DeLeon v. Western Casualty Co.

114 S.W.2d 274, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 886
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1938
DocketNo. 13671.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 274 (DeLeon v. Western Casualty 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
DeLeon v. Western Casualty Co., 114 S.W.2d 274, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 886 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Floyd DeLeon sued Western Casualty Company, in a district court of Tarrant *275 county, to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board, growing out of a hernia injury sustained while in the employ of Armour & Co., in December, 1935.

The petition sets out all necessary requisites to the jurisdiction of the court, in which it is shown that the award from which the appeal was perfected bore date of April 16, 1936. Because of the nature of the appeal before us, it is unnecessary to make, further statement now of the full contents of plaintiff’s pleadings.

The defendant filed a plea in abatement to plaintiff’s alleged cause of action, based upon the ground that the award of the Industrial Accident Board was not a final one, and therefore the district court did not have jurisdiction.

The plea in abatement was sustained by the trial court, and plaintiff has perfected an appeal to this court.

Under article 8306, § 12b, the Workmen’s Compensation Act makes hernia one of the special claims enumerated, and contains specific provisions for the manner in which recovery may be had; there is a routine of questions of fact for determination by the Industrial Accident Board before the matter can be reviewed by the courts for such an injury. Among other things, that article provides:

“In all such cases where liability for compensation exists, the association shall provide competent surgical treatment by radical operation. In case the injured employee refuses to submit to the operation, the board shall immediately order a medical examination of such employee by a physician or physicians of its own selection at a time and place to be by them named, at which examination the employee and the association, or either of them, shall have the right to have his or their physician present. The physician or physicians so selected shall make to the board a written report, signed and sworn to, setting forth the facts' developed at such examination and giving his or their opinion as to the advisability or non-advisability of an operation. If it be shown to the board by such examination and such report thereof and the expert opinions thereon that the employee has any chronic disease or is otherwise in such physical condition as to render it more than ordinarily unsafe to submit to such operation he shall, if unwilling to submit to the operation, be entitled to compensation for incapacity under • the general provisions of this law. If the examination and the written report thereof and the expert opinions thereon then on file before the board do not show to the board the existence of disease or other physical condition rendering the operation more than ordinarily unsafe and the bo.ard shall unanimously so find and so reduce its findings to writing and file the same in the case and furnish the employee and the association with a copy of its findings, then if the employee with the knowledge of the result of such examination, such report, such opinions and such findings,, thereafter refuses to submit within a reasonable time, which, time shall be fixed in the findings of the board, to such operation, he shall be entitled to compensation for incapacity under the general provisions of this law for a period not exceeding one year.
“If the employee submits to the operation and the same is successful, which shall be determined by the board, he shall in addition to the surgical benefits herein provided for be entitled to compensation for twenty-six weeks from the date of the operation. If such operation is not successful and -does not result in death, he shall be paid compensation under the general provisions of this law the same as if .such operation had not been had; other than in determining the compensation to be paid to the employee, the board may take into consideration any minor benefits that accrued to the employee by reason thereof or any aggravation or increased injury which accrued to him by reason thereof.”

Section 12d reads:

“Upon its own motion or upon the application of any person interested showing a change of conditions, mistake, or fraud, the board at any time within the compensation period may review any award: or order, ending, diminishing or increasing compensation previously awarded within the maximum and minimum provided in this law, or change or revoke its previous order, sending immediately to the parties a copy of its subsequent order or award. Review under this section shall be only upon notice to the parties interested.”

The award of the accident board on its face appears to be final; omitting parts, unnecessary for this discussion, it reads:

“On this 16th day of April, 1936, after due notice to all parties, came on to be *276 considered by Industrial Accident Board claim for compensation by Floyd DeLeon against Western Casualty Company, and board finds and orders:
“On December 12th, 1935, Armour & Co., a subscriber to the Employers’ Liability Law with insurance carried by the Western Casualty Company, had in its employ Floyd DeLeon whose average weekly wage was $25.15, and compensation rate $15.09 per week under the act. On said date Floyd DeLeon, suffered injury in course of employment resulting in total incapacity for performance of labor for 52 weeks.
“Western Casualty Company is ordered to pay Floyd DeLeon $15.09 per week for 52 consecutive weeks from December 12, 1935, for total incapacity.”

After hearing was had by the board, it entered an order on February 26, 1936, finding plaintiff had sustained a hernia while employed by Armour & Co., and that defendant was the insurer; that plaintiff was entitled to compensation of $15.09. Plaintiff was ordered to submit to an operation by Dr. J. H. McLean, some time between March 8 and March 18, 1936, at a time and place to be designated by Dr. McLean. The compensation was ordered to begin with the date of the operation and to continue for 26 weeks. On March 4, 1936, an order was entered amending the one last referred to, so as to require compensation to begin with the date of the injury.

The defendant advised the board it would furnish the services of Dr. McLean for the operation, but some misunderstanding arose between plaintiff and attorneys for defendant. The plaintiff contending that defendant demanded that plaintiff sign a release of further liability if the operation should prove successful. On March 28, 1936, counsel for plaintiff wrote the board declining the operation at the hands of Dr. McLean and asked the board to make a final award. Thereafter, on April 16, 1936, the- award was made, from which the appeal to the district court was taken.

The petition of plaintiff shows that he did, on April 9, 1936, undergo the operation at the hands of another surgeon; this, it will be observed, was prior to the entry of the award from which the appeal was taken.

There is no provision in the statutes, from which we have quoted above, for the board to order an operation at the hands of a surgeon named by it, until the employee has refused the services tendered by the insurer, but we do not consider that the order requiring the operation was ineffective because it named Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 274, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deleon-v-western-casualty-co-texapp-1938.