Williams Bros. Co. v. McIntosh

84 So. 2d 692, 226 Miss. 553, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 433
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1956
Docket39909
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 84 So. 2d 692 (Williams Bros. Co. v. McIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams Bros. Co. v. McIntosh, 84 So. 2d 692, 226 Miss. 553, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 433 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*555 Lee, J.

Mrs. Erma McIntosh and her two children, Grace and Jimmie, age 12 and 9 years, respectively, filed their claim for benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation Act on account of the death of their husband and father, Truman McIntosh. The attorney-referee and the Commission disallowed the claim; but, on appeal to the circuit court, the former order was reversed and a judgment was entered awarding the benefits. From that judgment, the employer and its carrier appealed.

McIntosh had been injured in July 1951. A hearing on his claim for disability benefits was held before the attorney-referee on November 25, 1953. At the conclusion of the evidence, the attorney-referee rendered an opinion in which it was stated that McIntosh was in the employ of Williams Brothers on July 18, 1951, and that, “On said date claimant herein, while performing services for the employer, sustained an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment. At the time of the injury claimant was employed as a laborer clearing debris from a pipeline right of way when a limb struck him above his left ear about the part of the hair causing a temporary semi-conscious condition. Claimant worked the remainder of the day and reported the incident to Herman Brown, the right of way foreman. * * Following the injury, claimant had occasional headaches which became more frequent and severe as time passed. He continued in the employ of Williams Brothers Company until the job was completed in October, 1951, at which time he returned from North Carolina to Meridian. During November, 1951 Claimant experienced a convlusion and when he awoke his tongue had been severely bitten. After the initial convulsion, claimant began experiencing convulsive seizures periodically which occurred mostly at night. Claimant has been under the treatment of Dr. Haekett Bennett of Meridian and Dr. Charles L. Neill of Jackson.” The opinion re *556 ferred to the medical evidence of Dr. Neill to the effect that the type of injury which the claimant received would cause a condition of epilepsy and that one year after the doctor’s first evaluation, and in June 1953, the doctor found a stronger tendency toward convulsive seizures. Payment of total disability benefits from May 29, 1952, was ordered. The employer complied with the order. No appeal was taken to the Commission.

McIntosh died on February 19, 1954, about two days after the performance of a brain operation.

The sole issue is whether or not the injury of July 18, 1951, aggravated or accelerated an existing tumor, and shortened the deceased’s life and thus contributed to his death.

In the original report of Dr. Hackett Bennett, which was filed with the Commission on May 15, 1953, it was stated that the patient’s history was: “Patient was clearing land for a right of way for company when struck on back of head by falling tree. Patient states he was knocked unconscious for unknown period of time. Slowly became disabled to work in approximately five to seven days after injury.” His objective findings were “injury to head and cranial contents as manifested by post traumatic headaches, and convulsive seizures.” He was referred to a neuro-surgeon. The certificate of death, signed by Dr. Charles L. Neill, showed that the cause was “astrocytoma tumor of brain right”, and that the doctor attended him until it occurred on February 19, 1954.

Several doctors were offered as witnesses in the case. All of them agreed that trauma does not cause a tumor of the nature here described.

Dr. Neill, a neuro-surgeon, testified that his original diagnosis was traumatic epilepsy as a result of a blow on the left side of the head from the limb of a tree. He knew something was wrong in the brain, and he gave it the general term lesion, that is, “an alteration of *557 normal physiological structure.” He did not have sufficient evidence from time to time to make a diagnosis of tumor, but he felt that “there was a definite lesion in that right hemisphere of his brain all of the time, from the first time I saw him, all the way through his treatment.” A study which he carried out as of June 23, 1953, was indefinite. A number of electroencephalograms suggested a localized epileptic focus, and he felt that a lesion in that area might be discovered, which could be helped surgically. Consequently he operated to determine the nature, whether malignant or benign, and if it could be removed. By the operation it was disclosed that the trouble was a grade two astrocytoma, extensively and deeply infiltrating the right side of the brain, and beyond the possibility of surgical excision. The surgical specimens were examined. The patient died two days later. The doctor testified that the growth of this kind of tumor is slow; that it had started on McIntosh perhaps 8 or 10 years previously; and that it does not spread to other parts of the body like the ordinary cancer. It was his opinion that trauma will produce a disabling epileptic condition because of bleeding into or about the tumor at the time of the injury and will accelerate death. From the history, his knowledge of the patient and earlier examinations and treatment, he was of the opinion that McIntosh had a hemorrhage into the existing tumor as a result of the head injury; that such alteration produced a more rapid deterioration, convulsions, headaches, etc. than would have occurred if he had not sustained the injury; and that his life was shortened at most four or five years.

Dr. Forrest G-. Bratley, a pathologist, Dr. Jack King, a general surgeon, and Dr. Harvey Johnston, a chest and general surgeon, were called as witnesses for the employer. None of these witnesses had made an examination of the injured employee or had any personal *558 knowledge of Ms physical condition. Hypothetical questions were propounded to them.

Counsel, on direct, detailed the facts as set out in the finding of the attorney-referee, which appears herein above, except that a limb of a tree “brushed” him rather than “struck” Mm, with the additional subsequent history, and inqMred if the blow was the cause of the tumor. Dr. Bratley, before answering, wanted to know whether tMs man was knocked out or not. Counsel then :said: “My understanding, doctor, is that the most that can be said is that he was in a semi-conscious condition, that is, that he was not knocked unconscious or ‘out’; and, as a matter of fact, he continued with his work.” Then the attorney-referee read from his finding of fact in the hearing. The doctor then gave it as his opinion that a blow on the head does not cause a tumor and that there was no causal connection between the blow and the death at such a distant time.

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Bluebook (online)
84 So. 2d 692, 226 Miss. 553, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-bros-co-v-mcintosh-miss-1956.