Consolidated Cas. Ins. Co. v. Perkins

269 S.W.2d 683, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2675
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1954
DocketNo. 6735
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 683 (Consolidated Cas. Ins. Co. v. Perkins) 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
Consolidated Cas. Ins. Co. v. Perkins, 269 S.W.2d 683, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2675 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

• This action was instituted by appellee for compensation for an alleged injury he sustained on or about April 30, 1950.

Appellant among other defenses set up and relied strongly upon the allegation of appellee’s lack of good cause in filing his claim with the Industrial Accident Board after the six months’ period had elapsed. Appellee alleged and contended that he had good cause for failure to file his claim with the board up until the time it was actually filed which was some seventeen months after his alleged injury.

Trial was to a jury on special issues and resulted in a verdict favorable to appellee, upon which the trial court entered judgment for appellee for total disability at at the rate of $25 per week for 401 weeks.

Appellant’s first three points assert that the trial court erred in (1). overruling the defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict and refusing to enter judgment for appellant because the evidence established as a matter of law that plaintiff did not have good cause for his failure to file his claim for compensation within the statutory six months’ period from the date of his alleged injury on April 30, 1950; (2) that the trial court erred in submitting to the jury the special issues in his charge relating to appellee’s good cause for failure to file his claim with the board for the reason that the evidence upon which the issues were based fails as a matter of law to show good cause; and (3) that the evidence was wholly insufficient to support the answers of the jury to such issues, and the answers to same were against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.

The facts show that appellee at the time of his alleged injury was employed by the Sinclair Oil & Gas Company as a pumper on some of its leases in Rusk County; he worked at night and had control of several pumping units. He had been employed by the Sinclair Oil & Gas Company for over twenty years and for a good portion of that time in the production department working as a pumper. On the night of his injury, and at the very time he claimed he received his injury, he was attempting to crank a gasoline motor which operated pumping units under his charge. The testimony shows that the engine had been worked on and was stubborn or hard to start. It had to be cranked by hand. Ap-pellee got help, and in attempting to crank the engine appellee testified that he strained himself in the region of his heart; that he felt something pull loose which caused some pain. Appellee finished his night shift and continued to work. About May 5th, some five days after his alleged injury, he consulted a physician in Jacksonville, Texas, who made an examination of his heart by taking an electrocardiogram. On or about May 14, 1950, following his alleged injury on April 30, 1950, appellee received a communication from his physician stating the results of the electrocardiogram test and requesting that he lay off from his work for three to five months. Appellee presented this letter to his immediate superior and he was allowed to take a lay-off for several months, with full pay for a while and one-half pay for the balance of the time. He did not work any more for the company as a pumper, or in any other capacity. He received the one-half pay [685]*685under the terms of Sinclair’s contract with the union, although appellee was not a member of the union, until sometime in July, 1951. It was appellee’s desire, expressed to his superiors, that he he given a light job. His testimony is that his foreman, Mr. Slayton, told him that he would he given a light job with the Sinclair Company. It is appellee’s testimony that he knew of other employees of Sinclair who had been given light jobs on account of disability. He also testified that he made inquiry of his superiors with respect to filing a claim with the Industrial Accident Board and that they told him first, he could not file a claim while on the payroll of the Sinclair Oil & Gas Company; and second, that they would notify him when to file his claim with the board. Appellee testified that he knew of instances where officials of the Sinclair Company had assisted injured employees in filing their claims with the Accident Board and in this he was ■corroborated by Sinclair’s Assistant Super■intendent Buser; that during the period of time he was allowed to lay off from his job — about May 14, 1950, until the 16th •day of August, 1951 — appellee testified he was led to believe that he could not file .■a claim with the board because of being on the payroll of the Sinclair Company, and that his superiors would tell him when to file his claim. It is appellee’s testimony also that he did not know he was separated from his employment with the Sinclair Company until August 16, 1951. His last pay-check was delivered to him in July, 1951. The next'day after he received the information that he had been separated from his employment with the Sinclair Oil Company August 16, 1951, he contacted attorneys in Henderson, Gordon R. Wellborn and. Rex Houston,' and. employed, them to handle his case before the. Industrial Accident Board. Attorney Rex Houston testified that they immediately wrote the Industrial •Accident Board for claim blanks but .on account of its being the board’s vacation peri,od it took some two weeks or more to receive the blanks; that as' soon as he could make an investigation of the claim of ap-pellee and get the blanks from the board he prepared the claim and filed it with the Industrial Accident Board on or about the 5th of October, 1951. Numerous issues were submitted to the jury covering the good cause feature of the case, that is, whether the statements claimed by appel-lee were made to him by his superiors and whether he believed said statements, acted upon them, and whether all the statements taken together so made and acted upon constituted good cause for his failure to file his claim with the board within the six months’ period described by R.S., Art. 8307, § 4a.

All issues submitted to the jury were answered in favor of appellee with the exception of No. 24, which inquired whether “Clem Buser of Sinclair Oil & Gas Company advised plaintiff (appellee) approximately four months after April 30, 1950, that he could not. make a claim for compensation as long as he remained on the company payroll.” All issues submitted to the jury find support in appellee’s testimony, and some of them find additional support in the testimony of other witnesses. It is practically undisputed that appellee received an injury on or about the 30th day of April, 1950, while employed by the Sinclair Company which has totally, incapacitated him as a laborer.

The issue of good cause :is universally held to be one of fact for the trier of the facts, in this' case .a jury, and the findings of the jury “must be upheld unless the respondent [appellee] failed to meet the test of good cause for delay. Such test for delay is that of ordinary prudence, that is, such course of conduct as would be •pursued by an ordinarily prudent person acting under the same or similar circumstances.” Texas State Highway Department v. Fillmon, 150 Tex. 460, 242 S.W.2d 172, 176, citing cases. See also Anchor Casualty Co. v. Beeler, Tex.Civ.App., 245 S.W.2d 303. (writ ref., n. r. e.). Many more decisions might be cited sustaining the above proposition but it would unduly encumber this opinion. They are amply collated under key numbers 1283, 1924 and 1927, Workmen’s Compensation, Texas [686]

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 683, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-cas-ins-co-v-perkins-texapp-1954.