Barmore v. Safety Casualty Company

363 S.W.2d 355, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1962
Docket6596
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 363 S.W.2d 355 (Barmore v. Safety Casualty Company) 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
Barmore v. Safety Casualty Company, 363 S.W.2d 355, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2039 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

Appellant sought benefits under the Workmen’s Compensation law for total and permanent incapacity resulting from an alleged injury of March 9, 1960. Since judgment was against him, the parties here will be referred to as they were in the trial court.

*356 In answer to the first special issue submitted to it, the jury found that plaintiff had not sustained an injury on or about March 9, 1960. Seeking to set aside the judgment of the lower court and for remand, plaintiff urges a single point of error. This point asserts that,, since the charge- of ‘‘recent fabrication” had been leveled by defendant at plaintiff, the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of plaintiff’s wife in rebuttal that he told her the morning after his claimed injury that he had been hurt- on the job.

The question whether plaintiff had had an accident and sustained any injury on the occasion in question was vigorously contested. To put the question in proper perspective, we set forth a summary of pertinent events as they developed at the trial. Plaintiff was the' first witness taking the stand and on direct examination, after having told about being employed by So-cony-Mobil Oil Company as a tank-truck driver, stated that the night of March 9th, while driving along the highway some electric wires in the motor of the truck shorted and caught on fire. Upon discovering this he immediately pulled his truck off the highway and, just before he stopped its roll, he jumped out of the cab and claimed to have injured himself doing so. After waiting about an hour beside the road, another employee of the company, Sterling Hoke, coming from the opposite direction stopped his truck and plaintiff told him about the motor catching on fire. Plaintiff was then asked whether he told Sterling Hoke at that time that he had gotten hurt, in answer to which he said he did. He testified that Hoke flagged a car for him and the driver of that car brought plaintiff to the inspection station in Logansport,. Louisiana. After he reached this inspection station plaintiff telephoned his boss, Zee P. Brooks, and reported the break down of the truck. After staying at the inspection station about four hours he caught a ride with his co-employee Hoke, who was then returning from a trip and going back to Center, where plaintiff lived.

On the following cross-examination, plaintiff stated, while he did not remember, he might have mentioned to Brooks that he had gotten hurt. He was then asked whether he had seen a doctor L. S. Oates after his claimed injury and whether he told him of his injury. Plaintiff said he did not remember doing so. He was then asked whether he had any explanation for this, and he stated, “No, sir, I don’t.” In reference to the way the accident happened, he was asked on this examination, “Of course, you had no skinned places on you? No, sir, not * * * ” Then he was asked, “You had no bruises to show anybody. You had no signs on you anywhere? A. No, sir.” When asked whether he fell on his hands when he jumped from the truck, he said he could not answer that. Then: “Uh-huh. But you did not skin your hand and you had no skins any place on you? A. No, sir.” A short time later in this cross-examination, defendant’s counsel stated “As a matter of fact, don’t you know you didn’t have any accident there. You just had your truck short out and you stopped and first man come along, you didn’t tell him you had any injury did you? A. I told him the truck was on fire.” He was then asked if after he went to the inspection station “You didn’t tell that man about being injured did you? A. I did.” Then he was asked whether he told Brooks on the ‘phone that he had gotten hurt, to which he stated he did not remember. Plaintiff was pressed for not having told Brooks about any injury, and in answer to this he said he had no reasonable opportunity to do so and that he knew that there was going to be some men laid off and he wanted to hold his job. As a matter of fact he was let out about two weeks after March 9th. Then defendant’s counsel stated:

“Q. Yeah. And he finally let you out and then you decided to file this claim and then you left him — you ever seen Dr. Dickerson up till then? A. No, sir.
“Q. Till you decided to make a case and when you decided to make a *357 case, you started hunting those kind of doctors didn’t you? One that would swear there was something wrong with you ? A. I didn’t hunt Dr. Dickerson at all.
“Q. Well, did you hunt the lawyers and the lawyers hunted the doctor for you ? Who gave you this doctor’s name? A. Well, I had heard of Dr. Dickerson.
“Q. Well, did you see your lawyer here first? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And from him did you get Dr. Dickerson’s name? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Uh-huh. And so at the time you got Dr. Dickerson you really wasn’t trying to get treated, you was trying to file a lawsuit wasn’t you? Trying to make out a case? A. We had talked about it.”

After the above took place, plaintiff was then questioned as to who the man was who took him into the weighing station at Lo-gansport. While he could not recall the man’s name, he described him well and he was located and the man, C. R. Baker, later testified for the defendant to the effect that he did not remember plaintiff mentioning anything about an injury to him. In this connection plaintiff himself had previously testified that he did not remember telling Baker about his injury. Defendant also produced the weighing station witness who stated that while he recalled the incident when plaintiff stayed at the station March 9, 1960, to his knowledge plaintiff did not mention that he had gotten hurt. He heard his conversation with Mr. Brooks on the ’phone but did not remember that plaintiff mentioned his injury to Mr. Brooks. Defendant also placed Brooks on the stand, who testified that while plaintiff had several opportunities to tell him of the injury, he never mentioned it to him either on the telephone or in person. Defendant produced Dr. L. A. Oates, who also testified that insofar as he could recall plaintiff never mentioned an injury to him; that his record listed no such injury and if he had been told thereof, he would have made a note of it.

After defendant rested, plaintiff placed his wife on the stand in rebuttal. The following transpired, while plaintiff’s counsel was examining her:

“Q. Now then, after he had been in Louisiana, the time when his truck got on fire, when he came back, did he tell you anything about getting hurt? A. Yes he did.
“Q. What did he tell you? Á. Well, he— • -
“MR. LANE: Just a minute, I was listening here. We would object to what he told her some several hours or 6 or 8 hours after he came in. Wouldn’t be res jeste.
“COURT: Sustain the objection as to what he told her.
“Q. But did he tell you he got hurt? A. He did.
“MR. LANE: Well we — that’s the same thing.
“MR. SEALE: Now your Honor, the whole case, every witness he’s brought up here, he said ‘Did he tell you he got hurt’ ‘Did he tell you he got hurt.’ That’s the big issue in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
363 S.W.2d 355, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barmore-v-safety-casualty-company-texapp-1962.