Consolidated Underwriters v. Ruff

164 S.W.2d 550, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 1942
DocketNo. 4034.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 550 (Consolidated Underwriters v. Ruff) 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. Ruff, 164 S.W.2d 550, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 469 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This is a compensation case with appel-lee, Jake Ruff,- the employee, appellant, Consolidated Underwriters, the compensation insurance carrier, and Texas Creosoting Company the employer. On the verdict of the jury, answering special issues, judgment was for appellee against appellant for compensation for total disability for 156 weeks at $10.80 per week, beginning on the 10th day of August, 1941, from which appellant has regularly prosecuted its appeal.

Appellee’s employer was engaged in the business of curing and preserving timber, in part, by use of penta-chlorphenol. The timbers were dipped in this preservative. It was appellee’s duty to brand the timbers after being dipped, which was done by resting his branding tool on the end of the timber to be branded, and then striking it with a hammer. It was the theory of his petition that striking the timbers with the hammer caused his face to be sprayed with the preservative, which inflicted on him the injuries in issue. The court overruled appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict, and all fact issues raised by the pleadings were found in favor of appellee.

Appellant makes the point that the court should have sustained its motion for an instructed verdict for the reasons that, on the evidence, appellee had not sustained a compensable injury; he had not sustained any incapacity by being sprayed with the wood preservative; he offered no more than a scintilla of evidence on the issues of liability. These contentions are overruled. Appellee testified as to his employment, the nature of his employment, the use of the wood preservative, his method of branding the timbers, the spraying of his face when he struck the timbers with the hammer, and the injuries suffered by him, all in a manner to support the statement made above.

We quote as follows from appellee’s testimony :

“Breathing — well, whenever this would break out on my face the least bit, get out and get a little hot, get heated up in any way at all in the sun, it would swell and my breathing would get bad on me; it chokes my air, otherwise, the stuff would swell when I got hot. * * * The sores and pimples and all, and poison, would break out on my face and my face would swell.
“Q. Are you able to do any type of work now, Jake? A. Not any kind of work.
“Q. Why are you not able to do it? A. Well, I can’t stand any heat whatever, and any kind of work I do, in order to call it work of any kind, would heat my body up, and causes my face to get worse so I can’t do anything.
*552 “Q. I will ask you whether or not the sun would have the same effect upon you? A. The sun does.
“Q. Does that affect your hearing any? A. At times, whenever my face is at its worst, I can’t hear anything at all. I have got as much as three weeks at a time I couldn’t hear anything.
“Q. I will ask you whether or not that re-occurs at various times ? A. Just whenever my face is in its worst, the hearing goes out on me.
“Q. Does it affect your eyes, Jake? A. Well, it affects my breathing and eyes and also my hearing. It has effects all over me whenever my face is festered and in had order.
“Q. Did you go to work at any other place since you left the employment of Texas Creosoting .Company? A. No, sir; I haven’t.
“Q. How come you to fill out that blank as you did. A. Well, in filling out that blank I didn’t understand the blank; I could not read real well; but I heard I could draw a little time; there wasn’t anything done for me while I was going to the Doctor. Then Mr. Brant up there — I notified him I wanted to see him; I was under the Doctor’s care.”
Dr. Edward C. Ferguson gave the following testimony:
“Q. Dr. Ferguson, from your examination of Jake Ruff, and the number of times he has been to your office for treatment, and from the history he gave you, what have you diagnosed his present affliction to be? A. My diagnosis is that this is an acne-form eruption following a chemical burn.
“Q. An acneform eruption following a chemical burn. Now, Doctor, have you made a research or study and endeavored to determine the results of burns by various chemicals? A. Yes.
“Q. And in your study have you acquainted yourself with the reaction of a chemical known as penta-chlorphenol? A. Yes.
“Q. What is the reaction of the tissues of the human skin to a burn by penta-chlor-phenol — inflicted by penta-chlorphenol ? A. This chemical, after it gets on the skin, produces a condition which is known as photo-sensitivity. That means that after the sun light shines on this area that has been damaged by this chemical that this eruption is produced, and the entire skin is involved.
“Q. Doctor, I will ask you as to whether or not it is possible to desensitize what is known as a photosensitive skin? A. If thoroughly sensitized they generally remain sensitized. After it is once established, then the rule is to take them away from those chemicals for all times, because they erupt very easily after they have been sensitized.
“Q. I will ask you to explain to the jury the effect of a photosensitive skin and the things that it bring about in the human tissues ? A. Photo means light; sensitivity is sensitive to light; in other words, the skin is rendered — that is, it swells up, puffs up, turns red, and in this particular — with this particular chemical, they generally break out with these bumps that look something like acne.
“Q. Doctor, what ordinarily brings about a photosensitive skin? A. Well, these chemicals, some of them; there could be quite a number of conditions that would do that; but this particular chemical is especially prone to bring about that condition.
“Q. Could a man with a photosensitive skin perform manual labor in the sun light? A. Not very well. They generally work at night.
“Q. What effect would it have upon a man with a photosensitive skin to work in a close hot place? A. It would be dilatory to his welfare; the condition might come on him again.
“Q. By dilatory you mean— A. It would make him sick — liable to make him sick.
“Q. Does this chemical, these phenols— do they have any other reaction upon the body? A. They may bring about destruction of the liver.
“Q. Destruction of the liver — what do you mean by that? A. Well, the liver undergoes a fatty degeneration. That is the two outstanding symptoms. As far as the skin poisoning, following the chemical poisoning, you have an acneform rash. After you see it you had better stop then; if you don’t, the liver turns into fat and the patient dies, that is, with animals; these things have not been worked out finally.
“Q. Doctor, you have stated this man is able to work. I am going to ask you under what conditions he is able to work, to do manual labor? A.

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164 S.W.2d 550, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-underwriters-v-ruff-texapp-1942.