Williams v. Laurence-David, Inc.

534 P.2d 173, 271 Or. 712, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 557
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 534 P.2d 173 (Williams v. Laurence-David, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Laurence-David, Inc., 534 P.2d 173, 271 Or. 712, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 557 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an action for personal injuries allegedly sustained as a result of contact dermatitis from an allergic reaction to rubber gloves supplied by the defendant to plaintiff’s employer. The case was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. The trial court then entered an order allowing plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. Defendant appeals.

Plaintiff had worked in the plywood industry as a “spreaderman” for 18 years. During that time he, like other “spreadermen,” had used rubber gloves of *715 the kind sold by defendant to protect his hands from plywood glue and slivers. He testified that prior to 1971 he never had any “problem with dermatitis,” although he previously had “rash” and “minor irritations,” which he attributed to slivers.

He started working for Milwaukie Plywood Company in April 1971. He testified that he usually wore a short sleeve shirt and wore rubber gloves with cotton “liner” gloves. He also testified that in June he started having problems with dermatitis, with swollen wrists and a rash and itching from his wrist to his elbows. In August he went to see Dr. Chenoweth, who gave him some “salve.” The medical records of Dr. Chenoweth, which were received in evidence over plaintiff’s objections, stated as the diagnosis: “Contact dermatitis—wrists—probably from plywood glue” and also stated, under “remarks” that “patient was to bring in a sample of glue for patch testing and did not return for follow-up visit on August 23rd.” Dr. Chenoweth was deceased at the time of trial.

Plaintiff denied that he was told by Dr. Chenoweth that his problem was related to glue poisoning and didn’t remember whether he was asked to “come back with a glue sample for a patch test.”

In November 1971 plaintiff quit work at Milwaukie Plywood Company and went to work for another plywood company, where he continued to use rubber gloves with the same brand insignia on the wrapper as the kind used by him while working at Milwaukie Plywood Company, but with a thin plastic liner. He had no additional problem with dermatitis.

In August 1972 plaintiff went to see another doctor, Dr. Dahl, because of the loss of pigmentation of the skin on his arms. Dr. Dahl performed a “patch test” on plaintiff, using rubber gloves that he brought in, resulting in a negative reaction, showing that *716 plaintiff was not sensitive to those gloves. The gloves used for that test were the same, or the same type, as used for a test on a Mr. Krall, an employee of Milwaukee Plywood Company and a patient of Dr. Dahl, resulting in a positive reaction. Dr. Dahl concluded that the loss of pigmentation on plaintiff’s arms was due to some secondary infection, which “usually follows in severe inflamation of the skin. Not in all individuals, but some patients have it.”

A year later, in August 1973, plaintiff and Mr. Krall went to see a third doctor, Dr. Kingery, who also conducted patch tests, using a rubber glove and a glue sample brought to him by Mr. Krall. The result as to plaintiff was a “significant reaction” to the rubber glove and a “significantly negative reaction” to the glue.

Dr. Kingery testified that in his opinion plaintiff had “suffered a contact dermatitis as a result of the use of the rubber gloves.” He also concluded that the loss of pigmentation was due to a secondary infection.

Shortly before trial in February 1974 Dr. Kingery again examined plaintiff. He testified that plaintiff was then wearing gloves to which he was not sensitive, but was exposed to wood slivers, and “had just up and down his forearm * * * a number of slivers,” and was then “having a source of irritation * * * -unrelated to the prior problems with the gloves.”

Dr. Kinger}7 also testified that it was “reasonable to assume” as a matter of “medical probabilities” that the secondary infection was caused by the contact dermatitis and that “of the various explanations * * * an infection would offer the best logical explanation” for the loss of pigmentation.

When asked whether he would disagree that there were “other possible causations to this infection *717 and the resulted depigmentation other than dermatitis,” Dr. Kingery said, “No, I wouldn’t. I didn’t see the infection and I really didn’t see the dermatitis * * hut that “of the options available,” it was “most likely that [the depigmentation] resulted from the earlier dermatitis with the glove.”

Dr. Kingery also said:

“I can’t be sure there. Infection, the areas of the scarring and depigmentation do not necessarily correspond with the area directly exposed to the gloves. The thing that makes me suspicious of a secondary infection to the allergic contact dermatitis is a time relationship more than anything else.”

Dr. Kingery was also asked whether plaintiff was a hyper-allergic person and responded as follows:

“Only in the fact he has demonstrated the capacity to react to a rubber glove and the fact that he also at the time of the last examination had considerable reaction, which I presume might be due to one of the products in the—one of the forest products because he gets a lot of slivers and these seem to irritate his skin quite a bit on the abdomen or of the forearms.”

In addition to this medical testimony, plaintiff offered the testimony of five other employees of Milwaukie Plywood Company who testified that they had similar problems with their arms after using rubber gloves provided by their employer with the same brand insignia on the wrappers. One of these employees, Dennis Krall, had previously obtained a jury verdict for damages as the result of an action against defendant, but plaintiff was not permitted to offer the record in that case in support of his contention that defendant was collaterally estopped by that judgment to deny its liability to him.

Mr. Krall also testified on cross-examination that *718 to protect his skin from coming in contact with glue and also from splinters he generally wore long sleeve shirts, instead of short sleeve shirts, as usually worn by plaintiff.

Defendant’s president testified that defendant had been selling rubber gloves of this brand and also glove liners since 1964 to approximately 200 companies in 20 states and in Canada, including Milwaukie Plywood Company; that such gloves are used by workmen in plywood mills who are exposed to plywood glue and splinters, and that during those years he was aware of only five or six complaints about the gloves, including allergic reactions. He admitted that rubber gloves are a common cause of allergic reaction and that no warning was given that the use of such gloves may cause such reaction. He testified, however, that the liner was sold to prevent contact of the rubber gloves with the skin.

Plaintiff’s motion for new trial was based upon several grounds. We recognize that the allowance by the trial court of plaintiff’s motion for a new trial must be affirmed if any of the grounds for that motion are well taken. Highway Commission v. Fisch-Or, 241 Or 412, 418, 399 P2d 1011, 406 P2d 539 (1965).

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Bluebook (online)
534 P.2d 173, 271 Or. 712, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-laurence-david-inc-or-1975.