190 Tenn. 149 | Tenn. | 1950
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a Workmen’s Compensation case.
William M. Storie, deceased, husband of the appellee, worked as a traveling salesman for the appellant, Taylor Supply Company. On March 31, 1947, in line with his duty he drove his automobile to Gallatin, Tennessee, and surrounding territories on the business of his master. It is rather clear from the record that he did not finish his business there until rather late on that afternoon (seeing one of his customers after closing time in the store) and then while driving back to Nashville, where he lived, his car went out of control and turned over some two or three times, rather severely injuring Storie. He either got a taxicab or someone else got one for him and drove him to a local hospital in Nashville. His sister was notified that night about 10:00 o ’clock that he was in the hospital. She in turn got in touch with his wife who for the first time learned of his accident about 11:00 o ’clock on the night of March 31,1947. In the meantime she had become rather worried because he had not arrived home, as he was supposed to be there for dinner with guests,
At the time of the trial no witness could be found who saw the wreck or knew anything about it. The facts concerning the wreck had to he largely proved by what the president of the defendant company had discovered by investigation or had been told by Mr- Storie about the wreck. The president of this company though was apparently well convinced that this man had received his
The Chancellor after very carefully listening to the witnesses testify, and the arguments pro and con by respective counsel, concluded that Mr. Storie’s death resulted from an aggravation of a preexisting disease by the accidental injury he received in the automobile accident while on the mission of his employer. He, therefore, entered a decree in favor of the widow for the full amount of the statutory allowance for such a death, the wages of the employee being sufficient to bring the amount up to the maximum allowed by the statute. The defendant (appellant here) seasonably filed a motion for new trial which was overruled and the case appealed to this Court. We have very carefully studied this record and the authorities cited in the briefs in support of the respective- positions of the parties in arriving at our conclusions to be hereinafter set out.
As presented to us, the only serious insistence made by the appellant is “that the death of the said William M. Storie, deceased, was not caused by the injuries received in the alleged automobile accident but by the cause stated in the death certificate, convulsions of syphilis, due to the general paralysis of the insane, and that, therefore, the Appellee is not entitled to any recovery against the Defendants under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Statutes of the State of Tennessee.”
Obviously our consideration of this question must be controlled by certain rules which we set forth in Swift & Co. v. Howard, 186 Tenn. 584 at 588, 589, 212 S. W.
We gather from this record that the deceased was a high class Christian gentleman and a salesman of no mean ability. He was a close personal, church and lodge friend of his employer. Due to his past reputation as a salesman and to friendship, the employer sought out and procured his services. The deceased had sold various and sundry things over many Southern and Southwestern States and had met with much success in his profession. Some three or four years before the accident complained of herein the deceased had been on two different occasions, to Mayo’s Clinic where he had
On this testimony of the defendant’s doctor along with the evidence that the deceased had been apparently a healthy, normal man for some two or three years prior to the accident, up to and including the day
We said in Swift & Co. v. Howard, supra, that the employer takes the workman as he finds him and “assumes the risk of having a weakened condition aggravated by some injury which might not hurt or bother a perfectly normal, healthy person.” And we further said that if the injury “excites and aggravates a previous weakened condition then the employer is liable.”
For the reasons stated above we are constrained to affirm the decree of the Chancellor. It is therefore affirmed with costs against the appellant.