Bullard v. Universal Underwriters Insurance Co.

609 S.W.2d 621, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 4228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 26, 1980
Docket9196
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 609 S.W.2d 621 (Bullard v. Universal Underwriters Insurance Co.) 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
Bullard v. Universal Underwriters Insurance Co., 609 S.W.2d 621, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 4228 (Tex. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Chief Justice.

L. W. Bullard appeals from a judgment, rendered on a jury verdict, denying him recovery of workers’ compensation benefits for an on-the-job injury, granting him recovery of unpaid medical care required as a result of his injury, and taxing court costs against him. The predicates for his appeal are juror disqualification and misconduct, legal and factual insufficiency of the evidence to support two answers in the jury verdict, exclusion of evidence, prejudicial jury argument, and the erroneous taxing of costs. No predicate is developed to the status of reversible error, but Bullard is entitled to recover his costs. Reformed and affirmed.

Bullard alleged an injury to his back, and the jury found he received an injury, on 17 November 1977 while in the course and scope of his employment by Don Crow Chevrolet, Inc. The jury failed to find that the injury was a producing cause of any total or partial incapacity. The jury did find that medical care was reasonably required as a result of the injury, and that $205 of the reasonable cost thereof had not been paid by the insurance carrier, Univer *623 sal Underwriters Insurance Company. It was stipulated that Universal had paid Bul-lard $533 in workers’ compensation benefits, and it was evidenced that Universal had paid some costs of Bullard’s medical care.

Accepting the verdict signed by ten jurors, the court rendered judgment decreeing that Bullard take nothing from Universal except $205 “for medical expenses ... less proper offsets and payments heretofore made by [Universal] ... for [Bullard’s] . . . medical expenses,” and taxing all costs against Bullard.

At the outset, Bullard charges the court with double error in not granting him a new trial on grounds of juror disqualification and misconduct. First, he claims juror Betty Fried was disqualified under Article 2134(4), Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated (Vernon 1964), for bias or prejudice in workers’ compensation cases. Second, he contends Mrs. Fried’s concealment of her bias and prejudice on voir dire examination amounted to misconduct.

During the voir dire process, the jury panel was asked if any member had opinions about workers’ compensation cases that might indicate a bias or prejudice against claimants and the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act. Mrs. Fried made no response. She answered in the affirmative when asked, by reference to the questioning of other panelists, if she could sit and serve on this particular case. Mrs. Fried was one of the ten jurors who signed the verdict.

Bullard moved for a new trial on the ground that Mrs. Fried’s prejudice constituted a disqualification or jury misconduct. The prejudice, so Bullard contends, is proven by the testimony of juror Barbara Anne Echols, one of the the two jurors who did not sign the verdict. Mrs. Echols testified that

She [Mrs. Fried] said that she was having difficulty being a juror on the case because she was prejudiced and that if she were called to be a juror in another worker’s [sic] compensation case, she would have herself disqualified. And she said that the reason for her being prejudiced was that people came into her husband’s office and it was a frequent thing that they came in to his office saying that they were hurt when she didn’t think they were. In other words, her brief experience with worker’s [sic] compensation, that people would try to get money from insurance people.

Mrs. Echols also reported that Mrs. Fried said something along the lines that anybody that comes to court with a workers’ compensation claim, especially a back injury, has no case. From these statements, Mrs. Echols believed that Mrs. Fried had an opinion about workers’ compensation cases or claimants, especially those with back injuries, and was prejudiced about Bullard’s case. Mrs. Echols did not remember whether the evidence was being discussed at the time Mrs. Fried made her remarks, but she was sure Mrs. Fried made the statements on the elevator after the jury was discharged, although she may have said some things while the jury was deliberating.

Mrs. Fried gave testimony that she did not have any bias or prejudice, either for or against the insurance company or the plaintiff. She further testified that she neither had a feeling about, nor had expressed an opinion that might indicate she had feelings against, workers’ compensation claimants or cases, especially where back injuries are involved. Mrs. Fried did not remember saying that anybody that comes to court with a workers’ compensation claim, especially a back injury, has no case; but, if she said it, she explained, she meant it in connection with the evidence in the cause. She said that before the jury’s deliberation she had not decided how she was going to decide this case, and she based her decision in this case on the evidence she heard.

The trial court overruled Bullard’s motion for new trial. By so doing, the court impliedly found that Mrs. Fried did not have a bias or prejudice which, under Article 2134(4), disqualifies a person from serving as a juror. Bias or prejudice, which is to some extent common to all persons, operates as a statutory disqualification when the bias or prejudice reaches that *624 degree which produces a state of mind in favor of or against one of the litigants or the type of suit so that the panelist would not, or the juror did not, act with impartiality or had prejudged the cause. Compton v. Henrie, 364 S.W.2d 179, 182 (Tex.1963). If evidence conclusively establishes that state of mind, the person is disqualified as a matter of law; otherwise, the reviewing court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to upholding the trial court’s ruling. Id. at 182.

Here, the conflicting evidence does not conclusively establish a biased or prejudiced state of mind which, as a matter of law, would disqualify Mrs. Fried from serving as a juror. Crediting the evidence favorable to the court’s ruling, as we must, it cannot be said that Mrs. fried had a disqualifying bias or prejudice which was concealed. The first two points are overruled.

Asked whether Bullard’s injury was a producing cause of any total or of any partial incapacity, the jury answered “No” to each inquiry. Bullard’s third- and fifth-point — of—error challenges that there is no evidence to support the “no” answers are unavailing.

By the use of these “no evidence” points, Bullard does not undertake to demonstrate that he conclusively established either total or partial incapacity; instead, he proceeds from the erroneous assumption that the “no” answers are affirmative findings of the nonexistence of any total or any partial incapacity. Properly interpreted, each “no” answer is nothing more than a failure or refusal by the jury to find from a preponderance of the evidence the fact of incapacity which Bullard had the burden to affirmatively establish, and simply means that he failed to discharge his burden of proof. C. & R. Transport, Inc. v. Campbell, 406 S.W.2d 191, 194 (Tex.1966).

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Bluebook (online)
609 S.W.2d 621, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 4228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullard-v-universal-underwriters-insurance-co-texapp-1980.