American Employers' Ins. Co. v. Williams

66 S.W.2d 726
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1933
DocketNo. 12880.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 726 (American Employers' Ins. Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Employers' Ins. Co. v. Williams, 66 S.W.2d 726 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted in the Seventy-Eighth district court of Wichita county on May 16, 1932, by Mrs. Alice M. Williams, widow of Robert P. Williams, deceased, for herself and as next friend for her minor children, Joseph Lester, Carl Samuel, and Art Willis Williams. Later, to wit, on July 11, 1932, the plaintiff amended her original petition in which, by order of the court, the names of Estelle Pruitt, née Williams, joined by her husband-, B. V. Pruitt, and Grover C. Williams were inserted. Estelle Pruitt and Grover C. Williams were also children of Robert P. Williams, deceased, and were minors at the date of his death but had attained their majority prior to the institution of the suit. The suit was instituted by Mrs. Williams, for herself and children, against the American Employers’ Insurance Company under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 8306 et seq.).

The plaintiff, in addition to the necessary jurisdictional facts, alleged, in substance, that the deceased, Robert P. Williams, on and about the 6th day of November,-1929, and pri- or thereto, was in the employ of one G. W. *727 Mennis as a laborer under an oral contract of hire, and that, while engaged in the discharge of his duties as such employee, the deceased came in contact with an electrical wire highly charged with electricity and was thereby killed.

The defendant insurance company pleaded that the district court was without jurisdiction for the reason that Mrs. Alice Williams at the time she made her application before the Industrial Accident Board was without mental capacity-to do so and laboring under the disability of a lunacy judgment against her in the county court of Wichita county. The defendant also pleaded a general denial and specially that deceased, at the time of his ■death, was neither an employee of G. W. Men-nis nor engaged in the usual course of his employer’s business.

The trial was before a jury, which gave favorable answers to special issues submitted and upon which the court rendered a judgment in favor of Mrs. Alice Williams, Joseph Lester Williams, Carl Samuel Williams, and Art Willis Williams against the defendant, the American Employers’ Insurance Company for the sum of $2,049.80, as principal, and $184.40, as accrued interest up to September 23, 1932, the same being the amount of accrued compensation with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from November 13, 1929 (one week after the date of Robert E. Williams’ death), and for the further sum of $13.85 per week beginning on the 30th day of September, 1932, and continuing for a period of 212 weeks, together with interest upon all installments that might thereafter become past due at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, and for all costs. It was further ordered that the moneys awarded to the plaintiffs named be apportioned one-half of the total amount of the recovery to Mrs. Alice Williams and to each of the minor plaintiffs named a one-sixth of the total recovery. The plaintiffs Estelle Pruitt, joined by her husband B. Y. Pruitt, and Grover C. Williams, were denied all recovery.

From the judgment so rendered, the defendant insurance company alone appeals.

We overrule the contention that the district court was without jurisdiction on the ground alleged. While it is true that prior to the time Mrs. Williams applied to the Industrial Accident Board for compensation she had been adjudged a lunatic and confined in a sanitarium, the evidence is that, since the entry of the decree of lunacy and prior to the decree or ruling of the Industrial Accident Board upon the application, her sanity had been restored and a formal order of the county court entered l'estoring her to the status of a person sui juris. Under such circumstances, the mere fact that the decree of lunacy had not been set aside at the time she filed her application will not have the effect we think of depriving the district court of jurisdiction. There is nothing in the Workmen’s Compensation Act which prohibits the board from receiving an application of the kind even though presented by a party incompetent to sue. Mrs. Williams’ application was in fact received, and in fact acted upon as stated after the restoration of her original mental status. Appellant only cites the case of Mitchell v. Stanton (Tex. Civ. App.) 139 S. W. 1033, 1039, but a reading of that opinion will show that the court said no more than that the judgment of lunacy in that case was “prima facie. evidence at least of lunacy.” The presumption that Mrs. Williams was a lunatic at the time the decree of lunacy was entered is conclusive, but no authority has been cited to the effect that that presumption may not he rebutted to show her qualified and mentally capable of doing the acts complained of in presenting her claim to the board. .

In Jones Blue Book on Evidence, vol. 4, § 723, the author states that, while at common law insane persons could not be permitted to testify as witnesses, the rule is now firmly established, both in England and in this country, that a lunatic or insane person is admissible as a witness, if, on examination by the court or by evidence aliunde, he appears to have sufficient understanding to apprehend the nature and obligation of an oath and to be capable of giving a correct account of the matters that he has seen or heard, and in reference to which he is called to testify.

The Texarkana Court of Civil Appeals in the case of Clement v. Rainey et al., 50 S.W.(2d) 359, held that one who, in lunacy proceedings, had been adjudicated to be of unsound mind, was not necessarily incompetent to make a will.

Hence, as already stated, we think that regardless of the fact that Mrs. Williams, at the time of filing her application before the accident board, may have been presumptively of unsound mind, she was not necessarily so and the action of the board in receiving the application without objection appearing and later making its award at a time when a formal decree of her sanity had been entered cannot in reason be held to rob the district court of jurisdiction upon appeal in other respects held to be regular and authorized.

By assignments duly presented appellant also insists that the deceased, Williams, was not at the time of his death an employee of the subscriber of the appellant insurance company and did not receive his injury in the usual course of his employer’s business.

There was evidence in behalf of appellees to the effect that Williams had been employed as a laborer by G. W. .Mennis for about a year when for some reason not appearing that former employment was. terminated.. While so employed by Mennis, he was occupying one *728 of Ms employer’s houses. Upon his discharge from the former employment, Mennis, by his duly authorized agent, entered into an oral agreement with the deceased that he and his family could continue the occupancy of the house in which they were living for which he was to care for certain pumping operations on an oil lease owned by Mennis. The deceased, according to the terms of the agreement, was required to grease machinery, look after the motive power, etc., during evenings and mornings when not engaged performing labor for another party by whom he had been regularly employed.

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Related

American Employers Insurance v. Williams
94 S.W.2d 1147 (Texas Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-employers-ins-co-v-williams-texapp-1933.