Biers v. Fort Worth Lloyds

219 S.W.2d 493, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1659
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1949
DocketNo. 12045
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 493 (Biers v. Fort Worth Lloyds) 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
Biers v. Fort Worth Lloyds, 219 S.W.2d 493, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1659 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 113th District Court of Harris County, in a compensation action, entered in part upon a jury’s verdict in response to special issues submitted, and in part upon additional findings by the court, setting aside an award therefor, theretofore made by the Industrial Accident Board in appellant Ed Biers’ favor against Fort Worth Lloyds alone, and denying him any of the benefits he was claiming under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Texas, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq., against either of the herein-named appellees — that is, Fort Worth Lloyds, and the National Automobile & Casualty Company.

This suit had been originally filed in the trial court by such Fort Worth Lloyds as plaintiff, to set aside such award by the Accident Board in appellant’s favor, against him alone, wherein he, by amended answers and cross-actions, had vouched in such National Automobile & Casualty Company as a defendant, and had sought recoveries against both concerns for the benefits he so claimed.

Indeed, as a part of this final judgment, the court, after having, during the progress of the trial, first granted an instructed verdict in favor of the Casualty company, tried the cause before the jury as between the appellant as such cross-plaintiff below, and the appellee, Fort Worth Lloyds, as such cross-defendant there.

The parties to the appeal now here are, therefore, Ed Biers as appellant, and Fort Worth Lloyds as appellee.

The Automobile & Casualty Insurance Company, although named as an appellee in the appeal-bond of the appellant, who failed to prosecute his appeal against it, is not an actual party here. So that, the trial court’s judgment in its favor, having become final, must be left undisturbed.

The appellant challenges the determination so adverse to him below upon some six points-of-error, the first three of which allege violations upon the trial court’s part —in conducting the trial — of successive Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Nos. 281, 283, and 285, respectively, “when some of the jurors were induced to answer special issue No. 1 ‘no’, instead of ‘yes’, by relying on other jurors’ statements that their answer would not affect appellant’s recovery.”

The fifth and sixth points are, in substance, as follows, to-wit :

“The trial judge erred in instructing the jury that they were not to consider the argument by appellant’s counsel that appel-lee had failed to produce ‘Joe’, who was notified of the accident; the trial judge abused his discretion, after allowing counsel for appellee to take over appellant’s witnesses on the pretense of voir dire, in allowing appellant’s witnesses to be cross-examined, over timely objection by appellant’s counsel.”

In his trial pleading (his second amended original cross-action) appellant thus declared the substance of his compensation-claim against the appellee:

"On or about the 13th day of September, A.D., 1946,, while cross-plaintiff was in the employ of Oak Crest Provision Company, working in Harris County, Texas, and while engaged in his usual duties in the regular course and scope of his employment and in the usual course of trade of said employer, he sustained accidental injury in the following manner:

“Cross-plaintiff, while skinning cattle, sustained and suffered a cut on his left hand, which subsequently became infected, said infection naturally and normally resulting from the aforesaid accidental cut [495]*495on cross-plaintiff’s left hand. The infection was diagnosed as leptospirosis, commonly called Weil’s disease, from which accidental injury to cross-plaintiff’s left-hand, and the resulting infection, cross-plaintiff became then and there totally and permanently disabled, within the meaning of the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Texas.”

This was followed by extended further pleading, the hoiled-down purport of which was to declare the appellee — as the compensation-insuranee-carrier of his Provision Company employer — responsible to him therefor in a lump sum, equivalent to $20 per week for 401 weeks, etc., asking that the prior award in his favor of the Accident Board, recited supra, be first set aside.

Following the submission of evidence offered by the appellant, tending to support such cause-of-action as so plead by him, including the opinions of three Houston physicians, who, as experts, testified, and who appeared to have been shown to be fully qualified as such, that, in their respective opinions, the appellant had contracted Weil’s Disease, through the abrasion he so declared-upon and that he had become totally and permanently disabled therefrom, and as a natural result thereof.

With the ultimate purport and effect of the pleadings and testimony in appellant’s favor so appearing — the appellee having offered no testimony in its own behalf — the trial court submitted some 18 special-issues to the jury, the substantial purport of and the findings of the jury in response thereto, being to this effect:

“No. 1. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Ed Biers sustained an injury to his left hand on the 13th day of September, 1946, while acting in the course of his employment with Oak Crest Provision Company?

“Answer: ‘No’.”

Thereupon followed Issues Nos. 2 to 13, inclusive, which, by their terms, were in effect conditioned upon an answer of^'Yes” to quoted Issue No. 1, which, since it was answered “No”, were not answered at all.

The jury thereupon answered “Yes” to succeeding Issues 15, 16, and 18, to the effect (1) that appellant had been free from Weil’s Disease before September 13, 1946; (2) that other employees of his class had worked substantially all the year.immediately preceding September 13, 1946, in the same place and employment as his; (3) that manifest hardship would result to appellant if his compensation were not paid in a lump sum, and that $7.54 was the average daily wage earned by such other employees during the days he had been so employed, etc.

In the circumstances and setting given, this Court holds that the trial court erred in so submitting Special Issue No. 1 to the jury, and especially in so limiting any possible finding upon its part that the accident so declared-upon by the appellant might not have occurred upon any other day than the one specific date of September 13 of 1946; that such qualifications required the jury to find that such accident either occurred upon that particular day, or it did not occur at all; whereas, the above-quoted pleading of the appellant, as well as the stated substance of his supporting evidence, was to the purport that such accident occurred “on or about that date.”

This summarized-effect of the submission, and especially o'f the jury’s verdict thereon, plainly indicates the jury’s apparent agreement with appellant’s contentions that he had sustained such compensable-in-jury in the scope of his claimed-employment, and that he had been totally and permanently disabled therefrom, except for the fact that they did not find it to have occurred upon the exact date of September 13 of 1946.

Appellant contends, under his 4th point-of-error, summarized supra, that the reason for the jury’s answer of “No” instead of “Yes” to issue No.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 493, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biers-v-fort-worth-lloyds-texapp-1949.