Woodward v. Kansas City Bridge Co.

3 So. 2d 221, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 451
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1941
DocketNo. 2252.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 So. 2d 221 (Woodward v. Kansas City Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodward v. Kansas City Bridge Co., 3 So. 2d 221, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 451 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

The plaintiff is the widow of John Lewis (Bud) Woodward who died on August 11, 1937, as she alleges, from creosote poisoning and poison ivy or poison oak contracted while he was working for the defendant company in building or repairing a bridge for the Kansas City Southern Railway Company near DeQuincy, Louisiana. She sues for herself and a minor child, issue of her marriage with the deceased, to recover compensation in the sum of $6,000, being compensation for the period of 300 weeks at the rate of $20 per week, plus an additional sum of $250 for medical and hospital expenses. Her cause of action is stated in her petition as follows: "The deceased, John Lewis Woodward, while working within the scope of his employment had received cuts, bruises and lacerations on his hands, arms and other exposed portions of his body, and that he had also come in contact with Poison Ivy, or Poison Oak, which had caused a breaking out or irritation of the surface of the skin and while in said cut, bruised, lacerated and irritated condition he was further poisoned by coming in contact with poisonous ingredients of creosote which brought about a Dermatitis condition, which later caused his death on the 11th day of August, 1937."

The defendant denied that the deceased died from the effects of poison ivy or poison oak and creosote poisoning. While the defendant did not so allege in its answer, it undertook to prove on the trial of the case that the deceased died from arsenical poison resulting from injections of neoarsphenamine given in the treatment of what was thought to be syphilis by the doctor giving the injections, and before it was ascertained that the deceased was not affected with this disease. The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment which rejected her claim.

In the latter part of June and during the first half of July, 1937, the deceased was *Page 222 helping build or repair a bridge with creosoted timbers. According to the testimony of several coemployees of the deceased, it was his duty to handle timbers which had been treated with creosote and which timbers had been lying on the railroad right of way for some time and had become partly covered with poison oak vines; that it was necessary for the men to remove these vines in handling the timbers, and several of the men, including the deceased, received creosote burns and oak poisoning on the exposed parts of their hands, face, neck and arms, and the deceased broke out with a rash or skin eruption which they thought was poison ivy or poison oak; that the creosote got in these burns and bruises on his hands, arms and face and his skin became irritated and swollen to such an extent that he could not wear his gloves and had to quit work about the middle of July.

Dr. A.E. Douglas examined plaintiff for the defendant company, and, according to the report made of that examination, dated July 2, 1937, this doctor found nothing wrong with the deceased at that time. The records of the defendant company show that the deceased went to work for it on June 21, 1937, and it is not clear as to why this pre-employment examination report is dated more than ten days later, unless it is possible, as the doctor suggests, that the report was not made out until several days after the examination was made. In any event, it is clear from the testimony of this doctor and other evidence in the record that there was nothing wrong with the deceased when he began work for the defendant.

While we are unable to fix from the evidence just when the dermatitis first appeared on the body of the deceased, yet from the testimony of practically all the witnesses who testified on this point, it is certain that this rash or skin irritation did not show up until several days after the deceased began working for the defendant — in any event not before the last of June or the early part of July, there being considerable testimony that it developed after July 6th. The trouble had become so serious by the middle of July that he was forced to get medical treatment and was confined in the Lyons-Douglas Clinic at DeQuincy from July 19th until he died on August 11th. On July 16th, Dr. Douglas made out a certificate to the effect that the deceased had had an attack of oak poisoning and was very sore and could not work for several days.

Two nurses who treated the deceased while he was in the clinic testified that his whole body was covered with blisters which resembled burns from which a watery fluid ran, and the skin would slough off. The skin irritation had more the appearance of blisters resulting from burns than a rash; but there was no sign of burns. The skin eruption spread more and more over his body until it affected the soles of his feet and the hair of his head before he died. It appears from the evidence that there was a rather general impression among the doctors and nurses at the clinic that the deceased was suffering from creosote and oak poison, one or two witnesses testifying that Dr. Douglas stated that it was the worst case of creosote and oak poisoning that he had ever seen or heard of.

A few days after the death of the deceased, Dr. Douglas made out a report and bill for the defendant company in which he diagnosed the disease from which the deceased died as "exfoliative dermatitis from irritation of creosote and secondary infection oak poison". And a few days later he made out a death certificate in which he gave the principal cause of death as exfoliative dermatitis and septicemia with contributory causes of creosote oak poisoning and arsenic irritation. In this certificate the doctor described the death as accidental and gave the date of the accident as July 14, 1937.

Notwithstanding that Dr. Douglas had made out all these reports and had expressed his opinion in unmistakable language that the deceased had died from creosote and oak poisoning, when this case came on for trial he took the stand and gave it as his opinion that the deceased died from the effect of arsenical poisoning resulting from the injections which he (Dr. Douglas) had given the deceased for what he thought was syphilis. The doctor gave three, four or five of these injections beginning about June 20th and ceased giving them when he received a report from the State Chemist on a Wasserman test which proved negative. A copy of this report is in the record and is dated June 24, 1937, and as this report must have been received by the doctor within a few days after its date, it is to be presumed that he gave no more of these injections after the latter part of June. *Page 223

Under this situation, we are at a loss to understand just how the report of the pre-employment examination made by this doctor and contained in his report of July 2d showed that the deceased had no venereal or other disease. Nor do we understand how this doctor for more than a month thereafter and long after the deceased had died continued to give in his reports and express in his opinions that the deceased was affected with creosote and oak poisoning, and made no mention of arsenical poisoning as the principal trouble. The doctor attempts to explain this inconsistency by stating that he did not want to cast any reflection on the deceased or embarrass his family by reporting the fact that these treatments had been given under the belief that the deceased had syphilis. But as the test had proved negative, there was no occasion for withholding a fact that, instead of reflecting unfavorably on the deceased and his family, would have had the opposite effect. As a further evidence that Dr. Douglas believed that the deceased had creosote and oak poisoning, he treated him for that condition until he died.

Dr. G.E. Barham testified as an expert for the plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sparks v. Tulane Med. Ctr. Hosp. & Clinic
546 So. 2d 138 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1989)
Stevenson v. Bolton Co., Inc.
484 So. 2d 678 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)
Geist v. Martin Decker Corp.
313 So. 2d 1 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Jennings v. Louisiana and Southern Life Ins. Co.
290 So. 2d 811 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)
Frame v. Majors
224 So. 2d 65 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Martin v. Brown Paper Mill Co.
35 So. 2d 140 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 So. 2d 221, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-kansas-city-bridge-co-lactapp-1941.