Sitemap | Contact | Search | Employment
 
  Subscribe to SPLC news:
  Landmark Cases  
  Case Docket  
  Immigrant Justice  
  School to Prison Pipeline  
  Mississippi Youth Justice  
  Publications  
  Legal News  
  Legal FAQ  
  Legal Assistance  
Hate Map
Hate Map
Wilkins v. Lanier
Brown Lung Case

AGENDA AREA: Health Justice

Case Number: CV-79-294
Court where filed: Circuit Court for Lee County, Alabama
Date filed: 10/19/1979
Status: Settled
Nat Wilkins was a brown lung victim represented in Center lawsuits against a textile company.
(special)
 
Plaintiffs: Nat Wilkins
Defendants: West Point Pepperell, Chairman and CEO Joseph Lanier, other company officials and the company's insurance carrier
Date(s) of Disposition: none.
Complaint : Complaint 10-19-79


Protecting worker safety
For 27 years, Nat Thomas Wilkins worked at the Westpoint Pepperell cotton mill in Opelika, Alabama, cleaning and combing cotton. Every day, Wilkins inhaled millions of microscopic cotton dust particles that clogged his lungs, making him so ill he could barely work.

Wilkins was sent to a doctor and placed on medical leave. After helping Wilkins apply for Social Security benefits, the company terminated his employment.

Westpoint Pepperell never informed Wilkins of what it had suspected for years - mill workers like him were in danger of contracting byssinosis, a preventable work-related lung disease commonly known as "brown lung." By the time Wilkins discovered the truth he required a respirator.

The Center took Westpoint Pepperell to court. Evidence showed the industry had concealed information about brown lung disease from its workers.

While the suit could not restore Wilkins' health, it did clear the way for brown lung victims to receive some financial security. Since the case ended in 1983, federal regulations control the level of dust to which cotton workers may be exposed and require textile companies to provide regular medical screenings.

» Return to the Case Docket