Vaughn v. Salem Carriers

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 30, 2005
Docket2005-UP-603
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vaughn v. Salem Carriers (Vaughn v. Salem Carriers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughn v. Salem Carriers, (S.C. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals

Robert Calvin Vaughn, by Faye Vaughn, Respondent,

v.

Salem Carriers, Employer and Virginia Surety Company, Carrier, Appellants.


Appeal From Greenville County
Edward W. Miller, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2005-UP-603
Submitted November 1, 2005 – Filed November 30, 2005


AFFIRMED


Kay G. Crowe and Andrea C. Pope, of Columbia, for Appellants.

Joseph Collins Smithdeal, of Greenwood, for Respondent.

PER CURIAM:  In this workers’ compensation action, Salem Carriers and Virginia Surety Carrier appeal the trial court’s order affirming the order of the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission), which awarded benefits to Faye Vaughn for the death of her husband, Robert Vaughn.  We affirm.1

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Salem Carriers employed Robert primarily as a drop and hook driver from December 1996 until his death on July 7, 1999.  As a drop and hook driver, Robert transported box trailers filled with textiles from the Sara Lee plant in Hodges, South Carolina to another plant location, dropped off the trailer, picked up a trailer, and then returned to the plant in Hodges.  A drop and hook operation is considered light duty work for a truck driver.  

During the week of July 1 through 7 of 1999, the Sara Lee plants were shut down and Robert was not scheduled to drive.  Robert agreed, however, to substitute as a flatbed truck driver for Salem Carrier’s RMAX account.  Driving a flatbed truck typically requires more physical activity than a drop and hook operation of dropping off and hooking up to loads.  Flatbed driving often involves securing the load, requiring tarping, climbing, and strapping by the driver.  The strapping and tarping occurs after the truck has been loaded, and the loading usually takes fifteen to twenty minutes for a load the size of the one Robert was driving.  One of the drivers who Robert substituted for at the time of his death, Eugene Miller, testified about the normal process for securing a load.  Miller testified that at the RMAX plant, if he was present he would observe the product being loaded, but sometimes it was loaded without him being there.  In securing the load, a driver first has to throw six or seven straps over the load.  He then has to climb up a thirteen-foot ladder, which is like an airplane ladder, onto the top of the load and get on his hands and knees in order to straighten the straps.  He would stand up to go to the next strap and then get down on his hands and knees again.  He would also put corner pieces on to keep the load from being damaged.  He then climbs back down the ladder and hooks the straps and tightens them with a metal bar.  Finally, the driver would usually put a tarp weighing twenty to thirty pounds, over the load, climb back up the ladder, and then spread the tarp over the load. He would then secure the tarp by hooking thirty or forty bungee cords onto the tarp, tighten the cords, and then hook them to the side of the trailer.  The strapping and tarping normally takes from thirty minutes to an hour and fifteen minutes, depending on the driver. 

While working for Salem Carriers, Robert drove a flatbed truck only three days in 1998 and for two days in July 1999 before the day of his death.  It is undisputed Robert was a drop and hook driver, as opposed to a flatbed driver, ninety-eight to ninety-nine percent of the time he was employed with Salem Carriers.  When Robert came home after his first day as a substitute driver during the first week of July, 1999, his wife testified that he was dragging, gray, ashy, and sweating.  After he worked July 1 and 2, he was off for a long weekend.  Over that weekend he did a little painting and wallpapering, and cut the grass with a riding mower, but did not perform any strenuous activities.  According to Faye’s testimony, on July 6, Robert arrived home early and appeared normal.  Robert’s log sheet indicated he was present at the RMAX plant from ten in the morning until noon that day.  The log sheet does not specify what he was doing at the plant for that time and the parties dispute whether the truck was loaded and Robert secured it on that date or whether the truck may have just been loaded then

The record shows on July 7, Robert was at the RMAX plant for approximately one hour and twenty-three minutes before he left the plant with his secured load.  At 9:08 a.m., after driving from the RMAX plant in Greer into downtown Greenville, Vaughn called for an ambulance.  Once it arrived, he told the emergency medical technician that he began having chest pains while he was securing his load around 8:00 that morning.  Robert was taken to the emergency room and died that same day from cardiac arrest. 

Miller testified it was not unusual on this route for a truck to be loaded and left overnight without it having been strapped or tarped by the driver.  He further stated, based on his experience, he believed Robert did not take possession and control of the load until July 7, when he signed the bill of lading, and that he was of the opinion Robert spent the morning of July 7 at the RMAX plant securing his load.  Miller also opined that for the two hours Robert was at RMAX on July 6, he was waiting to get his truck loaded.  David Doherty, who was presented as an expert witness in the field of trucking operations, testified that during the two hours Robert was at the plant on July 6, he could have been repositioning his trailer, performing an inspection on his trailer, or waiting for it to be loaded but encountered a problem and the loading was not completed.  He stated that trailers like this could be loaded in the driver’s absence.  Doherty was of the opinion Robert was hooking up his trailer and strapping and tarping his load on the morning of his death. 

Robert’s personal physician, Internist Dr. Russell Hall, testified, although Robert had previously undergone some cardiac testing in 1998, he was considered at low risk for a cardiac event at that time.  Further, while Robert had a history of transient ischemic attack, or a stroke that resolved itself, dating back to 1991, this condition was the result of a mitral valve prolapse which had nothing to do with his heart attack.  After review of Robert’s hospital records from the day of his death, he agreed Robert had severe coronary artery disease.  Dr. Hall stated that if Robert did not usually secure a load as part of his usual job, and if he secured a load on the morning of July 7, he was of the opinion that the securing of the load provoked his heart attack.  It was his opinion that the exertion involved, which was above and beyond what he was accustomed to doing in the course of his job, had a role in precipitating the heart attack. 

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Vaughn v. Salem Carriers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-salem-carriers-scctapp-2005.