Shepard v. Robinson

451 S.W.2d 329, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1068
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1970
DocketNo. 54569
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 451 S.W.2d 329 (Shepard v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard v. Robinson, 451 S.W.2d 329, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1068 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

HENRY I. EAGER, Special Commissioner.

This appeal arises out of a claim against the Second Injury Fund for Workmen’s Compensation benefits. The claimant lost and has appealed. We shall need to state the facts in some detail. We have jurisdiction because the State Treasurer is a party.

Claimant was an automobile mechanic. He worked for White Motor Company in Kansas City for about eight or nine years; in the fall of 1963 he was first employed by Rudy Fick, Inc., the employer in the present controversy. There he worked in a large second floor room 70-80 feet long and 30-50 feet wide, as thus vaguely described. The business was located at Pershing Road and McGee Street in Kansas City. There were eight windows along one side but, according to claimant, they were usually kept closed by the painters to keep the dust out. The room was divided into “stalls” merely by painted lines, with a row down the length of the room on each side. Claimant had two stalls on the west side of the room; another mechanic had stalls on the south side of his, and painters used the stalls immediately north of his stalls. The “body” men worked on the other side of the room. Claimant testified also: that the painters were furnished respirators but that he “rarely if ever saw them put one on”; that he was furnished none; that spray painting went on every day; that the atmosphere “was heavy sometimes,” and that the fumes smelled like paint; that he would at times have to walk out and stay a few minutes to get air and that he would become nauseated and faint; that the amount of painting varied; that he “made a grievance out of it with the union” about two weeks before May 4, 1964, but that the foreman then told him that if “he didn’t like it” he could get out; that there was one rather small exhaust fan which had “paint corrosion” on it and that he “didn’t see it run” and he did not think it would run. Cars and trucks were moved in and out of this area and, of course, the motors were running in the process of moving, if not also at times when they were being worked on. The plaintiff’s testimony emphasized the paint fumes which he could smell, but not particularly the carbon monoxide which presumably he could not smell.

On May 4, 1964, claimant first installed a “West Coast” mirror on a truck, beginning about 8:00 a. m.; in the next stall to the north was a cattle truck, parts of which were being sanded and painted; he noticed that the painter was spraying that truck about 9:30, and the fumes were blowing “back in toward, directly toward, back in kind of up under my truck pretty heavy,” and claimant testified that he felt nauseated and sick. At that time claimant was working on a car or truck with a damaged radiator. At about 10:00 o’clock he stepped up on a metal crate (as he had frequently done) so that he could better reach over the fender; he collapsed, and the next thing he became conscious of was his presence in St. Mary’s Hospital. He was attended there for five days, and then went to his home in Ft. Scott, Kansas.

Claimant had sustained three prior com-pensable injuries: (1) an injury to a lumbar disc in 1958 or 1959, for which surgery was performed; he received a settlement of about $3,000; (2) an injury to his “neck,” about 1961, when a differential fell on him; this also required surgery; he was paid about $2,000 and was off work for about nine months; (3) an injury to his “hand” or lower forearm incurred when a piece of metal was projected into it; this was removed but subsequent surgery was required; he was paid about $1,-500 for this. Plaintiff testified that each and all of these injuries left him somewhat incapacitated, although he returned to his regular work; the incapacities were, supposedly : an inability to do heavy lifting, a weakness in his left hand, pain upon sudden movement of his neck, and, from the third injury, a loss of the “grip” in his right hand. When heavy lifting was required plaintiff said that he got someone to [331]*331help him. Plaintiff testified: that .because of these injuries he was assigned to lighter work at White Motors; that he took a regular mechanic’s job at Rudy Fick’s, but suffered considerable pain in doing the work.

Claimant had suffered over the years from sundry ailments in addition to his injuries, including, according to his family physician, Dr. Basham: bronchial pneumonia, sinusitis, degeneration of a lumbar disc, bursitis of a shoulder, arthritis in one hand, a blackout spell in 1961, pulmonary emphysema, a collapse in December, 1963 (at which time he was reported as having a duodenal ulcer), a gastrointestinal hemorrhage in January, 1964, with a 66% hemoglobin (about two-thirds of the normal) and sundry coughs, chills, colds and “flu.” In August, 1966, claimant was diagnosed as having arteriosclerotic heart disease, but there seems to have been no specific finding of this before May 4,1964.

The medical testimony, taken by deposition from two physicians, is rather voluminous. In view of the points made here oh the evidence, it will be necessary to summarize it. Dr. James J. Basham, a general practitioner in Ft. Scott, Kansas, was claimant’s family physician. He furnished much of the above statement of claimant’s prior history. He saw claimant on May 16, 1964, at his home. His diagnosis was, “cerebral vascular spasm, secondary to inhalation of paint fumes * * Claimant then had many complaints, including pains, general weakness, sleeplessness and a certain amount of anaesthesia in the hands and wrists. The doctor administered pain killers, and continued to see him from time to time up to the time of the doctor’s deposition in October, 1966. During this period claimant suffered with shortness of breath, blackout spells, severe headaches, exhaustion and arteriosclerotic heart disease. The doctor recommended that he see a neurologist, and he later did so; he stated, as his opinion, that claimant was not capable of any gainful employment and would not be in the future. As a somewhat more specific statement of the causation he testified that such “fumes” cause minute hemorrhages in the brain, thereby cutting off the blood supply and resulting in the destruction of living brain tissue and the formation of scar tissue. He found a vascular insufficiency, but had a question as to whether the cause was at least partly functional or emotional; he thought that this condition was an ischemia (obstruction of blood) though not strictly a stroke. His diagnosis was based in part upon the histo-; ry given to him, and he testified that the focal brain damage occurring on May 4, 1964, was a “new occurrence” and not an “aggravation” of prior conditions.

The report of Dr. Harry S. Cohen, a physician on the staff at St. Mary’s Hospital (5-26-64), was to the effect that claimant had sustained a “cerebro-vascular spasm secondary to inhalation of paint”; he had been seen in consultation with Dr. Gregory Pucci, a neurologist.

Dr. H. Richard McFarland, testified by deposition. He had examined claimant in Kansas City at the request of the employer’s insurer. He specialized in neurology. He had received from claimant a history concerning his work, the paint fumes, and his sundry complaints existing since May 4, 1964. He described the episode of May 4, 1964, as a loss of consciousness “usually” caused by a lack of blood supply to the brain, with an insufficiency of the right middle cerebral artery.

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Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.2d 329, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-robinson-mo-1970.