Wolf v. Mallinckrodt Chemical Works

81 S.W.2d 323, 336 Mo. 746, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 633
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 323 (Wolf v. Mallinckrodt Chemical Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolf v. Mallinckrodt Chemical Works, 81 S.W.2d 323, 336 Mo. 746, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 633 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This case comes to the writer upon reassignment. Defendant appeals from an adverse judgment of the circuit court, city of St. Louis, in the sum of $12,500. The verdict of the jury was for $25,000 but was reduced by remittitur. Plaintiff sued for injuries to his health caused by contracting an occupational disease while he was employed in defendant's chemical works in St. Louis. Defendant's principal complaint is that the trial court erred in refusing to sustain its demurrer to the evidence.

Plaintiff, by his second amended petition, charged that for about six years prior to August 31, 1923, he was employed by defendant, Mallinckrodt Chemical Works, at its chemical manufacturing plant in St. Louis; that "for about one and a half years or more" prior to August 31, 1923, he, in the course of his employment, handled and was about chemicals and minerals which emitted poisonous gases, vapors, fumes and dust in harmful quantities and under harmful conditions. These chemicals and minerals with which plaintiff worked, according to the petition, were zinc stearate, pyrogallic acid, and fourteen other simples and compounds. Plaintiff further alleged *Page 750 that, while he was so employed, he inhaled and absorbed poisonous gases, vapors, fumes and dust, and as a result he contracted "a severe form of chronic occupational disease."

The negligence attributed to defendant was based on the common law and the Missouri statutes. The common-law negligence charged was that defendant did not furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work by failing to provide respirators while plaintiff was about chemicals and minerals which emitted poisonous gases, vapors, fumes and dust. Failure to warn plaintiff that his health would be endangered by the inhalation and absorption of gases, etc., was also alleged.

Statutory negligence pleaded was: (1) Failure of defendant to adopt and provide approved and effective devices, means or methods for the prevention of industrial or occupational diseases "incident to plaintiff's said work;" (2) its failure to provide adequate and approved respirators, and "to provide working clothes to be used exclusively by plaintiff in his work;" (3) its failure to provide hoods with suction fans for machines which subjected plaintiff to the inhalation of dust and poisonous gases; (4) its failure to cause plaintiff to be examined once a month by a physician for the determination of the existence or development of any occupational disease; (5) its failure to post "an appropriate notice of the known dangers to the health of its employees and particularly the plaintiff arising from the work together with simple instructions as to any known means of avoiding so far as possible the injurious consequences thereof." Defendant by its answer admitted that it was engaged in the manufacture of chemicals and other products in St. Louis and denied all other allegations.

In our opinion the test of the demurrer is whether there was evidence tending to prove that combined sclerosis — a degenerative process of the spinal cord — from which experts testified plaintiff was suffering — was an occupational disease under the applicable law. Although plaintiff charged in his petition that he was engaged in handling and being about harmful chemicals for about one and a half years or more prior to his termination of his employment on August 31, 1923, he testified, without objection as to the time covered, concerning his work during his six-year period of service. Defendant has a large plant, made up of sundry separate buildings, each of which is used for the manufacture of different chemical compounds, several kinds being made in each building. There is also a mill room or building in which chemical preparations, made up in the other buildings, are finished and packed for commerce. Plaintiff, during his employment of six years, worked in these several buildings, including the mill room. He was a laborer and, it would seem, was shifted from place to place, according to the needs of the industry. *Page 751 The chemical elements of the several compounds were mixed, boiled, heated, dried, separated, distilled and otherwise treated on a plane of quantity production. The labor routine of each process was simple and supervised.

Plaintiff worked several times in building 20 where zinc stearate, a baby powder, and aluminum stearate were made. Zinc stearate was produced in a vat twelve feet high, six feet wide and equipped with a stirrer. Soda ash was first brought to a boil in the vat. Lamb fat containing stearate was added to the solution. Then zinc sulphate in measured quantities was put in. The boiling mixture was watched and tested from time to time until at last the compound was run off from the vat to a centrifugal machine which cast out a precipitated dry powder, the zinc stearate. This powder was then sifted into a barrel and was sent to the mill room for finishing. In the process of manufacture the zinc sulphate was eliminated by the fusion of the zinc element with the stearate. Plaintiff testified that, during two periods of service in building 20, he did the work of boiling, adding elements, testing the materials in the vat, operating the centrifugal machine and sifting the resultant zinc stearate. He also testified that when the powder was produced and sifted there was much dust — "you couldn't see nothing any more so much dust was in there." He made aluminum stearate by the same process except that an aluminum salt took the place of the zinc salt. The aluminum stearate did not make as much dust as the zinc stearate. The plaintiff also testified that, in the manufacture of zinc and aluminum stearate, dust came out of the vat in clouds when the boiling process was half done. He also worked on stearates in the mill or finishing room and complained of the dust which he inhaled there. Whether zinc stearate was poisonous was an issue raised by the conflicting testimony of chemists. We will not here prolong this statement with further details of plaintiff's labors in compounding many other chemicals. This for the reason that the only medical expert who testified as to the cause of plaintiff's condition said it could be due to absorption of zinc. And the only zinc with which plaintiff came in contact was zinc sulphate used in the manufacture of zinc stearate.

Testimony given by plaintiff tending to prove violation of the occupational disease statutes was: While he was making stearates he asked the foreman for a respirator and was told he did not need one. There was not a ventilator draft in the finishing room. No one informed him that zinc stearate was poisonous. On cross-examination plaintiff admitted the presence of some suction fans and ventilators but denied that they were in place or in use at the vats and machines where he worked. He also testified that for a time he used a respirator, made of a sponge and given to him by a fellow workman.

Plaintiff testified that he was in good health and weighed 175 *Page 752 pounds when he went to work for defendant. His weight was 134 pounds when he left defendant's service August 31, 1923. During the last six months of his employment (which was at zinc stearate), he coughed a great deal, emitting white stuff "like talcum powder." His throat and lungs were sore. His arms hurt and his hands were without feeling. He could not eat much. His stomach became swollen. He walked with difficulty and, after he left defendant's employment, he could not move for a time. He was in hospital twice for treatment and was much improved at time of trial. The medical testimony was that, while he was in hospital, he was treated for locomotor ataxia, a post effect of syphilis.

Dr. H.W.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 323, 336 Mo. 746, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-mallinckrodt-chemical-works-mo-1935.