American General Ins. Co. v. Webster

118 S.W.2d 1082, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1938
DocketNo. 3283.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 1082 (American General Ins. Co. v. Webster) 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 General Ins. Co. v. Webster, 118 S.W.2d 1082, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 83 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

COMBS, Justice.

This a compensation case. Brown & Root, Inc., a road contracting firm, was the employer, Earl Webster was the employee, and appellant, American General Insurance Company was. the compensation insurance carrier. Appellees, who are the widow and minor children of Earl Webster, deceased, brought this suit on the theory that Webster died as the result of a heatstroke received in the course of his employment. They plead:

“That on or about the 16th day of June, 1936 the said Earl Webster, Sr., was in the employ of the Brown & Root, Incorporated at or near Hamshire in Jefferson County, Texas, in the capacity o,f a laborer, that on said date, while in the course of his employment as such, he sustained injuries resulting in his death, to-wit: Plaintiffs show that on or about the said 16th day of June, 1936, while the said Earl Webster, Sr., was performing the duties of his employment with his employer aforesaid,, and while working and engaged in the work of building and constructing a highway between Hamshire and Fannett in Jefferson County, Texas, as aforesaid, that the said Earl Webster, Sr., had to exert and strain himself, the work he was performing requiring a great deal of strength, shoveling sand at about 1:30 P.M., the sun was very hot and no shade available and that while in the act of performing the duties required of him by his employer, he was overcome by the heat and suffered a heat stroke, which caused him to become sick and nauseated and fall out and as a result of same, the said Earl Webster died on said date; that the conditions surrounding his employment created a condition of greater hazard, and that the said Earl Webster, Sr., was exposed to greater heat and exposure hazard than the public was generally exposed to, and that on account of same, the conditions surrounding his employment brought about and resulted in the death of the said Earl Webster, Sr., as aforesaid. That his employer, Brown & Root Incorporated furnished their employees water to drink out of a barrel and that said water was not iced, and that the same was brackish, with an ill taste. That the said water was dirty and unwholesome. And that when said Earl Webster, Sr., the deceased, became overheated and exhausted as aforesaid, he drank a quantity of said hot and ill-tasting water. That immediately thereafter he suffered severe nausea, acute gastritis and pains in his chest and stomach and abdomen, that grew worse and caused his death, due either to the heat prostration as aforesaid and/or the drinking of said foul and unwholesome hot water that had been provided by the employer.”

The proof, although somewhat conflicting .in the details, showed that Webster was employed as a common laborer in highway construction work for Brown & Root for some months prior to the time of the alleged heatstroke, that he worked regularly when it was not raining. He was 39 years of age and apparently in good health. Some witnesses testified that he was sick on June 15th. Others said he was not. On the 16th day of June, 1936, in the afternoon he was engaged in shoveling sand into a wheelbarrow and pushing it some distance and emptying it into a concrete mixer. He went to the water barrel and got some water, complaining to a fellow employee that he had taken sick and did not think he could make it. He placed his hand upon his stomach and chest. One witness said he appeared to be sick and burned out. He pushed two more barrows of sand and said he could *1084 not go any farther. He was carried to the office in a car and when. he arrived there he was unconscious. He was placed in an automobile and another - employee started to bring him to Beaumont for medical attention. The driver of the car testified that Webster’s head rested on his (the driver’s) lap and before they reached Fannett, a few miles from the place where Webster had been working, he noticed a rattling or gurgling sound in Webster’s throat, and by the time they reached Fannett he was dead. A fellow employee testified that the weather was very hot at the time Webster fell out and that the work Webster was doing, shoveling sand and pushing a wheelbarrow was heavy, arduous work and the weather hot. The fellow employee who took Webster’s place when he had to quit testified that the wheelbarrow of sand had to be pushed rapidly as the concrete mixer was waiting for the sand. Some witnesses place the time of day when Webster quit work as 1:30 and others placed it at 3:30 or 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Some other witnesses testified that the weather was not hot for the time.of year, but was inclined to be mild, and that a breeze was blowing. However, the records of the State Experiment Station at Amelia, a few miles away from the scene of the work, showed that for the day in question the maximum temperature was 97 degrees, and for the 12 hour period covering the day of June 16th, 65 miles of wind passed the Experiment Station. Mr. Wyche, superintendent of the Experiment Station, testified that that amount of wind was below the average. His records did not show the wind velocity -for any particular time during the day. The place where Webster and his fellow employees were working was in open country ’ on a wide cleared right, of way.

Dr. Seab J. Lewis, a pathologist who performed an autopsy on the body, testified that, based upon his findings, it was his opinion Webster died from heart disease, “that is myocarditis with artierio schlerosis of the coronaries, associated with acute gastritis”. He found a serious condition of the heart and hardening of the arteries. On cross-examination, Dr. Lewis testified that the meninges or covering of the brain, also the liver, lungs and other organs of the body were gorged with blood and that such conditions were usually present in cases of heatstroke. He said that heat exhaustion would throw an added weight or burden on the heart. He further testified in effect that he did not take into consideration heatstroke as he didn’t think that was up to him.

Dr. Darwin, who testified as an expert, gave as his opinion that Webster died of heatstroke.

The jury found in substance that Webster died of heatstroke, an injury received in the course of his employment; that his work at the time exposed him to greater hazards of heatstroke than those to which the public generally was exposed ; that his death was not due to heart disease independent of the injury; that his death was not due to acute gastritis independent of the injury; that his death was not due to natural causes independent of the injury. On the verdict of the jury the trial court entered judgment for plaintiffs, and the insurance company has appealed.

Opinion.

We overrule appellant’s contention that plaintiff’s petition did not allege an unconditional cause of action. The portion of the petition complained of is set. out above. As we read it, it charged death from “heat prostration as aforesaid and/or the drinking of said foul and unwholesome hot water that had been provided by the employer.” The defendant leveled' no special exceptions at the petition but relied solely upon its general demurrer. Resolving all reasonable intendments in favor of the pleadings, as we must do' against a general demurrer, heatstroke was alleged as the ground of recovery. The 'drinking of unwholesome water was alleged as á contributing cause to the heatstroke, and not as an independent ground of recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 1082, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-general-ins-co-v-webster-texapp-1938.