Weathers v. Kansas City Bridge Co.

162 P. 957, 99 Kan. 632
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1917
DocketNo. 20,949
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 162 P. 957 (Weathers v. Kansas City Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weathers v. Kansas City Bridge Co., 162 P. 957, 99 Kan. 632 (kan 1917).

Opinions

The opinion of the-court was delivered by

Marshall, J.:

The plaintiff recovered judgment under the workmen’s compensation law, and the defendant appeals.

Two weeks after the plaintiff was injured, he went on crutches to the office of the defendant and there had a conversation with Howard Treadway, the vice-president and general manager of the defendant company. This conversation can be best shown by quoting from the abstract of the evidence as follows:

'“Q. What did you say there? A. I went in and introduced myself and he says, ‘Just a minute.’ He says, ‘Step in that office.’ I went in a little office at one side and sat down about five minutes and Mr. Tread-way came in and said ‘It is too bad for a man to be knocked out right at Christmas times,” and I says, ‘Yes; pretty bad, but it can’t be helped, I suppose.’ And we talked there and talked about work and he asked me all the places I had worked for the last 15 years back and the salary I had drawrf and why I was working for $2.00 a day when I had worked for more money. EPe says, ‘I wish to the Lord you could go to White Rock, Missouri; I have a job there as water compressor in the boiler,’ and I says, ‘It would n’t look good for me to go on crutches,’ and he says, ‘No.’ And then we talked on other things and he says, ‘I do n’t want to beat you out of anything, you are right up against it,’ and I says, ‘Yes; I am strictly up against it.’ He says, ‘I know you are; Mr. Ryan told me you was;’ and he says, ‘I think you will be all right to go to work in ten days,’ and I says, ‘I think so.’ And he says, ‘I will pay you for your wages for four weeks and by that time I think you will be all ready to go to work,’ and I says, ‘I hope so because it is very little money.’ He says, ‘Sure it is little; six dollars a week is not much. That Compensation Act don’t bring very much to a man that don’t get any more than you get.’ He says, ‘You won’t have to pay the doctor, if you have to you won’t have anything left out of six dollars a week,’ and he [634]*634said, ‘I am going to make this check' out for you for four weeks,’ and he started to make the check out for $28.00 and he changed it and made it for $24 and he says, “That is right, we don’t pay for Sundays.’ And he says, ‘Now, in case you get along all right what about that?’ I says, ‘If I get along all right, if I have beaten you out of anything I will give it back to you.’ I says, ‘Furthermore, I want a job.’ He says, ‘Oh, sure; I am going to take care of you.’ .And after he got through he gave me a newspaper laying there on a chair and says, ‘You can read that going home.’ I says, ‘What about that job when I get ready to go to work?’ He says, ‘I am not going to promise you a job because I may not have any.’ He says, ‘This is machinery and stuff you know, you can hire with me uptown and nobody else would want to take somebody else’s cripple,’ and he says, ‘I would like to have you get acquainted with my chief foreman; we might be able to use you the year around.’
“Q. He said he would take care of you? A. Yes, sir. I says ‘You have my address,’ and he says, ‘Yes; if anything shows up I will see about it.’ I says, “Now I can about half depend on a job, do I understand you that way,’ and he says, ‘Well, I am not going to promise you a job because I might not have any.’
“Q. Well, you finally agreed upon accepting $24 as your compensation and you agreed to execute that release? A. Mr. Treadway said to me, he says, ‘Now, here, we called up the doctor and the doctor thinks you will be able to go to work in nine or ten days,’ and he says, ‘It has been two weeks now’ and he says ‘I think you will be all right.’ Well, I says, ‘I am not sure that I will, but I hope that I will.’ ‘Well,’ he says ‘in case of a doubt I will just pay you for four weeks, that is at six dollars a week,’ and I says ‘Well, if I get well before that time I will refund what difference there is,’ and he says ‘If you don’t get well we will take care of you.’ And he went on and asked me about the different positions I had held and he says ‘You are just the kind of a man I want to get hold of, and I can use you down at this place’ — I think it 'was White Rock, Missouri, — anyway, it was in Missouri- — -‘on a water compressor in a boiler job,’ and he says ‘I want you to get'acquainted with my chief foreman. We do work all over the country and a man that can go ahead and handle an engine or bunch- of men or concrete mixer or do any other of this construction work I want to keep him and I will take care of you.’ I says ‘All right; I want a job, that is what I want and I have got to have it,’ and he says ‘I will take care of you.’ And he started to write out a check for $28.00 and he says ‘Well, I.only pay for six days; I am not paying for Sundays,’ and he changed it to $24.00. And he says ‘I don’t see how you fellows live working for two dollars a day.’ And he says ‘You haven’t always done that,’ and .1 says ‘No, sir; I haven’t. I worked for C. C. Smith and Walter Diggs, foreman,’ and he says ‘I will try and keep you in mind.’ ‘You have my address’ I says, and he says ‘Yes,’ and I says ‘I will see Mr. Ryan,’ and he says ‘you see me, you don’t need to see Mr. Ryan, you see Treadway; I am the man to see,’ and I says ‘All right.’ And we talked there and [635]*635he wondered how I could live and work for $2.00 a day. He says ‘If you had gone to see’, — he says ‘If the doctor came to see you three times you are out $ix dollars at the best, if you don’t have to have a prescription.’ He says ‘A man that makes the money I make, a good salary, I can kinda stand it,’ and he handed me this check for $24.00 and I put it in my pocket. I signed it, I think in the presence of the stenographer. The stenographer came in and he asked him to make a typewritten one, I think he made two or three copies. That was the first time I saw him and no one had been in the office but Treadway and myself, so when he handed me the check and I signed up and he says T will see you again,’ and handed me the newspaper.”

The release signed by the plaintiff is as follows:

“FINAL RECEIPT
“For Compensation Paid Under the Workmen’s Compensation Law State of Kansas.
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 14,1915.
“Received of Kansas City Bridge Company the sum of Twenty-four & no/100 Dollars ($24.00) said amount being such part of my weekly wages for the period of four weeks from the 30th day of November, 1915, to the 28th day of December, 1915 (both days included) as I am entitled to and making in all, with the weekly payments already received by me, the total sum of Twenty-four & no/100 Dollars ($24.00) such payment being the final payment of Compensation under the WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION LAW of Kansas and in consideration of which I hereby release and forever discharge the said Kansas City Bridge Company heirs, successors and assigns, from any and all actions, causes of actions, claims and demands, for, upon, or by reason of any damage, loss, injury, suffering and disfigurement which heretofore has been or which hereafter may be sustained by me in consequence of an accident suffered by me on or about the 30th day of November, 1915, while in the employ of Kansas City Bridge Company.
“Witness my hand and seal, this 14 day of December, 1915.
Wm. P. Weathers.”

The plaintiff was injured November 30, 1915. He walked on crutches until December 24, 1915, and walked with a cane until the 17th of the following April.

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Bluebook (online)
162 P. 957, 99 Kan. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weathers-v-kansas-city-bridge-co-kan-1917.