Safety Casualty Co. v. O'Pry

187 S.W.2d 578, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1945
DocketNo. 4288.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 187 S.W.2d 578 (Safety Casualty Co. v. O'Pry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safety Casualty Co. v. O'Pry, 187 S.W.2d 578, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 691 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

Joseph O’Pry, while employed by the Magnolia Petroleum Company about November 1, 1943, was engaged in setting a blind in a gas pipe at that company’s refinery. In the course of that operation some bolts were unscrewed and while the two joints of pipe were momentarily open some gas, acid and fumes of gas came from the pipe. He breathed some of these fumes and immediately was severely affected by it. He had trouble breathing, began to cough and burn and could not see, went into the outside air and attempted to vomit. He finished his hours of shift on that day and continued to work for the company until he quit work New Year’s night of 1944. He had previously worked for a road contractor and for a ship yard in Beaumont. In January, 1944, a laboratory-sputum examination showed no tubercular germs and showed the presence of other ordinary pus forming germs. By September 5, 1944, the date of the trial, a sputum examination of O’Pry showed the presence of many tubercular germs.

O’Pry brought suit against Safety Casualty Company, the compensation carrier of his employer, alleging that he had suffered an accidental injury and disability thereby, and upon trial to a jury he was awarded compensation for a period of 208 weeks. The appellant has duly perfected its appeal from judgment making such award.

In its first, second and third points, appellant attacks the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the jury that the appellee had sustained an accidental injury and that the personal injury sustained resulted in total incapacity to work and earn money. The appellant maintains that since the evidence shows that the appellee lived with his wife and six children in one room, that a baby was born to his wife in December, 1943, that the husband worked shift work and sometimes slept day time and sometimes at night, his home surroundings show that he was the victim of a situation ideal for the development of tuberculosis; that the damage and infection of his lungs was not caused by a single incident which could be deemed an industrial accident but that his development of tuberculosis was a slow process, covering a number of weeks and months, caused by the slow and gradual inhalation of noxious gases so as to make his disability the result of an occupational disease rather than the result of industrial accident.

The following testimony was introduced for the appellee by the testimony of a physician:

“Q. Just what happened to this fellow between the examination in February and the examination here on the Sth of September ? A. Every body in this country, by the time they are aged fifteen, have tuberculosis. Of course, they don’t all come down with what we call a destructive tuberculosis, but they have latent tubercular germs in their lungs at all times, and anything that will reduce their resistance, either loss of sleep or influenza or irritant gases or what not, can bring about the lighting up of these tubercular germs in the lungs.”

*580 The following hypothetical question was propounded to the Doctor and the following answer was given :

“Q. Assuming this man (O’Pry) to have gone about his work, been a farmer, got a job out at the Magnolia in June of last year, went about his work until early part of November and while putting a blind in a pipe, apparently gas, acids or fumes from the work being done escaped, breathing them, and at the same time was very near what he described as the acid plant, and at the time they were discharging fumes from the acid plant, he inhaled those, at that time he immediately felt a burning sensation in his eyes, burning in his lungs, began coughing, found it necessary to leave his work temporarily and go out in the fresh air to relieve his condition. Assuming that to be true, that it really happened, and knowing his condition as it is now, from a medical standpoint, from your more than thirty years of practice and the teachings of your profession, do you see any connection between the inhalation of the gas or the acid or of the acid fumes and his present condition? A. Yes. This man could have had tuberculosis when this accident happened to him, but if he had any condition or had an irritation produced by the gas, it is possible that that accident brought this condition about.

“Q. Assuming what I say to be true, that he inhaled this gas and acid fumes like he said he did, set up this irritated condition, caused him to cough so severely he left his work temporarily and returned, and from then on, through the months of November and December he coughed worse and worse and the pain in his chest grew worse until the last of December, the first of January, he had to give it up, give up his job, and quit work. Now is that the course, from a medical standpoint, you would expect to follow from a latent tubercular condition being aroused by inhalation of an irritant? A. It could be.

“Q. Was that the history you would expect or would it be different? A. That is what you would expect.

“Q. Does that follow the logical pattern of your experience or would it be different? A. That is what you would expect.

“Q. Does that follow the logical pattern of your experience as a physician in gas causing the arousing of this latent condition and causing him to be in the condition he is now in? A. Yes.

“Q. That is the history of the case as far as it goes? A. That is right.

“Based upon X-ray picture and report made by Dr. Ledbetter I could not tell whether it was an abscess or not, the inflammation was so extensive — the inflammation of his lung was very extensive. Ledbetter couldn’t tell what kind of cavity it was. He was inclined to believe it was an abscess, and the laboratory report showed that probably it was an abscess. It could have resulted from any infection. Of course, irritant gases would irritate the lungs in such a way it makes it possible for an infection to come on, either influenza or any other kind of infection.”

From the foregoing testimony, and that of O’Pry himself, we believe the jury was warranted in finding that the appellee received an accidental personal injury in the inhalation of the gas and fumes, and that such inhalation of the gas and fumes was the producing cause of his tubercular condition and consequent disability. Appellant’s first, second and third points are overruled.

By its fourth and fifth points, appellant complains of the definition in the court’s charge of the term “accident” and of the refusal of the court to include in such definition a special instruction in regard to occupational disease. In special issue No. 5 of the court’s charge to the jury, a finding was asked as to whether the personal injury sustained by the appellee was an accident, and the term accident was defined as “an unforeseen, undesigned and unexpected occurrence of a calamitous nature.” Special issue No.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W.2d 578, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safety-casualty-co-v-opry-texapp-1945.