Batson-Milholme Co. v. Faulk

209 S.W. 837, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1918
DocketNo. 7632.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 837 (Batson-Milholme Co. v. Faulk) 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
Batson-Milholme Co. v. Faulk, 209 S.W. 837, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

The appellee, Paulk, an oil field worker, sued his employer, the appellant company, at common law for damages alleged to have resulted to him from its 'negligently permitting a sheave, or pulley, to fall upon him from, the top of one of its derricks, at the bottom of which he was working.

Appellant responded, first, with a plea in abatement of his suit because of his failure to make the Texas Employers’ Insurance Association a party defendant, alleging that at the time of the injury it was a “subscriber,” under the terms of the Texas Employers’ Diability or Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1913 (chapter 179, General Laws of the 33d Legislature [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. S246h-5246zzzz]), had complied with all the requirements thereof, including provisions for payment of the compensation therein designated to its injured employés by taking out insurance for that purpose with the association named, and that it had given Paulk notice of such arrangements prior to his injury. Its further answers consisted of demurrers, denials— in particular of the acts of negligence charged — and a plea of assumed risk upon Paulk’s part of a known danger.

The court submitted the cause to a jury upon special issues embodying inquiries as to whether or not appellant had been negligent as charged, whether Paulk had actual knowledge prior to receipt of his injuries that appellant had taken out the insurance it claimed to have done, and as to what sum of money, if paid then, would adequately compensate appellee for any injuries he was shown to have received.

Among its answers, the jury having found that appellee did not, prior to receipt of his injuries, have actual knowledge that his company had provided for payment of compensation to its injured employes under the liability act, the court overruled the plea in abatement, and then entered judgment against the company in appellee’s favor for $10,009 damages, found by the jury to have been sustained by him as a result of appellant’s negligence. This appeal proceeds from that judgment.

[1] It is first very earnestly and ably contended that the court below erred in so overruling the plea in abatement, notwithstanding the jury’s finding that no prior notice had been given Paulk .that appellant had insured its employés as provided in this Liability or Compensation Act of 1913, because, it is insisted, under the proper construction of that act, no such notice was necessary or a prerequisite to so bringing Paulk’s cause of action, if any he had, under its terms, as to leave him without the right to sue for damages at common law, as he did; in other words, it is said that the provision for such notice in section 19, part 3, of the act in question, is directory only, and a failure upon the employer’s part to observe it does not in any way abridge his right to yet require the employé to resort alone to the compensation therein prescribed.

If this construction be correct — that is, if the liability act, with its fixed schedules of compensation, superseded his right to sue for damages at common law, despite the fact that he had not been given the prescribed notice — then Paulk had no case against appellant and the plea in abatement should have been sustained.

The question is not an open one in Texas, however, having already been thrice explicitly determined adversely to appellant’s contention, once each by the Courts of Civil Appeals of San Antonio, Amarillo, and Beaumont, in the order named. Kampmann v. Cross, 194 S. W. 437; Rice v. Garrett, 194 S. W. 670; Farmers’ Petroleum Co. v. Shelton, 202 S. W. 194.

Appellant indulges no illusions about the effect of these holdings, concedes them to be directly counter to its view as to what our Legislature intended the effect of the required notice to be, and frankly asks this court not to follow them, but to construe the act as it does, and to reverse and render the judgment in its favor.

The practice in this court has been, when it has felt unwilling to follow previous decisions of other Courts of Civil Appeals in instances where conflicts between different ones of them did not already exist, to refrain from determining the matter in a contrary way, and thus creating a conflict, but to avoid that result by certifying the question to the Supreme Court. That course would now be followed if we were convinced *839 that the courts mentioned were wrong in their several and like general conclusions that the unnotified employs was not cut off from his right to sue his employer, nor remitted solely to the schedules of the compensation law; hut, not so thinking, it becomes our duty to determine the issue here. Since, however, our conclusion that the right result was reached in those cases rests upon somewhat different intermediary interpretations to some there announced as to the purpose and effect of the notice provision in the statute, this expression of them is ventured, under efforts to confine it mainly to considerations not presented by the other courts, and to avoid reargument of those they have advanced.

The provision concerning notice referred to, that of the act of 1913, § 19, pt. 3, is this:

“Every subscriber shall, as soon as he secures a policy, give notice, in writing or print, to all pe'rsons under contract of hire with him, that he has provided for payment of compensation for injuries with the association.”

What at that time was the object of, the purpose in, and the reason for this requirement?

As applied to a case of the character here developed, did the Legislature intend by this provision merely to require the employer to furnish his employe such conciete information as would enable the latter to obtain and reduce to possession the compensation which might thereafter become due him under a compulsory law, to which both of them, in consequence of the employer’s having qualified as a subscriber thereto by paying the prescribed insurance premium, had already become unconditionally amenable, as appellant in effect contends, or did that body in the purpose to adopt, to a degree at least, an elective act, intend to impose upon the employer such a duty toward the employe as might, in the event of its nonperformance, be so penalized against the former as to leave to the latter unimpaired his pre-existing right of action for damages, if he chose to exercise it?. The power of the Legislature to have done either, under the opinion of our Supreme Court in the Middleton Case, 108 Tex. 96, 185 S. W. 556, now seems established, so that the inquiry is limited to which one of the two it did, or, more properly, to which it intended to do; accordingly it is thought that a very brief reference to the nature and history of the enactment will aid in furnishing an answer.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 837, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batson-milholme-co-v-faulk-texapp-1918.