Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. v. Holcomb, 45105

Decision Date09 December 1968
Docket NumberNo. 45105,45105
Citation217 So.2d 18
PartiesINGALLS SHIPBUILDING CORPORATION and American Mutual Liability Insurance Company v. Caswell R. HOLCOMB.
CourtMississippi Supreme Court

White & White, Gulfport, for appellant.

Cumbest, Cumbest, O'Barr & Shaddock, Pascagoula, for appellee.

JONES, Justice:

This workmen's compensation case comes here with the only issue for us to determine being the correctness of an order of the Commission, affirmed by the Circuit Court of Jackson County, insofar as it allows medical expenses.

The expenses involved here are those incurred without authorization of the employer; the authority for which, in pertinent part, is found in Section 6998-08 of Mississippi Code of 1942 Annotated (1952) on medical expenses, which reads:

If the employer fails to provide the same, after request by the injured employee, such injured employee may do so at the expense of the employer. The employee shall not be entitled to recover any amount expended by him for such treatment or services except in emergency cases, unless he shall have requested the employer to furnish the same and the employer shall have refused or neglected to do so, or unless the nature of the injury required such treatment and services and the employer or his superintendent or foreman having knowledge of such injury shall have neglected to provide the same * * *.

On April 28, 1966, Appellee Holcomb reached down to lift a certain gear whereupon he felt his back 'pop.' Appellee continued to work, however, until May 16, 1966, on which date he informed his 'leaderman' of his injury, whereupon appellee was sent to the yard hospital. He there talked to the one in charge of insurance and medical matters, as well as safety and fire protection. Appellee reported the accident to this gentleman, who could not understand how he could have received the injury and had continued to work for over two weeks, and that same day he saw and was examined by a company doctor. The record is silent as to what instructions were given appellee as to returning to the company hospital or doctor, but it is clear that appellee never again reported there or requested, or advised that he needed or desired further treatment.

Appellee Holcomb spent the night of May 16 at his home near Lucedale. The morning of the 17th, while returning to work in a car with other employees, he complained of pain and of not having slept the night before. When they crossed the Moss Point Bridge and stopped at a cafe, appellee stated he could go no further and requested to be returned home; he was carried back to Lucedale by the driver of the car. (Lucedale is thirty or more miles from Moss Point, whereas Moss Point is about six or eight miles east of Pascagoula where the appellant's plaint and hospital are situated).

When appellee was taken back to Lucedale, he went immediately to his family physician, whom, he said, he wanted to look after him. In fact, Holcomb testified that his family physician was the only one he thought about. On being recalled for further testimony, appellee stated he was afraid if he returned to Pascagoula, he would have to walk a considerable distance to the yard hospital. However, the proof showed the company maintained an ambulance and a station wagon to convey employees to the hospital. On these facts, appellee asserts an emergency existed.

At Lucedale, appellee was given a 'shot' to relieve pain and put in traction where he remained eight days. Holcomb's family physician secured an appointment for him with Dr. Whigham at Pascagoula. Dr. Whigham placed appellee in the hospital at Pascagoula (not the company hospital), where he remained about fifteen days. Dr. Enger of Pascagoula also saw appellee, performed a myelogram, and operated. Appellee then returned to his home near Lucedale but continued to suffer and returned to the same Pascagoula hospital, had another myelogram, and another operation, and was released about July 22. Appellee continued under Dr. Enger's care and was under his treatment at the time of the hearing, February 14, 1967.

As heretofore stated, it was much farther from Moss Point to Lucedale than from Moss Point to Pascagoula. Further, we judicially notice the 1960 census which shows Moss Point was at that time a city with a population of 6,631. No effort was made, nor thought given to locating a doctor there.

There is no evidence that the company or its officials knew of appellee's actual condition or were ever advised of it (after the only trip to the company hospital-two and one-half weeks or more from date of injury), so as to have an opportunity to supply necessary treatment.

Appellee argues there was an 'emergency.' Having worked over two weeks after the injury, it is evident appellee did not appreciate the nature and seriousness of his injury and the company official in charge of medical treatment, from what the record shows, did not appreciate it either; therefore, the reasoning of this Court in Ingalls Shipbuilding Corporation v. Byrd, 215 Miss. 234, 249, 60 So.2d 645, 651 (1952) seems particularly appropriate:

Let it be said that appellee did not appreciate the nature and seriousness of his injury, so neither did the company. He chose his own course, and sought hospitals and doctors of his own choosing. No request was made of the company to furnish such services. Even a liberal construction of the statute can not amend it by judicial legislation. His very ignorance of the compensability of his injury has been availed of to justify an award for compensation. We must follow a consistent course by disallowing the award for medical and doctor's bills, since, regardless of the reason therefore, he failed to avail of the offer of the company, informal though it was, and sought out his own sources of aid. Nor do we think there was an emergency sufficient to excuse compliance with the statute. His trip to Mobile for examination was impelled not by certainty but by uncertainty. An emergency must allow of no reasonable alternative consistent with the preservation of life or irreparable injury from delay. On the dates when he was taken to the George County Hospital or to Mobile, he could, had he elected to do so, have requested that these services be furnished by the appellant. A denial of this award, however harsh it may be construed by an employee, points up the purpose of the Act to grant compensation under liberal interpretation, but at the same time to require, in the interest of the carrier and the employer, compliance with prerequisite conditions. We are constrained, therefore, to amend the award, by eliminating the items of medical and hospital bills.

Notice the Court's definition of emergency and compare the facts herein.

Teague v. Graning Hardwood Manufacturing Company, 238 Miss. 48, 117 So.2d 342 (1960) required the company to furnish eye treatment and repair of eyeglasses where the foreman knew employee had been struck in the eye and his glasses shattered but did not send him to a physician. The facts there are easily distinguishable from the instant case.

Following Teague was the Court's holding in Smith v. Crown Rigs, Inc., 245 Miss. 311, 148 So.2d 195 (1963). That case was decided under Subdivision (e) of Section 6998-08, providing that where an employee 'believes that his best interest has been prejudiced by the findings of the physician designated by the employer' he may...

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