Connecticut Indemnity Company v. Henson

388 S.W.2d 300
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1965
Docket14515
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 388 S.W.2d 300 (Connecticut Indemnity Company v. Henson) 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
Connecticut Indemnity Company v. Henson, 388 S.W.2d 300 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

WERLEIN, Justice.

Appellant, Connecticut Indemnity Company, has appealed from a judgment based upon a jury verdict in a workman’s compensation case awarding appellee payments for permanent total disability.

Although appellant has complained that there is no evidence to support the jury’s answers to special issues finding total incapacity and that such total incapacity was permanent, appellant relies mainly upon its Points 2 and 4 complaining respectively that the jury findings of total incapacity, and that it was permanent, are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. These assignments require a careful examination of the entire record.

Appellee Henson testified that at the time of his injury on April 12, 1962 he was working for Funway Boat Sales, Inc., a retailer of boats, and had been working for such company for 22 months, driving a truck and transferring boats back and forth from Houston to Freeport and Seabrook, and also *302 carrying boats from various boatyards to the Company’s yard for repair; when he handled large boats like a 25 foot or 30 foot boat he had a helper; that on the occasion of his injury a customer had brought in a 16 foot fiberglass boat to have its 70 h. p. outboard motor or engine worked on; the boat which weighed about 1200 pounds was on the ground beside the shop, leaning on one side of the building; pursuant to instructions he bent over and undertook to lift up and pull the boat half way up on the trailer so that the bow would be up in the air and the water would drain out of the boat; that as he did so he felt something sharp in his back, dropped the boat and fell to his knees and called for help; one Newman, a helper, came out and grabbed hold of him while he was still on his knees; Newman helped him up from the ground, and then Newman and one Smith braced him up and stood him up against a wall because he could' not sit down; the pain which he experienced was in the upper part of his back and extended into his neck; that the accident happened about 10 o’clock in the morning and about 12 they took him to Dr. Baier; that his uncle later took him home; he had never had any trouble with his back before; he was 29 years old and about 6 feet tall and weighed about 184 pounds, was married and had two children of his own and a stepchild; that he had had only a tenth grade education; that at the time of the injury he was making approximately $70.00 per week, or $1.20 per hour; his work required lifting.

He also testified that Dr. Baier told him to go home and apply hot water bottles and towels to his back and take aspirin; Dr. Baier gave him chiropractic treatments and adjustments every day except Saturdays and Sundays for some six weeks, and on June 20 he returned to his employer’s place of business for light work; he undertook to sweep the floors with a push broom, but he could not do it because of the pain in his neck and back, and he was sent home; that he continued to see Dr. Baier but the adjustments and treatments did not relieve him at all; he had to sleep on the floor many times; that about July 1 he was referred to Dr. Brodsky by his employer, and Dr. Brodsky took x-rays of his entire body, head and back; he was given therapy treatments and shots in his upper back in the area of his pain; that he was given about 10 heat treatments in Dr. Brodsky’s office, and given pills to take; the treatment helped his head and neck but did not relieve his back; that only one thing cleared up and that was the swollen knot, or swollen place, on his back. About two weeks after his last treatment at Dr. Brodsky’s he went to see Dr. Reece, a chiropractor, to whom he had been referred by his attorneys.

He further testified that he couldn’t do any work at the time he went to see Dr. Reece, and that after he went to see Dr. Reece and was being treated by him, he undertook to work for the Melton Brothers Texaco station; his employer had never called him back, and he couldn’t do any lifting; that his father worked for Mr. Melton at his Texaco station; he explained to Mr. Melton that he had been trying to get jobs elsewhere but had a back injury, and Mr. Melton on August 6, 1962 hired him at the Texaco station to work on the front; he worked there from August 6, 1962 until June, 1963, but during such period of about 10 months he lost one month because of his back; that his back would start giving him trouble and he would have to be off and go to the doctor; Mr. Melton let him go because he was missing too much time, and he had to have someone there who could do the work on time and stay there; that thereafter he went to work for Bill O’Day’s Gulf Station and worked approximately a month; he tried to wash cars but couldn’t do it; he washed about 10 cars that week but missed two days because of his back; he did no greasing or tire changing; he asked to be allowed to work on the front; he worked there about a month, and then was laid off because the manager said he did not have enough business to pay a man $60.00 or $65.00 a week just to work on the front, and he had to have somebody else who could *303 work on the front and also wash cars and do everything; that he then went to work for Bob Matthews Hancock Service Station as night manager, working hy himself after 9 o’clock at night, and he worked about 12 hours a day just pumping gasoline and not doing any greasing or anything of that nature or any tire work; that he worked there until September 9, 1963 when the station was sold, and he did not stay on with the new owner; that after leaving Hancock he went to work at the Katy Road Gulf Station tuning up and putting in plugs, and points in distributors; he did not change radiators or starters or pull generators; that he worked for the Katy Road station from the latter part of September until around November 19, 1963, when he was laid off because he was asked to change a truck tire and he told the manager he couldn’t do it. He then called his father and asked him to talk to Mr. Melton and see if he would employ him again. He went to work on November 25, 1963 as front man at Melton’s, pumping gas and wiping windshields, and was still working there when his case went to trial on March 3, 1964.

Appellee testified that he still had pain in his back at the time of the trial and that he could not do any kind of heavy labor or perform the usual tasks of a workman on a job of like nature that he had at Funway Boat Sales, and that he didn’t think he would ever be able to do so in the future; that other than the job at Melton’s Texaco station, which his father helped him get, he had never applied for any other job from November, 1963, to the time of the trial; and that he could no longer play baseball or bowl as he had done prior to his injury. He said on cross-examination that he had greased his own car twice and had loosened some lugs on wheels with an electric wrench weighing about twelve pounds; that if he were able to grease cars and fix tires he would make more money; he has tried to lift or bend and as a result has suffered pain which lasted from four days to a week.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
388 S.W.2d 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-indemnity-company-v-henson-texapp-1965.