Whitehead v. Holston Defense Corporation

326 S.W.2d 482, 205 Tenn. 326, 9 McCanless 326, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 368
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 326 S.W.2d 482 (Whitehead v. Holston Defense Corporation) 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
Whitehead v. Holston Defense Corporation, 326 S.W.2d 482, 205 Tenn. 326, 9 McCanless 326, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 368 (Tenn. 1959).

Opinion

*328 Mb. Chief Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is on appeal from the Chancery Court of Sullivan County wherein Eoscoe E. Whitehead obtained an award for total and permanent disability under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, T.C.A. sec. 50-901 et seq. The basis of the award was that the petitioner’s disability resulted from an occupational disease which arose out of and in the course of his employment at the plant of the Holston Defense Corporation. It was conceded in the court below, and is now admitted at the bar of this Court that the petitioner’s condition is total and permanent.

The defendant appealed from the Chancellor’s decree. The assignments of error complain as follows:

(1) “The Trial Court erred in holding that the employee’s lung disease (pulmonary fibrosis) was a compensable occupational disease under the Tennessee Workmen’s Compensation Law, being Chapter 11, Title 50, Tennessee Code Annotated.”
*329 (2) The trial court erred in holding that the employer and its insurance carrier had actual notice that the employee was suffering from a occupational disease, and that the employee was excused from giving written notice that he was suffering from such occupational disease.

■ An “occupational disease” is defined by T.C.A., Title 50, Section 1101, listing nine specific diseases as “occupational” and compensable. In the same section the statute purports to define the term “occupational disease”; that it means one of the scheduled diseases arising out of and in the course of employment. We shall later on in this opinion have occasion to refer to this section. But we deem it unnecessary to copy it here, since it is known to both counsel and the legal profession generally.

The Chancellor’s finding of facts is, as follows:

“Boscoe Whitehead testified that he was 58 years old; that he is a married man and that he began work at the Holston Defense Corporation about 1951 and worked until 1957. He testified further that he had begun work about 1942 and worked until ’45, at this same corporation. But he testified that a part of his duties were to work in and about hot temperatures where there was coal being burned and where it was blazing and where gases were being emitted. He further testified that he worked in the exhaust room and he stayed in the room a great deal of time and that it required generally his full-time to attend to this furnace, and that artificial gas was coming from the room and from the furnaces. He testified that he worked in the exhaust room and that he could smell gas. It was *330 liis testimony that there was not enough ventilation to completely clear the room of g'as.
“The very fact that there was some ventilation in the room or in these rooms, in the exhaust room and in the gas producing room, is evidence that there must have been some elements in there that it was necessary to remove from the room.
“He testified further that he was required to lift iron balls from the top of the furnace, that there were six of these and he looked into the fire and the coal where it was burning, and that as an operator it was necessary for him to do that occasionally to check on the coal and burning fire, and that a yellow gas escaped from these holes.”

We find material evidence to support the foregoing decision.

Following the recitation of the evidence given by the petitioner the Chancellor refers to specific statements of witnesses, called by the defendant, which he says corroborated the petitioner.

The lay witnesses for the petitioner, his wife, a Mr. Miller and Mr. Woodward, testified that when he went to work for the defendant in 1951 he was a strong man and a good worker. His neighbor gave him a good character. After he quit work at the Holston Defense Corporation he gave evidence of shortness of breath. His wife testified “he would wheeze at night”, and she called a doctor on three or four occasions to relieve his condition. But aside from this there is complete agreement among expert medical witnesses that the petitioner is now disabled permanently, and that it results from a lung disorder.

*331 The Chancellor in his discussion of the facts says, “the real question before the Court is not whether or not this man is in a 100% disabled condition, because that proof is established under this record. The question is was there a connection between his ivorh, between his occnpar tion and his condition.” This is the determinative issue.

Turning now to the evidence relating to whether or not there is a causal connection between his occupation and his condition, the Chancellor found, as follows:

“Dr. Blevins who made a very impressive witness in this case by his deposition stated that he was a chemist; that he had done graduate work in chemistry, having received a Master’s Degree from Tulane University; and that he was familiar with the production of gas for industrial purposes, and that in his opinion, the circumstances under which this man worked would produce pulmonary fibrosis, and he pronounced that as his condition, that that was what was wrong with him. In addition to his knowledge of chemistry, he is also a practicing doctor of a number of years, a graduate from the University of Tennessee Medical School, and he diagnosed his condition as that outlined and contained in the bill of complaint.
“The proof further shows that these yellow streaks of gas or some chemical substance would come from the furnace. They were seen by a number of people, and this same substance was seen on his clothing by his wife when she laundered it. The evidence, in the record shows that it was on the bed clothing where he slept.”

*332 The foregoing is supported by the testimony to which the Chancellor refers. Of course, there is contrary evidence. Dr. James E. Shall testified that he found that the petitioner “has a rather diffuse pulmonary fibrosis of the lungs.” But that any person could have pulmonary fibrosis whether they were in industry or not. He also testified that in his opinion there were no chemicals in producer gas that could cause damage to the human lung such as the pulmonary fibrosis he found in Mr. Whitehead’s case. There is other corroborative medical testimony to the same effect. There is also lay testimony which tends to contradict the petitioner’s contention as to the conditions under which he was required to work. But the finding by the Chancellor upon these controversial issues, when supported by any material evidence, is conclusive upon this Court. We think his finding and conclusions are supported by substantial evidence.

The counsel for the appellant has been most fair in arguing the issues now before us. Following the citing of T.C.A. sec. 50-1101, supra, it is said, “So far as we have been able to determine in our research of this problem, we find no reported case in Tennessee dealing with a non-scheduled occupational disease.

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Bluebook (online)
326 S.W.2d 482, 205 Tenn. 326, 9 McCanless 326, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-holston-defense-corporation-tenn-1959.