Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Courtney

363 S.W.2d 427
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1963
DocketA-8843
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 363 S.W.2d 427 (Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Courtney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Courtney, 363 S.W.2d 427 (Tex. 1963).

Opinion

GREENHILL, Justice.

' This is a workmen’s -compensation case. The Question is whether the triál court acted correctly in instructing’counsel for the insurer not to mention' to the jury that the injured employee ever refused to súbmit to a myelogram' or surgery or- that an operation iqight 'cure or benefit her condition. The answer to this question depends upon whether the insurer properly demanded or tendered an operation and whether it admitted liability in such a way as to make the proffered testimony admissible.

After a trial by jury, the employee recovered a judgment for total and permanent disability. The action of the trial court was affirmed by the Austin Court of Civil Appeals, one justice dissenting. 353 S.W.2d 299.

The general problem presented here has been before this Court in three recent cases: Truck Insurance Exchange v. Seelbach, 161 Tex. 250, 339 S.W.2d 521 (1960); Texas Employers’ Insurance Association v. Shelton, 161 Tex. 259, 339 S.W.2d 519 (1960); and Cook v. City of Austin, 161 Tex. 294, 340 S.W.2d 482 (1960). In Shelton, the insurer tendered an operation and requested the Board to order a medical examination if the employee refused to submit to an examination. Though the insurer by implication assumed the expense of the operation, it did not admit general liability. In Seelbach, no surgery was recommended, tendered, or demanded while the employee’s case was before the Board. The need for an operation did not become apparent until after the Industrial Accident Board’s award became final. In Cook, the employee was said to have knowledge, while his case was before the Board, that surgery would help him. But no operation was tendered or demanded while his case was before the Board. In all three of these cases, it was held that the trial court correctly excluded evidence similar to that proffered here. In these three cases, this Court had before it the line of cases including the Quinn and Kubiak cases, and the ruling substantially to the contrary by the Fifth Circuit in the Bellah case. 1 It chose to follow Quinn and Kubiak. And in Seelbach, Shelton, and Cook, this Court held that for the insurer to be in a position to offer the testimony, it must have (1) admitted liability and (2) tendered an operation to the employee, and (3) the tender must have been made while the matter was still before the Board and before the Board’s award had been finally made.

It will be helpful, in considering the facts set out below, to keep in mind the steps set out in Quinn to enable the insurer to get in this testimony:

1. The insurer must admit liability;
2. It must tender an operation while the claim is pending before the Board;
3. If the employee refuses the operation, the insurer must make a *429 demand to the Board to require the examination; and
4. The insurer must show the examination was had and the action of the Board thereon.

The facts in this case and the voluminous correspondence between counsel for plaintiff and counsel for the insurer are set out at length in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, 353 S.W.2d 299 to 303, and only the substance thereof will be repeated here.

Mrs. Claudine Courtney injured her back while at work in October of 1959. The insurer assumed liability and paid her weekly compensation for 33 weeks plus medical expenses. During that time, she was sent by the insurer to Doctors Esquivel and Tisdale who considered that she had only a back strain. In March of 1960, before her payments were stopped in June of 1960, Dr. Esquivel reported that although he did not think Mrs. Courtney had a disc lesion, he recommended to the carrier and to claimant’s attorney that she be examined by a neurosurgeon and “perhaps have myelogram studies made to rule out such a lesion.” She was not sent to a neurosurgeon and no myelogram was run at that time.

In June of 1960, while the matter was still before the Board, the insurer stopped making compensation payments. It wrote the Board that it was stopping because, based on its doctors’ reports, Mrs. Courtney merely had a lumbar strain and had ceased receiving any medical attention; that the doctors had indicated that the claimant was no longer disabled. While it does not clearly appear, it is apparent that Mrs. Courtney thereafter asked the Board to require the insurer to continue making payments.

On October 21, 1960, counsel for the insurer again wrote the Board that it had stopped payments for the above reasons; that it appeared that “this claimant has been overpaid” because she hadn’t reported for treatment since December 11, 1959, “and we have no evidence that the claimant should have any residual disability or loss of earning power whatever.”- It stated that none of the doctors had recommended surgery, and it had no information that she required surgery. Then follows language which is pertinent on tender of an operation:

“However, we * * * are giving notice, through your Honorable..Board, that if claimant’s attorney has any evidence or any infprmation indicating that this claimant - requires surgery, then the insurer hereby tenders the claimant a surgical operation at the hands of Dr. S. Esquivel. * * * ”

Mrs. Courtney’s attorney replied on October 22, 1960, that Dr. Esquivel had recommended a myelogram on March 18, 1960, and that Dr. Tisdale’s report of June 8, 1960, suggested the possibility of a disc protrusion; but that the insurer had not paid Mrs. Courtney any compensation since June 13, 1960, or suggested any further treatment. He said, however, that he would agree to postpone the hearing before the Board to see whether Mrs. Courtney’s condition required an operation if the carrier would bring her compensation payments up to date and would continue them until it could be definitely determined whether surgery would be required.

Insurer’s counsel replied that he interpreted Mrs. Courtney’s counsel’s letter as requesting a myelogram. He thereupon wrote:

“ * * * we accordingly, hereby tender the claimant a myelogram at the expense of the insurer at the hands of Dr. S. Esquivel. * * * The insurer also offers to resume the payment of weekly compensation when the claimant reports for the myelogram and to continue the payment * * * until the claimant is released by Dr. Esqui-ygj * * *»

Mrs. Courtney’s counsel replied that his letter had been misinterpreted: “Claimant is not requesting a myelogram or surgery unless it is the opinion of either Dr. Esqui- *430 vel or Dr.

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363 S.W.2d 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardware-mutual-casualty-co-v-courtney-tex-1963.