Blevins v. Teer

Decision Date08 October 1941
Docket Number167.
Citation16 S.E.2d 659,220 N.C. 135
PartiesBLEVINS v. TEER et al.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

This proceeding began before the North Carolina Industrial Commission, upon complaint of the plaintiff, Blevins employee, against the defendants, Teer, employer, and the insurance company, carrier, for compensation which the plaintiff alleged to be due him for injuries sustained while in the employment of the defendant, Teer.

He claims that he received his injury through accident while helping to carry one end of a heavy galvanized iron pipe along and down a mountainside, along with several other men. The evidence bearing upon the manner in which the injury was sustained may be summarized as follows:

Some time after plaintiff went into the employment of defendant Teer, he was engaged, with others, in carrying pipe lines across the highway, and was so engaged at the time of the alleged injury. The pipe line was of galvanized steel with a bed of tar on one side of it; plaintiff could not say how much the pipe weighed, but there were about eight men carrying it and he thought it weighed about one thousand pounds. He was holding one end of a stick passed under the pipe line, and the laborer on the other side was holding the other end, the stick bearing part of the load. They were undertaking to carry the pipe line down the mountain, and plaintiff's position was at the lower end, where the weight naturally fell.

Plaintiff experienced a little pain in the side of his back. Since that time, he complains that he has been "punishing"--hurting in his back all the while, and is not able to do any kind of work or to perform any kind of gainful labor. This was on December 17, 1938, and the plaintiff appears to have filed his claim on December 11 of the next year.

Plaintiff further testified that he had not been able to perform any duties in connection with his former work, and did not return to work for Teer on the following day because he was unable to do so; that he paid little attention to it at the time but was unable to get back next day, although he thought he would be able to work in a few days. Plaintiff testified that he was thirty-eight years of age and prior to this occurrence he had been able to do hard, laborious work, "most any kind of work that comes along." He stated that he had not received any medical attention, except that Dr. Robertson had given him an examination. Plaintiff testified that he was not able to do any manual labor, spent most of the time in bed, that this condition did not exist prior to his injury. On cross-examination he stated that he did not remember saying anything to the people around him about being hurt just went home; that the next time he went to a Nello Teer job was on December 9, 1939, when he went back to report the accident; and that he had not been able to get about all this time, but thought that he might probably go back to work any day. He testified that he did not report the accident earlier because he thought that it would not amount to anything, but that it had; that he had waited almost a year to report the accident because he thought that he might be able to go back to work. He stated, however, that he had consulted many persons about his accident before he came to the lawyer, but did nothing about it.

Corroborative evidence as to the condition of claimant prior to the injury and after the injury was furnished by Waitz Blevins, his father, and by Arthur Patton.

Dr Robertson testified that Blevins came to see him about December 7, 1939, complaining of pain in his left testicle, and upon examination was found to have a varicocele and enlarged cord. Witness did not remember that Blevins made the complaint of pain in his back at that time. Witness stated that varicose veins might cause his back to hurt and give him the trouble complained of "on the stand". He stated that the condition he found was, in his opinion, not the result of any accident sustained in the manner claimed by plaintiff.

A second hearing was had before Hon. Pat Kimzey, Commissioner, in Asheville, on November 12, 1940. This hearing appears to have been for the purpose of taking the testimony of Dr. James H. Cherry.

This witness, after qualifying as an expert, testified that he had made an examination of Blevins on August 6, 1940, at which time he discovered that Blevins had two definite lesions in his spine, one of which had the characteristics of tuberculosis, and the other of osteoarthritis of the lumbar spine; in other words, he found that Blevins had tuberculosis of the spine and arthritis of the lumbar spine. He testified that in his opinion the arthritis had existed prior to the injury, but had no definite opinion with regard to the time when the tuberculosis set in. He expressed his opinion that neither condition was the result of the accident described by the plaintiff, nor the result of any strain received at that time. Upon a hypothetical question, witness stated that he had a definite opinion that the conditions he found were not caused by any such accident, but had no definite opinion as to whether they were aggravated by it or not; he believed, however, that the conditions he found would get progressively worse. Witness thought that recovery from the conditions found by him was retarded for want of medical care. He thought that tuberculosis could be cured in a certain number of cases, but doubted whether the arthritis could ever be cured, although the symptoms might be helped or relieved. Witness further stated that he found a condition of varicocele in plaintiff's left testicle, and had no definite opinion whether such condition might be the result of an accident, as that was entirely out of his field. He found no evidence of rupture.

Witness stated that when he made his examination on August 6, 1940 he found Blevins to be totally disabled. He thought that the disease could easily have been aggravated by the injury, but stated that he had never had it clearly in his mind as to how the injury did occur. He believed that any strain, if it had occurred, might have exaggerated the conditions both of tuberculosis and arthritis to some extent. Witness stated that any kind of quick jerk was likely to exaggerate the arthritis. He thought that the tuberculosis presented an old lesion, that the conditions might have been aggravated by a definite injury, a quick jerk, a definite strain. The plaintiff introduced a letter written by this witness, couched in technical terms, showing various pathological conditions, including the tubercular and arthritic conditions to which he...

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