Wheeler v. State

12 Ill. Ct. Cl. 254, 1942 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 8, 1942
DocketNo. 3363
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ill. Ct. Cl. 254 (Wheeler v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. State, 12 Ill. Ct. Cl. 254, 1942 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Eckert, J.

This action is brought under Section 3 of the Workmen’s Occupational Diseases Act (Illinois Revised Statutes, 1941, Chapter 48, Section 172.3) by Marjorie Wheeler, an employee of the respondent, for damages sustained as a result of contracting tuberculosis while working as. an attendant at the Elgin State Hospital, Elgin, Illinois. Claimant is a single woman, twenty-seven years of age, and was first employed by the respondent on April 18, 1934. Prior to that time she had lived at home on a farm, was a strong and healthy young woman, and had had no serious illness of any kind.

During the first nineteen months of her employment, claimant worked at Burr Cottage, the women’s infirmary, in' which there were confined fifty to seventy-five tuberculosis patients. The majority of these were constantly confined to their beds. Although the tubercular ward was a large room, the windows could be opened only three or four inches from the bottom and top because of the danger of patients escaping, and there was no other means of ventilation. Claimant bathed and fed these women, gave them medications, made their beds, and took their temperatures. Being insane, they were uncooperative and not mentally able to control their coughing and expectoration. Frequently they would hemorrhage on the beds and floors, and even on the nurses. The air was foul. Claimant wore the usual uniform of an attendant, but was not provided with a special gown nor with a mask or any kind of covering for the mouth and nose. She conscientiously followed the only precautionary instruction given her, not to remain with the -patients any longer than necessary, and on her own initiative frequently washed her hands. She worked eight hours a day, six days a week, but for long periods, because of lack of attendants, worked a seven-day week with no time off.

From Burr Cottage, claimant was transferred to General Belief, which consisted of working in women’s wards and cottages throughout the institution while steady employees were off duty. During that period, nearly a year, she occasionally worked at Burr Cottage. She was then assigned to the General Hospital, caring for sick employees, surgical patients, patients needing • special care and treatment, and patients being observed and examined for tuberculosis. Two of these latter patients were nurses who had worked with claimant while she was in Burr Cottage and had contracted tuberculosis. Here, too, she frequently worked more than forty-eight hours per. week. On October 1, 1937, she was transferred to the Deceiving Ward in the Diagnostic Building where she remained until October 19th.

While claimant was working at the General Hospital, she began feeling tired and 'experienced shortness of breath. Although prior to that time she had been an active swimmer, tennis player, and dancer, she was unable to continue these activities, and spent her free time sleeping. She gradually lost weight. In April, 1937, because of this condition, she had an x-ray picture taken of her lungs, but it was negative. Her fatigue increased, and in September, 1937, she expectorated blood and began to cough. On October 16th or 17th, a second x-ray was taken which was positive for tuberculosis. She was then placed in the General Hospital whefe she remained until November 10th when she was removed to the Kane County Springbrook Sanitarium. All necessary hospital, medical, and nursing services were furnished by the respondent while claimant was in the General Hospital.

At the Springbrook Sanitarium, where claimant remained until August 1, 1938, she received pneumo-thorax treatments for tuberculosis. Board, room, and medical services were furnished without charge by Kane County, excepting certain special medications for which claimant paid $45.00. After August 1st, she was examined and x-rayed every three months until she returned to work at the Elgin State Hospital on March 1, 1939. She is now fully recovered and working continuously. She can take only limited physical exercise, however, and if she swims, or dances, or climbs stairs, she becomes very short of breath. She is troubled somewhat with pleurisy, and still consults her physician for check-ups and x-rays every six months.

Dr. Kenneth G-. Bulley, superintendent and medical director of Springbrook Sanitarium, a specialist in diseases of the chest, including tuberculosis, and consultant at the Elgin State -Hospital, testified on behalf of the claimant. He stated that at the time she was employed at Burr Cottage, it was used for the isolation of tuberculosis patients; that conditions there ‘ ‘ so far as infection is concerned with tuberculosis, are such that there is a much vaster likelihood of infection being incurred in the wards of these tuberculosis patients than almost any other place ’ ’; that the likelihood of a breakdown of an individual in the environment of Burr Cottage as it then existed, and the probabilities of infection were greater by 30 to 100 times than the risk of a breakdown or infection under ordinary working conditions throughout the State at large; that the conditions of ventilation present in Burr Cottage were a definite contributing factor. He also testified that the attendants at Burr Cottage were not supplied with masks although it was then customary in the care of tuberculosis patients to supply nurses with such protection.

Dr. Bulley testified that, in all probability, claimant’s disease was contracted as the result of her taking care of tuberculosis patients at the Elgin State Hospital; that the risk of infection reached its peak in an institution where there is insanity among tuberculosis patients. In his opinion, claimant received a massive and heavy infection of bacilli while working in wards with tubercular patients, and in due course of time, possibly aggravated by subsequent reinfection from other cases, the disease followed its natural tendency to progress to a clinically visible and evident form of active disease. The fact that the x-ray taken in April, 1937, showed no tuberculosis did not mean that the infection had not then occurred, because even after infection occurs there may be a period of two months before any visible lung findings can be determined on the x-ray.

Dr. Bulley stated that it is necessary for claimant to-take every precaution to prevent a recurrence of the disease; that there may be a relapse during succeeding years after an arrested infection such as hers. He was unable to state with reasonable medical certainty what her future condition would be, but thought the likelihood was that she would remain well if she took care of herself. He stated, however, her chances of breakdown with active tuberculosis are several times greater than those of the general public, because of her previous infection.

Claimant contends that the State of Illinois may properly be made respondent, in the Court of Claims, in an action for damages for injury to health, resulting from a disease contracted by a state employee in the course of his employment, and proximately caused by the State’s, negligence, under the terms and provisions of the Workmen’s Occupational Diseases Act. The State never having elected to pay compensation pursuant to Section 4 of the Act, claimant bases her claim upon Section 3, which gives an employee a right of action for damages against an employer who has not elected to provide and pay compensation, and which provides in part as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ill. Ct. Cl. 254, 1942 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-state-ilclaimsct-1942.