Gulf Insurance Co. v. Gibbs

534 S.W.2d 720, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2455
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1976
Docket16611
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 534 S.W.2d 720 (Gulf Insurance Co. v. Gibbs) 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
Gulf Insurance Co. v. Gibbs, 534 S.W.2d 720, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2455 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

EVANS, Justice.

A workman’s compensation case.

The trial court awarded appellee, James Gibbs, the sum of $22,441.73 for compensation benefits and $170.00 for past unpaid medical expenses based upon the jury’s findings of total and permanent incapacity. Appellant, Gulf Insurance Company, brings this appeal.

Appellant’s first six points of error attack the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings on the issues of total and permanent incapacity. In reviewing the “no evidence” points we have considered only the evidence and inferences therefrom which support such findings, and in reviewing the factual insufficiency points we have considered all of the evidence.

Appellee', James Gibbs, was 60 years old and had gone to school for only one year. He was unable to read or write. He had held jobs working on a farm, cutting railroad cross-ties, sawing blocks at a saw mill, digging septic tanks, putting in sewer lines, and carrying pipes and bathtubs for plumbing companies.

The accident occurred on September 6, 1973. It was stipulated that Gibbs sustained an accidental injury in the course and scope of his employment. At the time of the accident Gibbs was carrying plumbing materials up a ladder to the second floor of a construction site. He fell from the ladder át the second story level, landing on his right side.

The morning following the accident Gibbs’ wife transported him to Ben Taub Hospital for examination and treatment. He was told that two of his ribs were cracked and was advised not to gS back to work for six weeks. He made a second trip to Ben Taub for x-rays and pain pills, but thereafter stopped going because he couldn’t pay the hospital bills. Gibbs testified that following the accident he had pain in his side, his arm, neck, chest and back and that he had chills. At the time of his testimony, he had pain in his side, arm and lower part of his back, “around my belt.”

Gibbs further testified that there were certain things which he had been able to do before the accident but could not do after-wards. He could no longer dig and he could not lift or carry heavy items. His attempts to work again as a plumber’s helper have failed because he gets tired and weak and can’t continue through the day. He has been doing some light work about three days a week for a man named Luther Brown. This job consists of picking up trash and sweeping but does not entail any heavy carrying or lifting. He can only work about six or seven hours a day.

Luther Brown testified that Gibbs works for him three or four days a month cleaning inside apartments and that the .job did not entail any lifting, stooping, carrying or digging. He said Gibbs does some sweeping and acts as a watchman. Brown did not believe that Gibbs could put in a full 40 hour week.

Mrs. Gibbs testified that her husband was constantly complaining about pain in his neck, lower back, right side and right arm and that since the accident he had had *723 trouble with his memory. She gives her husband a rubdown with ointment and puts a heat pad on him about two or three times a week. Her husband has not been able to do his gardening or help with many of the chores since the accident. Although he likes to fish he no longer does so because of the pain in his neck.

Gibbs sustained a neck injury in a car wreck about 9 years prior to the accident but testified he had recovered from that injury.

Dr. Otis Thomas, a chiropractor, called as a witness for Gibbs, testified that he first examined Gibbs on June 5, 1974. At that time Gibbs complained about pain in his neck, right shoulder, right arm and mid-back. X-rays taken of his cervical spine showed that the disc space between his 5th and 6th cervical vertebrae had been compressed. This narrowing of space, termed discogenic spondylosis, caused loss of feeling in Gibbs’ right arm. When such condition involves only one level of the spine, it is thought to be caused from a trauma or injury, rather than from degenerative age. The compression of the disc space could have been caused by the fall or by the auto accident; if the condition had been pre-ex-isting the fall could have aggravated the condition. The condition will not heal itself and is permanent. Based upon an x-ray of the upper part of Gibbs’ thoracic spine, Dr. Thomas testified that vertebrae processes were rotated beyond their normal limits. He also stated there was some rotation in the lower spine lumbar 1 and lumbar 2. This could have resulted in irritation of the nerve root. There were also lippings and spurrings on the lower spine which indicated that a lot of stress had been placed upon the spine over the years. A fall from a height of two floors could have aggravated these conditions.

It was Dr. Thomas’ opinion that Gibbs would have difficulty doing any kind of work that required heavy type lifting, bending, digging or strenuous activities and that his condition was either caused or aggravated by the injuries sustained in the fall and that such condition is permanent. Dr. Thomas had examined appellee on other occasions, the last occasion being March 27, 1975, a week prior to trial.

Dr. William Hand, an orthopedic surgeon called as a witness for appellant, testified that he examined Gibbs on February 26, 1974. He found Gibbs’ neck had a full range of motion; there was no tenderness when he palpated the cervical spine; the shoulders had a full range of motion; the reflexes in both arms were the same; there was nothing unusual or abnormal about the muscle strength in either arm. Gibbs had complained about pain in the neck and the upper part of the back and had also stated that his right arm had been paralyzed at one time, but that “it had gotten a great deal better recently.” No complaints were made to Dr. Hand about the lower part of his back and therefore no x-rays were taken of the lumbar spine. X-rays taken of the cervical spine showed the space between the 5th and 6th vertebrae was a little bit narrow compared to the ones above and below. X-rays of the thoracic spine were normal and did not indicate recent injury. There was no indication of nerve entrapment in either the thoracic or the cervical area.

Dr. Hand was of the opinion that appellee could do the usual tasks of workmen such as bending, stooping or lifting. On cross-examination he admitted that if a man had the beginning of a degenerative disc change as Gibbs had, a trauma might aggravate such condition and that a severe fall could bring on an acceleration or aggravation of a lipping and spurring condition that had preexisted. Dr. Hand did not examine the condition of Gibbs’ lumbar spine since Gibbs had made no mention of pain referable to that area. Gibbs testified that the lower part of his back did not begin hurting until two weeks after he went to see Dr. Hand. Dr. Hand had not examined Gibbs since February 1974 and did not know whether his condition had improved or deteriorated.

The term “total incapacity” implies a disability to perform the usual tasks *724 of a workman and not merely the usual tasks of any particular one trade or occupation. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Mallard, 143 Tex. 77, 182 S.W.2d 1000, 1001 (1944); Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n v. Hawkins,

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Bluebook (online)
534 S.W.2d 720, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-insurance-co-v-gibbs-texapp-1976.