Vester Gas Range & Mfg. Co. v. Leonard

148 Tenn. 665
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 148 Tenn. 665 (Vester Gas Range & Mfg. Co. v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vester Gas Range & Mfg. Co. v. Leonard, 148 Tenn. 665 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The petition in this case was filed in. the circuit court of Hamilton county by Taylor Leonard, who will hereinafter be referred to as petitioner, against Tester Gas Range' & Manufacturing Company, who will hereinafter be referred to as defendant, to recover compensation for an alleged injury sustained by petitioner while in the employ of the defendant, who was operating under the workmen’s compensation statute (Acts 1919, chapter 123), which injury, the petition alleges, arose out of and in the course of petitioner’s employment on December 10, 1921.

Defendant answered the petition, denying that petitioner sustained any injury whatsoever while in the employ of defendant, and averred that petitioner’s disability was caused from a disease which had no connection with his employment, and for which defendant was in no. way responsible. .

The answer further averred that, while defendant refused to recognize its liability to petitioner for compensation for his alleged injury, it did, on March 11, 1922, pay petitioner the sum of $97.50, in full settlemenhpf his alleged claim, and that he accépted this sum in full satisfaction thereof, and signed a regular compensation re[668]*668ceipt acquitting defendant of further liability to him for compensation.

The answer also set up a further defense to petitioner’s claim that there was a failure on the part of petitioner to give defendant notice of the accident and injury, as required by section 22 of the workmen’s compensation statute, and that therefore on this further ground petitioner’s claim for compensation was barred.

To defendant’s answer petitioner filed a replication, in which it was averred that, in about ten days after he sustained the injury complained of, he orally reported his injury to defendant’s foreman, who made a memorandum of his injury, and sent petitioner to defendant’s physician, Dr. J. B. Haskins, for treatment, and thereafter petitioner was sent to Mr. Roberts, who represented the Mutual Liability Insurance Company, with which company defendant was insured, and that Mr. Roberts, as agent of the insurance company, paid to petitioner the sum of $97.50, which sum was in settlement, for thirteen weeks’ compensation, to which petitioner was entitled under the workmen’s compensation statute; that said payment covered compensation due from defendant to petitioner from December 10, 1921, to March 4, 1922, at the .rate of $7.50 per week; that petitioner did sign a written release to defendant for said sum, but did not know that he was signing a release in full settlement for compensation and acquitting defendant of further liability; that said settlement was-not binding upon petitioner, because it Avas not approved by the judge of the circuit court, as required by section 27 of the workmen’s compensation statute.

The case was heard by the circuit judge upon the plead[669]*669ings and proof, and a judgment Avas rendered against defendant and in favor of petitioner for the sum of $7.50 per Aveek from March 4, 1922, during the period of his disability from said injury, but, however, not to exceed three hundred weeks, less the sum of $97.50, previously paid to petitioner by defendant, which sum the court ordered to be credited on and deducted from the recovery-awarded. The judgment further provided that the ainoünt awarded might be modified on future application by defendant to the court on the ground of any decrease in petitioner’s disability.

From this judgment defendant has appealed to this court and assigned errors. While there are a number of specifications of error assigned, counsel for defendant expressly state in their brief that they only present the following propositions:

“First. There is no material proof that the plaintiff received an accidental injury arising out of and in the scope of his employment with the defendant.
“Second. That the court arbitrarily disregarded the great preponderance of the evidence in holding plaintiff’s disability the result of an accident, instead of a disease.
“Third. That section 27 of chapter 123, Acts 1919, is violative of article 1, section 8, and article 1, section 21, of the Constitution of Tennessee, is so far as it requires all settlements of compensation claims to be approved by the circuit court before they are binding.
“Fourth. That the plaintiff. did not. give any written notice of the injury.”

Petitioner Avas receiving from defendant a wage of $15 per week for his work, and on the trial he offered evidence which tended to show that on December 10, 1921, while [670]*670in the employ of defendant, he and two other employees were engaged in loading stoves into a freight cai\ for the purpose of shipment, and that while lifting one of the stoves being loaded up on some other stoves in the car, and at a time when petitioner and his fellow employees had lifted said stove to a position where it was above petitioner’s head' his fellow employees released their hold on the stoye, which weighed about two hundred pounds, and let the full weight of same down on petitioner, which caused him to be thrown against the side of the car, whereby he sustained a severe .strain or injury to his back and side in the region of his kidneys; that after he received said injury he felt sick and faint, but on going- out and getting some freslji air he felt better and continued to work at his employment; that about an hour after he received this strain, on account of the falling of the stove upon him, he was put to work by his employer at rolling a wheelbarrow filled with green concrete along a plank, which was elevated about two' feet from the ground for the purpose of dumping the concrete in a form which defendant was using in building an addition to its plant; that while thus rolling said wheelbarrow along said plank it became overbalanced, turned over and threw petitioner off of said plank to the ground, whereby he sustained another strain or injury to his back and side; that this was just about quitting time in the afternoon; that after petitioner’s work hours had ceased he started to his home, but experienced great difficulty in getting home, o.wing to the severe pain Which resulted from his injury; that within thirty minutes after he received the last injury he began to pass blood in his urine. On reaching home pe[671]*671titioner says that he went to bed, where he was confined from his injury for a period of about ten days. Upon becoming able to get out he returned to defendant’s plant and reported his injury, to defendant’s foreman, Mr. Frye. He says that Mr. Frye made out a report of his injury and then sent him to defendant’s physician, Dr. Haskins, who treated him for a strained back; that this treatment consisted of bandaging his back. Some seven weeks after the injury petitioner -was examined by Dr. De Lay, who made a cystoscopical examination of petitioner and found him suffering from pyelitis, which is described as an inflammation of the kidneys. The evidence showed that, up to the time of the trial in the court below, petitioner was incapacitated from performing his employment with defendant by reason of the trouble which the physicians described as pyelitis.

There is a conflict in the testimony of the medical experts as to the likelihood of an injury, such as petitioner sustained, causing pyelitis.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Tenn. 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vester-gas-range-mfg-co-v-leonard-tenn-1923.