Union Producing Co. v. Dependents of Simpson

168 So. 2d 808, 251 Miss. 183, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 339
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1964
Docket43208
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 168 So. 2d 808 (Union Producing Co. v. Dependents of Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Producing Co. v. Dependents of Simpson, 168 So. 2d 808, 251 Miss. 183, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 339 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

*187 Gillespie, J.

The widow and sole dependent of Emmette Clinton Simpson, deceased, hereinafter called Employee, made claim for death benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Law against Union Producing Company, the Employer, and its compensation carrier. After a lengthy hearing, the attorney-referee awarded claimant death benefits. The Workman’s Compensation Commission affirmed, and on appeal to the circuit court, the Commission’s award was affirmed. The Employer and its carrier appeal to this Court.

Employee died of myocardial infarction following coronary occlusion, after suffering for a long period of time from progressive artheroschlerosis.

Employer operates 125 oil wells in the Tinsley Field, and maintains certain buildings on its leases at Tinsley, about twelve miles from Yazoo City, Mississippi. The production office is located about twenty steps from the warehouse, in which latter building the supplies are kept and issued to the crews operating Union’s oil wells in the Tinsley Field.

Prior to 1951 Employee had been working for Union in Alabama and in that year was transferred to Mississippi as a clerk in the production office at Tinsley. Up until about a year prior to his death, his work was exclusively in the production office and consisted of office work. He lived in Yazoo City and commuted to and from work in his own automobile or that of a co-employee under a car pool arrangement. About a year prior to his death, Employee began working four hours a day from Tuesday through Friday in the warehouse office, and the remaining twenty-four hours a week he continued to work in the production office. His work *188 in the production office consisted chiefly in making daily reports to the Jackson and Shreveport offices of the operation of Union’s wells, occasionally answering the telephone, paying hills, and making up weekly and monthly reports to the Jackson and Shreveport offices.

The proof showed without dispute that Employee had no supervisory duties, and he had ample time to do his work, and was not crowded or rushed for time. The production office was air-conditioned. The steps leading up to the production office contained only one or two risers. His work required no lifting, stooping or physical exertion, it being solely paper work.

The work in the warehouse was done in an air-conditioned office and Employee’s work there consisted of transferring requisitions and orders to the ledger and other paper work; he worked under the storekeeper, who completed any work that might not be finished by Employee during the four hours he worked in the warehouse from Tuesday through Friday of each week. There were two or three steps from the ground to the warehouse office. There was no lifting, stooping or straining involved in this work, since it was solely paper work. Occasionally Employee would go into the warehouse to point out an object to some of the other employees but he was not required to manually handle anything in the warehouse. The warehouse itself was not air-conditioned and would become hot, but it was ventilated with a fan.

After Employee died, Union did not employ anyone in his place. It was not necessary to do so because the work he had been doing was absorbed by the storekeeper in the warehouse and by other employees in the production office.

Deceased Employee was 49 years old when he died. He had had high blood pressure for approximately eight years, which had gotten progressively worse, and for a long time had suffered from coronary atherosclerosis. *189 He had bursitis in his shoulders, from which he suffered considerably; he had a dislocated disc in the cervical region which caused pain and discomfort. He contacted filariasis while in the U. S. Marines which caused swelling of the hands, feet and legs. He had hypertension and nervousness, and suffered pain in his chest, arms and hack and shortness of breath. He had an episode about five months before he died when he was mowing his lawn at home and complained of suffering from his chest hut recovered after a short rest. Employee had recently reduced from an overweight condition of 231 pounds to about 181 pounds.

Employee’s wife, claimant, testified that Employee told her of the various pains from which he suffered and that he would hurt if he sat in one position for any considerable length of time; that he worried about the possibility of having to give up his job because of his physical ailments. His wife testified also that he had suffered a great deal from indigestion.

Employee had worked from Monday until Friday morning as usual following a three-week vacation, which ended the weekend prior to his death. On the morning of his death, Employee arose at 6 A.M., ate a normal breakfast, left home about 6:45 A.M., and drove to Tinsley. Emmett Lee King, who was working that week as storekeeper, rode with him. Employee appeared to be normal. When he got to his place of employment, he went into the production office for a few minutes while King went to the warehouse office and turned on the air conditioner. After about ten minutes Employee walked approximately twenty steps from the production office to the warehouse office, and sometime later began his duties of assisting King* in checking the ledger against the monthly reports. One read and the other checked. This work was described by King as tedious.

King was on one side of the desk and Employee was on the other. They had been working about an hour *190 when Employee took a break and obtained a Coca-Cola from a machine outside the office. After they had worked about forty-five minutes longer and completed the report, Employee leaned on the desk and said he believed he was having a heart attack. King suggested that they do something* about it but Employee said, “No, it is probably indigestion .... it will pass on in a minute, usually do.” King asked him if he wanted a doctor, or to go to the hospital, or to call an ambulance, but Employee declined. Employee then said he was going over to the other office and he walked over to the production office. A short time later, King went over to the production office to check on Employee and found him sitting at the desk. Employee said he didn’t feel very well and King again suggested that he get a doctor or do something but Employee said, “No, I will be all right in just a few minutes.”

Sometime thereafter, about an hour or hour and a half after Employee first complained, Employee asked Edward Sanders, the senior clerk in the production office, to take him home. Sanders assisted him in getting up from his desk and in walking to Employee’s automobile, where he got on the back seat. After they started toward Yazoo City, Employee was “thrashing around on the back seat” and Sanders stopped and got a young-man to ride with them in case he needed help. As they went into Yazoo City, Sanders stopped and telephoned a doctor to be at the emergency room of the Hospital. Soon after Employee was taken to the hospital he died.

Dr. Moorehead had been Employee’s doctor and was also the company’s doctor, and came to the hospital at the time of his death.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 2d 808, 251 Miss. 183, 1964 Miss. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-producing-co-v-dependents-of-simpson-miss-1964.