Big MacK Trucking Company, Inc. v. Dickerson

497 S.W.2d 283, 16 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 404, 1973 Tex. LEXIS 280
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1973
DocketB-3520
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 497 S.W.2d 283 (Big MacK Trucking Company, Inc. v. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Big MacK Trucking Company, Inc. v. Dickerson, 497 S.W.2d 283, 16 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 404, 1973 Tex. LEXIS 280 (Tex. 1973).

Opinion

SAM D. JOHNSON, Justice.

The wife and children of Willie Lee Dickerson have recovered damages for his wrongful death in an action against his employer, Big Mack Trucking Company, Inc. The court of civil appeals affirmed. 482 S.W.2d 1. We reverse.

Willie Dickerson and Ormand Leday were employees of Big Mack. Each was driving a truck-tractor pulling a flatbed trailer loaded with sheet steel across Texas from Eagle Pass to Arp. Both trucks stopped in Waco. Leday parked his truck fifteen to eighteen feet behind Dickerson’s. Leday left his vehicle unattended. Dickerson got out of his truck and was standing behind his trailer with his back toward Le-day’s vehicle. Leday’s unattended truck rolled forward striking Dickerson’s trailer and crusing Dickerson between the two trucks. Dickerson was killed in the accident.

The plaintiffs first recovered workmen’s compensation benefits. The present suit was then commenced against Big Mack and Leday. Plaintiffs asserted that the instant action was not precluded because Big Mack had withheld from Dickerson’s wages the amounts necessary to pay workmen’s compensation insurance premiums. At trial the jury found that Big Mack had withheld from Dickerson’s wages the amounts necessary to pay the premiums for workmen’s compensation insurance. The significance of that finding is found in Vernon’s Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 8306, § 12g, which the courts below have held provides a right of action to recover actual damages for wrongful death against an employer who has so withheld, notwithstanding that plaintiffs have already recovered workmen’s compensation benefits against the carrier. The jury further found that Leday was acting as an employee of Big Mack at the time of the accident, that Leday was guilty of two acts of negligence which also amounted to heedless and reckless disregard of the rights of others, and that those acts were proximate causes of the occurrence. The jury found actual damages in the aggregate amount of $220,000, but did not award exemplary damages.

After the verdict was returned, Leday was dismissed on plaintiffs’ motion and judgment was rendered against Big Mack for $220,000.

Big Mack applied for writ of error on five points. The court of civil appeals has held against Big Mack on all points and we agree with that court’s holdings on the first four. The first point denies that there is evidence to support the jury’s finding that Big Mack “withheld.” That point is considered to be without merit and is overruled without further discussion.

The second, third and fourth points challenge the lower courts’ construction of Art. 8306, § 12g, which provides:

“It shall be unlawful for any subscriber or any employer who seeks to comply with the provisions of this law to either directly or indirectly collect of or from his employés by any means or pretense whatever any premium under this law or part thereof paid or to be paid upon any policy of such insurance under this law which covers such employés, or any intended policy of such insurance designed to cover such employés. If any such subscriber or any employer of labor in this State violates this provision of this law, then any employé or the legal beneficiary of any employé of such employer or subscriber shall be entitled to all the benefits of this law and in addition thereto shall have a separate right of action to recover damages against such employer without regard to the compensation paid or to be paid to such employé or beneficiary under this law. The asso *286 ciation shall in no wise be responsible because of such separate action by such employé or beneficiary against such employer on such separate cause of action.”

Big Mack first contends that “damages,” within the meaning of § 12g, comprehends only those damages which are occasioned by the violation of § 12g, and, consequently, the plaintiffs could recover only the amounts wrongfully withheld, plus interest. Second, even if the right of action be one to recover damages for personal injury or death, the employer retains the common-law defense of fellow servant because that defense was not specifically abolished in the context of § 12g litigation. Third, it would be a violation of due process and equal protection of the law for the court to construe § 12g against the petitioner in the particulars mentioned above because the amount of penalty imposed by the statute would bear no reasonable relation to the gravity of the wrong done by violation of the statute. We believe those points have been correctly decided by the court of civil appeals.

On the first point, the phrase “without regard to the compensation paid . under this law” indicates that the Legislature anticipated a double-recovery objection to a § 12g suit; the Act then specifically answers that double recovery of the same elements of damage is permitted. On the second point, it would be fortuitous escape from the penalty if the employer should have the defense of fellow servant. On the third point, the penalty imposed is the same for all violators, i. e., he loses the immunity from suit provided by Art. 8306, § 3.

By its fifth point of error, Big Mack asserts that there is “no evidence” to support the judgment against it because all the evidence of Leday’s negligence and proximate cause was hearsay as to Big Mack. Leday did not testify. No attempt was made to explain or justify the failure to call Leday, his absence, or his failure to give testimony. The plaintiffs’ theory of liability was predicated upon the fact that Leday’s brakes were defective at the time he parked his truck. The only evidence tending to prove the circumstances of the accident or the elements necessary for plaintiffs’ recovery came from two witnesses who could only testify what Leday had previously related to them. These two witnesses were Mr. David Stiles, the vice president of Big Mack, and Officer Henry Harwell, the investigating officer of the Waco Police Department.

Vice President Stiles testified that following the accident, Leday told him he had been having “air pressure troubles” and that he had not been maintaining the proper air pressure in his braking system. He further told Stiles that he had parked his truck behind Dickerson’s truck, had gone off and left it and that when he returned he found the deceased crushed between the two trucks. In addition, Stiles, who was familiar with the proper operation of trucks, testified as to the way air brakes work on trucks generally. Stiles testified that if a truck was being operated under circumstances where the driver was having trouble with the brakes such as those related that it would be improper to park the truck on any kind of incline without scotching the wheels or putting it in gear.

The testimony of Officer Harwell was introduced by way of deposition. He testified that when he arrived that Dickerson was no longer there; that he had been removed by an ambulance. The two vehicles were still at the scene of the accident. Officer Harwell then related what Leday had told him: that he had been experiencing brake trouble with his truck in that the air pressure was running law, that he was the operator of the back truck, that he parked his truck approximately fifteen to eighteen feet behind the decedent’s truck and that when he left his truck Dickerson was standing at the back of Dickerson’s truck eating off of the trailer.

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Bluebook (online)
497 S.W.2d 283, 16 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 404, 1973 Tex. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/big-mack-trucking-company-inc-v-dickerson-tex-1973.