleged accident was a proximate or producing cause of claimant’s disability.

Doctors Fox and Luttrell testified that claimant’s malady developed into a cerebral hemorrhage, which might have been *979

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E.2d 195, 194 Va. 975, 1953 Va. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rust-engineering-co-v-ramsey-va-1953.