Consolidated Underwriters v. Foxworth

196 S.W.2d 87, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1946
DocketNo. 4342.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 87 (Consolidated Underwriters v. Foxworth) 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 Underwriters v. Foxworth, 196 S.W.2d 87, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 519 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

This is a compensation case. The plaintiff, George N. Foxworth, was employed by Foster Lumber • Company as a watchman, and on June 9, 1944, fell from certain steps, or a stairway, in the lumber mill of his employer. The cause was tried to a jury who found in response to special issues that plaintiff sustained personal injuries on June 9, 1944, as a result of falling from steps; and that said injury was sustained in the course of his employment with Foster Lumber Company and resulted in his being totally and permanently incapacitated to work. They found further that plaintiff’s incapacity to work was not temporary; that said incapacity was not “due solely to melancholia not produced or aggravated by the accidental injuries, if any, of June 9, 1944”; and, in effect, that the facts required the payment of compensation insurance to plaintiff in a lump sum. The trial court entered a lump sum judgment in plaintiff’s behalf on this verdict for a period of 401 weeks, less payments already made to the plaintiff, and defendant has ap pealed.

Under Point 1, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s definition of “permanent incapacity. The substance of defendant’s argument may be thus stated: The trial court correctly defined total incapacity” but when the jury arrived at the Issue submitting the question, whether total incapacity would be permanent, the definition of permanent incapacity apparently qualified the definition of total incapacity and tended to mislead the jury into finding that plaintiff would be totally and permanently disabled although he was or would be, in fact, only partially incapacitated.

Point 1 is overruled. The definition of permanent incapacity seems informal but the definition of total incapacity and the way in which the various special issues were put to the jury obviated any possibility that the definition of permanent incapacity would be given the effect suggested by the defendant. If the definition of permanent incapacity was erroneous, the error was harmless.

The trial court gave the following definitions of injury and of total, partial and permanent incapacity:

“By the term ‘injury,’ as used in this charge, is meant damage or harm to the physical structure of the body and ■ such diseases or infections as naturally result therefrom. * * *
“The term ‘total incapacity,’ as used in this charge, does not imply an absolute disability to perform any kind of labor, but a person physically disabled to such an extent or degree that he is disqualified from performing the usual tasks of a workman in such a way as to enable him to procure and retain employment is ordinarily regarded as totally incapacitated.
“You are further instructed that by the term ‘partial incapacity,’ wherever it may appear in this charge, is meant that degree of physical disability which does not prevent one from procuring and retaining employment, but which, nevertheless, disables him from performing some of the material duties of his employment, or other classes of employment which he could have performed but for his injury, if any, as a result of which he is able to engage only in a class of employment which is less remunerative than that which he was capable of performing before his injury, if any, as a result of which he suffers a depreciation or reduction in his earning capacity.
“By the term ‘permanent incapacity,’ as used in this charge, is meant that a person is permanently disabled, either wholly or partially, and mil never again be able to do his full work as he did before the alleged injury.”

*90 The concluding' language of the last definition (which we have italicized) is that to which defendant objects under Point 1.

The matter of plaintiff’s injury and incapacity to work were submitted to the jury in the following Special Issues, to which the jury’s findings have been subjoined:

“Special Issue No. I: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that George N. Foxworth sustained personal injuries on June 9th, 1944, as a result of falling from steps? Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’ Answer: Yes.
“If you have answered the preceding issue ‘Yes,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following special issue:
“Special Issue No. 2: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that such injury, if any, sustained by George N. Fox-worth on June 9th, 1944, as a result of falling from steps, was an injury sustained in the course of his employment with Foster Lumber Company? Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’ Answer: Yes.
“If you have answered Special Issue No. 2 ‘Yes,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following special issue:
“Special Issue No. 3: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that George N. Foxworth has suffered or will suffer total incapacity to work as a result of injuries, if any, sustained by him on June 9th, 1944? Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’ Answer: Y es.
“If you have answered Special Issue No. 3 ‘Yes,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following special issue:
“Special Issue No. 4: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that such total incapacity, if any, is permanent ? Answer ‘It is Permanent’ or ‘It is not permament.’ Answer: It is permanent.
“If you have answered Special Issue No. 3 ‘Yes,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following special issue:
“Special Issue No. 5: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that said total incapacity, if any, is temporary? Answer ‘It is Temporary’ or ‘It is not temporary.’ Answer: ‘It is not temporary.
“If you have answered Special Issue No. S ‘It is temporary,’ and only in that event, you will answer the following special issue.”

From the foregoing, it appears that the issue submitting permanent incapacity (No. 4) follows directly after the issue submitting total incapacity (No. 3). It was conditioned upon a finding of total incapacity in response to Issue 3, and it affirmatively required the jury to find whether “such total incapacity” (obviously that previously found under issue 3) would be permanent. The language of these issues and .the order in which they were arranged thus directed the attention of the jury so clearly to the definition of total incapacity, and put to them so directly the question of whether this very total incapacity would be permanent, that only strong language could have diverted their attention from the definition of total incapacity and caused them, in effect, to substitute therefor the matter in the definition of permanent incapacity to which defendant objects.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 87, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-underwriters-v-foxworth-texapp-1946.