Highway Ins. Underwriters v. Coleman

239 S.W.2d 131, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1951
DocketNo. 4720
StatusPublished

This text of 239 S.W.2d 131 (Highway Ins. Underwriters v. Coleman) 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
Highway Ins. Underwriters v. Coleman, 239 S.W.2d 131, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

R. L. MURRAY, Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case in which Julian Coleman, as plaintiff below, has sought to recover compensation on the basis of total permanent disability upon the allegations that the said Coleman had sustained an injury on or about September 9, 1949, while working in Jefferson County, Texas, for Powell Transfer & Storage Company, said employer having a policy of compensation insurance with Highway Insurance Underwriters, defendant below.

The jury returned a verdict finding Coleman to be totally disabled and that such disability would last for 8 years.

Judgment was accordingly rendered in favor of Coleman for 401 weeks’ compensation, the maximum allowed by law.

After the overruling of its amended motion for a new trial, duly and timely filed and presented, appellant, the defendant be[132]*132low, has duly perfected- its appeal to this court.

The appellant brings the appeal upon four Points of Error, which are as follows:

Point 1. The error of the trial court in refusing to grant the defendant below a new trial because the jury’s finding that Coleman would be totally disabled for 8 years, is not supported by the evidence in the case and is so contrary to the overwhelming preponderance of evidence, including the testimony of Coleman’s own doctors, as to indicate that the jury must have motivated by some improper bias or prejudice.

Point 2. The error of the trial court in refusing to grant the defendant below a new trial because of the highly improper argument of the attorney for the plaintiff who argued to the jury that if the plaintiff had had a back injury at some time prior to the date of the accident involved in this case the defendant would certainly have brought in witnesses to prove it, there being no showing of available witnesses known to the defendant.

Point 3. The error of the trial court in refusing to grant the defendant below a new trial because of the highly improper argument of plaintiff’s attorney in criticizing Mr. Strasburger, attorney for the defendant without any justification therefor.

Point 4. The error of the trial court in refusing to grant a new trial because of the highly improper argument of plaintiff’s attorney in telling the jury that the insurance company had accepted the premiums on the policy, the question of payment of premiums not being pertinent to any issue in this lawsuit.

The appellant’s first point is overruled. We have examined the entire statement of facts and find the evidence sufficient to support the findings of the jury with regard to the accidental injury to Coleman’s back, the nature and extent of his injury and the probable length of time during which his disability will continue. Coleman, the appellee, was a Negro man about 27 years of age. He was raised on a farm in Alabama and went as far as the second grade at a farm school there. He farmed with his father who was a tenant farmer in Alabama and did other farm work until after he was grown and married and until the war was over. After the war was over, he worked in a mine in Kentucky and then Cameron, Louisiana, where he worked on a commercial fishing boat. He then worked for a shipyard in Port Arthur, cleaning and sweeping ships. He had gone to work for Powell Transfer & Storage Company, his employer at the time he was injured, about two weeks before • he was hurt. He and another Negro man operated a transfer truck for their employer. On September 9, 1949, he and the other man were sent to move some household goods from one house to another in Port Arthur. A large upright piano was one of the items of furniture they were required to carry from the house and place in their truck. The owner of the furniture suggested to them that the piano was too big for two men to handle and called their employer to that effect. The other Negro, who seems to have been the headman of the operation, also called his foreman back at the office and told him it was a pretty big piano for two men to move. The foreman told him that he had moved “lot heavier things than that” and he declined to send any additional help. The men rolled the piano to the front of the house and at the edge of the porch there was a gang-plank leading from the step to the sidewalk. The two of them carried the piano down to the ground and put it into the truck. According to Coleman’s testimony he was at the front or lower end of the piano, facing the piano and backing down the gang-plank. As they got the piano to the ground, Coleman testified something came loose in the lower part of his back and it felt like something pulled loose in the lower part of his back. He said he told the other man that he believed he hurt his back. They stood and rested awhile, then put the piano in the truck and delivered it. He continued to work the rest of the day moving some more furniture. He said that when he was moving his back would be all right, but when he would stop it got to hurting, “as long as I was moving it wouldn’t hurt me much pain, just a little bit, but when I stopped it give out on me”, he did not tell his foreman of his injury that [133]*133Saturday night, the day of the injury, because when he got to the office the foreman was “eating out” the other man for something he had done and he just wouldn’t say anything about it. That night when he began to get stiff and cold and couldn’t move, his friends put some linament on him. The next morning he phoned his foreman and asked for a doctor. The foreman sent out Dr. Tritico, who rubbed his back and gave him three capsules and sent him some more medicine later that evening. The next day, Monday morning, he called the foreman and asked for a doctor again and went in a cab to another doctor, Dr. Raines. Dr. Raines gave him some shots in the back and some antiseptic and other medicine. The second day following, he was taken to St. Mary’s Hospital in Port Arthur where he stayed for ten days. X-ray pictures were taken by various doctors and he was examined and treated by several more. Coleman testified that he had never been hurt or claimed to be injured at any other jobs he had had. Willie Joiner, the other man with Coleman on the truck testified that the lady who owned the furniture they were moving had told him that two men were not enough to handle the big piano and he rang up the boss and told him they had an upright piano and needed more help. He said that he was on the back end and Coleman was on the front and that he did see Coleman go down to his knees while they were lowering the piano. We think this is ample evidence to support the jury’s finding that Coleman suffered the accidental injury to his back.

As to the nature and extent of the back injury, over one-half of the 275 pages contained in the statement of facts is devoted to medical testimony. Dr. Kuhlman made X-ray pictures of Coleman on September 15, 1949, which was six days after the accident. He testified as to the X-ray pictures he took and also pictures of Coleman taken by another X-ray specialist on October 13, 1949. According to his testimony Coleman had a curvature of the spine; he had a small spur on the fourth lumbar segment of his spine, which was in his opinion definitely old; it could not have formed between the time the man was hurt, September 9th, and the day of taking the pictures, September 15th; he found no indication from these X-rays of a compression fracture. He further testified that the curvature or scoliosis was not a disabling condition, that a great many people have that much curvature and don’t know they have it.

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239 S.W.2d 131, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highway-ins-underwriters-v-coleman-texapp-1951.