Federal Underwriters Exchange v. Price

145 S.W.2d 951
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1940
DocketNo. 2056.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 951 (Federal Underwriters Exchange v. Price) 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
Federal Underwriters Exchange v. Price, 145 S.W.2d 951 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

*953 GRISSOM, Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. Walter Price 'instituted this suit against his employer’s insurance carrier, Federal Underwriters Exchange, to recover compensation for disability alleged to have resulted from injuries suffered on or about the ISth day of July,. 1937. Said injuries were alleged to have resulted by reason of oil being accidentally spilled or blown on plaintiff’s legs, causing an infection or poisoning to set up on his legs and body, rendering him. totally and permanently disabled.

The defendant answered by general demurrer, exceptions, general denial, and a special answer in which it denied' that plaintiff sustained any accidental personal injury while working about a well on his employer’s lease “after January 17, 1937.” Defendant further alleged “that whatever infection or skin eruption the plaintiff may have suffered * * * was not the result of any accidental injury suffered by plaintiff since January 17, 1937 at which time the plaintiff claims^ that he sustained burns to certain portions of his body which resulted in certain skin eruptions and for which he has been paid compensation by the defendant, and on or about July 18, 1937, the plaintiff executed and delivered a compromise settlement receipt in full compromise, settlement, accord- and satisfaction of all compensation and claims for compensation which he had or could have had against defendant by reason of injuries received by him on or about the 17th -day of January, 1937, and on occasions thereafter connected therewith, which said compromise agreement was approved by the Industrial Accident Board of Texas on July 25, 1937, whereby all claims for compensation that plaintiff then had or might thereafter have as an employee of George B. Ray from skin eruptions in the future were fully compromised, settled and satisfied, and the alleged infection or poisoning * * * which the plaintiff alleges set up on both of his legs and body for which he sues herein, are connected with the alleged injury of January 17, 1937, and the infection or poisoning resulting therefrom and is merely a recurrence thereof, for which the plaintiff has beeh heretofore fully satisfied by the defendant and plaintiff cannot be heard to recover again for such infection or poisoning for which a settlement and accord has been entered into and fully satisfied]”

In answer to the special issues submitted, the jury found:. (1) That plaintiff sustained an injury while operating a rod-pulling machine on or about the 15th day/ of July, 1937; (2) .that such injury was accidental; (3) that said injury was sustained while in the course of his employment with George B. Ray; (4) that plaintiff suffered disability as the result of such injury; (5) that said injury was a producing cause of plaintiff’s disability; (6) that plaintiff was not totally disabled; (8) that plaintiff suffered partial disability as a result of such injury; (9) that such partial disability existed from July 15, 1937, until the date of the trial; (10) that during said period, plaintiff was disabled 75 percent; (11) that plaintiff will suffer partial disability as a result of such injury; (12) for the remainder of his natural life; (13) that the extent of plain-j tiff’s future partial disability will be 51 per cent; (14) that plaintiff told his fore-* man about said injury within thirty days after its occurrence; (15) that there was not another employee of the same class as plaintiff who worked substantially the whole of the year immediately preceding the time of plaintiff’s injury in the same or similar employment in the same or a neighboring place; (16) that the average weekly wage of plaintiff for the year immediately preceding July 15, 1937, deemed just and fair to both parties was $28 per week; (17) that plaintiff’s disability was not brought about solely by his being burned on January 17, 1937; (18) that plaintiff’s incapacity was not caused solely by being sprayed with oil on an occasion or occasions other than on or about July 15, 1937; (19) that plaintiff’s present incapacity was not caused solely by being sprayed with oil while working for Hart & Taylor in April, 1938. The court rendered judgment for plaintiff on said verdict against defendant for the sum of $1,222 and $69.30 accrued interest. The defendant has appealed.

The defendant’s first proposition is that the court should have directed a verdict for it because plaintiff and defendant, on July 6, 1937, entered into a compromise settlement agreement which was approved by the Industrial Accident Board in accordance with which defendant paid plaintiff $85 and which said agreement released defendant “from the injuries and incapacity for which plaintiff sues.” It is undisputed that about January 17, 1937, plaintiff received burns while working for *954 George B. Ray, his employer in the present suit. As a result of the burns plaintiff was off from work from January 17 until February 14, 1937. He signed a compensation settlement receipt acknowledging payment of compensation for this period of disability. He returned to work about February 14, worked for about two weeks and then a breaking out, similar to that alleged to have caused the incapacity for which he here sues, started from the burn on the lower part of his left leg and began spreading itntil it was solid over his leg. After two or three weeks of this irritation plaintiff stopped work and was under the care of doctors. He was absent from -work at this time for about five weeks; that is, from about May 15 until June 26, 1937. His claim for compensation was reopened and further compensation was claimed because of the breaking out. The plaintiff was paid additional compensation. In connection with this additional claim for compensation, plaintiff made an affidavit in which the manner in which he suffered the burns and the payment of compensation therefor were recited. The affidavit contained the following statement: “For some unknown reason infections, eruptions, irritations and diseases began to develop over my body and particularly on both legs and ankles and thighs after I had been back working for about ten days.” It also contained the further statement : “My condition now is satisfactory, but of course I realize that such eruptions or irritations may again arise and that after working on said lease I may again be obliged to quit work and continue with some medical treatment. I dó not know whether the conditions above described that have occurred since I returned to work on February 15, 1937 are in any manner related to the accident and injuries and burns that I received on or about’ January 17, 1937.”

Plaintiff’s testimony is, in substance, that he completely recovered from the burns and the skin irritation above referred to, and returned to work for the same employer in June, and about July 15, 1937, while removing wet tubing from an oil well he had oil blown on him and he became saturated with oil, especially from his waist down. That since said occurrence, on or about July 15, 1937, whenever he gets oil on him he suffers skin irritations and eruptions which cause incapacity. The substance of the medical testimony relative thereto is that plaintiff had developed an allergy to oil and that hereafter as long as he lives when he comes in contact with oil he will suffer these skin eruptions and that this will result regardless of what portion of his body comes in contact with oil, that is, regardless of whether or not the portions of his body that were burned on January 17, 1937, come in contact with oil.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-underwriters-exchange-v-price-texapp-1940.