E. K. Local Ins. No. I v. Lilly

1 S.W.2d 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1927
DocketNo. 11880.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 S.W.2d 490 (E. K. Local Ins. No. I v. Lilly) 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
E. K. Local Ins. No. I v. Lilly, 1 S.W.2d 490 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

Under the undisputed evidence and admissions of the parties, we think-it is sufficiently comprehensive and accurate to say that this is an appeal from a judgment in favor of J. O. Lilly against the E. K. Local Insurance Company No. 1 of Seymour, Tex., a mutual benefit association. The certificate of membership contained the following pertinent provisions, to wit:

“Total permanent disability or death:

“As herein provided, this policy is made payable in the sum of $1,000, but in case of death or total disability of the insured herein at any time before said membership shall reach 1,000 members in good standing the association will pay to the assured or beneficiary only $1 per member then in good standing. However, when the actual membership shall exceed 1,900 in *491 numbers, this policy shall be payable to assured or beneficiary in ease of permanent disability or death of the assured in the sum of $2,000, respectively, and shall so remain, until the membership shall from some calamity or other reason be reduced to a number below 1,400, in which event said policy shall drop back to and become payable in the sum of $1,000 under the same conditions as above stated.

“After said membership shall exceed 1,900, all assessments for death or permanent disability shall be $1.50 per member, and shall so remain until the membership shall be reduced below the said 1,400, when it shall again drop back to the $1 assessment, and be payable as above stated.

“The loss of the use of both hands, or both feet, or one hand and one foot at the same time, or the irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes at the same time, caused by disease, sickness, or accident, shall be considered as total permanent disability under the terms of this certificate.

“Permanent partial disability benefit:

“Second. In event the insured shall at any time subsequent to the date of this certificate while in good standing in this association become permanently partially disabled, this association shall pay to the insured the sum of one-half of one full assessment of $1 levied on each member in good standing at the time such disability occurs, and which is paid into the association as a result of that particular.assess'ment levy, to the amount of one-half of policy in force at that date.

“The loss of the use of one hand, or one foot, or the irrecoverable loss of the sight of one eye, caused by disease, sickness, or accident, shall be considered as permanent partial disability under the terms of this certificate.”

It was admitted that appellee at the time of the injuries hereinafter specified was a member of the association in good standing, and that, if injured as he alleged, the membership of the association was such as to entitle him to the sum of $1,000. On the issue of appellee’s disability, the following testimony was presented:

“The plaintiff testified that he was 38 years of age, engaged in farming at Elbert, Tex., in Throckmorton county, from 1906 to 1912. ‘Since that time I have been driving a truck at Elbert, Tex.’ And in connection with his testimony he there introduced the benefit certificate containing the clause of the above copy. He then described on page 7 the manner in which the accident occurred and in regard to his ability to work he gave, in substance, as follows:

“ ‘At this time my hand is stiff, and it is weak; has not got the proper feeling; doesn’t feel like my other hand at all, and painful at times in cold weather; gets cold and gets stiff and swells up at times, then going away. I can’t use it to do any good. I can pick up light things with it and use it some, but heavy work I can’t do at all, and have to use the back of my hand; had to do heavy work; to pick up any weight I can’t do it at all; and is not as large as the .other hand. I can grip a large object with it better than a small one, but not much grip to it, I can’t hold it. I cannot perform my duties with that hand as well now as I could before it was injured. This accident occurred in April, 1926⅛ I am not in the track business. I haul cotton seed, wheat, barley, anything that comes tc hand; load the cotton seed with a fork, but I don’t grip it with my hand, put the handle on the back. I load and unload them that way out of a seed house or cotton gin and into a car with that seed fork. I do not use a helper. I believe there are ten prongs on that seed fork. I haul groceries and things like that, sacks of potatoes, barrels of salt and flour, boxes of can goods. I am able to load and unload things, but I do not use both hands. I use one hand and one arm, the butt of my hand; sometimes use my arm. I have done some blacksmith work since this injury, and assisted in sharpening drill bits. About 50 or 75 pound bits were the biggest bits we sharpened with two men; when we had the big ones used three men. They call these bits fishtail bits. In sharpening these bits they use a power hammer, operated by a gas engine. You heat this bit and put it on the anvil with tongs or a hook. I used a hook like a cotton hook. I pitched some wheat in the field during the summer of 1926. - I think it began about June loth. I was hurt in April. I have been engaged in my trucking and manual labor .since that time. I began work in the blacksmith shop about the 1st of October, 1926.’

“Testimony of Dr. M. Thompson was to the effect that he took an X-Ray picture of the hand, but there was no bones broken, but am injury to the tendons. Dr. Thompson examined Mm three times; the last time was in August, 1926. Dr. Thompson further stated: ‘It is my opinion that he will be totally disabled for a period of six months to a year, and there will be a permanent partial disability as long as he lives.’

“The other medical testimony, there being several expert witnesses, was substantially to the same effect.

“C. N. Johnson, a witness for the defendant, testified that he is a farmer living in Elbert and had known J. O. Lilly, the plaintiff, for about 20 years, that J. O. Lilly had been engaged in the tracking business for -the last 6 or 7 years. In September, when seed hauling opened up, he went to hauling seed, and it was necessary to use both hands in loading and unloading the same. T saw him driving a truck quite a number of times during the fall of 1926, and have seen him load the same with cotton seed and: unloading them; he was using a seed fork with' both hands. I have seen him do this several times, I was at the gin to have my cotton ginned. He was loading the cotton seed into a truck and hauling it to the railroad. In the blacksmith shop he was handling fishtail, bits with a pair of tongs. He would hold them under the power hammer while the blacksmith hammered them' out. He would remove them from the furnace with a pair of tongs and hold them under the power hammer while the blacksmith hammered them out. I have lifted these fishtail bits; they weigh about 75 to 100 pounds. They are held in place under the power hammer by a pair of tongs about 3½ feet long. Mr. Lilly would remove these bits from the furnace with the tongs and hold them under the power hammer while the blacksmith hammered them out. I have observed J. O. Lilly engaged in manual labor requiring the use of both hands several times since April 6, 1926, truck driving, loading and unloading merchandise and cotton *492 seed, etc., which requires the use of both 'bauds.’

“Z. T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 S.W.2d 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-k-local-ins-no-i-v-lilly-texapp-1927.