Hurtado v. TEXAS EMP. INS. ASS'N

574 S.W.2d 536
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1978
DocketB-7583
StatusPublished

This text of 574 S.W.2d 536 (Hurtado v. TEXAS EMP. INS. ASS'N) 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
Hurtado v. TEXAS EMP. INS. ASS'N, 574 S.W.2d 536 (Tex. 1978).

Opinion

574 S.W.2d 536 (1978)

Manuel R. HURTADO, Petitioner,
v.
TEXAS EMPLOYERS' INSURANCE ASSOCIATION, Respondent.

No. B-7583.

Supreme Court of Texas.

November 22, 1978.
Rehearing Denied December 20, 1978.

Putman & Putman, J. Vick Putman and Harold D. Putman, Sr., San Antonio, for petitioner.

Groce, Locke & Hebdon, Ray A. Weed and Thomas H. Crofts, Jr., San Antonio, for respondent.

STEAKLEY, Justice.

Manuel R. Hurtado, our Petitioner, sued for Workers' Compensation benefits. See Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann.art. 8306, Supp. 1978. He alleged that he is totally incapacitated as a result of injuries he sustained while "getting down from a cherry picker and slipped and twisted [sic] injuring his back and body generally"; further, "that as a result of said injuries, or in the alternative, as a result of said injuries having aggravated and accelerated the pre-existing arthritic condition as well as other physical conditions, plaintiff is totally incapacitated...." The defense of Texas Employers' Insurance Association to the suit of *537 Hurtado was, as pleaded, that "both prior to and subsequent to the alleged injuries in question Plaintiff suffered from injuries and conditions which were the sole cause of any incapacity he has had or might have at the present time."

Upon trial, the jury found that on the occasion in question Hurtado received an injury in the course of his employment but answered "no" to the issue inquiring whether the injury was a producing cause of any total incapacity. The trial court decreed that Hurtado take nothing. The Court of Civil Appeals, with the Chief Justice dissenting, affirmed this judgment. 563 S.W.2d 360. Hurtado seeks a reversal of the judgments below and a remand of the cause for a new trial. We agree there was error entitling him to this relief.

During the trial, Counsel for TEIA offered into evidence in the form of four exhibits the complete medical records pertaining to Hurtado from Memorial Hospital, Uvalde; from Santa Rosa Hospital, San Antonio; from the office of Robert E. Scott, M. D., of Uvalde; and from the office of Karl H. Hempel, M. D., of San Antonio. The exhibits reflected Hurtado's history of health problems with diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and a prior back injury, over an extended period of time. They contained 280 pages of medical records, including clinical records, hospital records, nurses' notes, physical examination reports, letters to and from attending doctors, and statements of medical and hospital charges. That which transpired after the offer of the exhibits and their admission in evidence "in total" is reported in nineteen pages of the Statement of Facts. A portion of the original objection of Counsel for Hurtado was this:

MR. PUTMAN: May it please the Court, plaintiff objects to the offer and acceptance of the various hospital records and doctors records into evidence because under the shopbook rule, under Article 37.37E, [sic] which they are being offered, they are admissible only in those instances to show matters upon which the minds of reasonable men cannot differ, such as diagnoses and the performance of certain clerical tasks, such as giving medicines or taking the temperature or things of this nature which are not in question.

But as far as being offered, they contain matters of hearsay and of a conclusion nature and matters of opinion and they are not admissible.

It is incumbent upon the one offering the records to go through and pick those parts out which he is offering. It is not incumbent upon the Court or upon us to go through and delete the unacceptable and inadmissible portions.

Counsel for Hurtado then enumerated a number of excerpts from the record as examples of their inadmissibility. A portion of the reply of Counsel for TEIA was this:

The only question that we are involved with here is the purpose for which they were introduced, and that is causation, whether it's caused by this or not.
. . . . .
If there is anything objectionable in there that Mr. Putman does not want in there he can take it up with the Court and it can be taken out. We are offering them primarily[1] for the purpose of showing that nowhere in these records is there any history of this man having the injury of which he describes.
. . . . .
I don't take the position that in all instances I could do this and the burden would be upon him, but for the purpose of which I offer them, the major purpose, is that I offer them so that the entire records be in there. In other words, I am offering them for the purpose of the entire records, the absence of something from the entire records.

Finally, this occurred:

THE COURT: Well, gentlemen, it's a close question but I'm going to overrule your objections to the records as submitted.
*538 MR. PUTMAN: What is the Court's ruling, that I have to go through and pick out the inadmissible parts?
THE COURT: I'm saying the whole thing is admissible for the purpose for which he offered them.
MR. PUTMAN: That's as to the hospital records of the Santa Rosa Hospital?
THE COURT: The whole thing.
MR. PUTMAN: I object to the entry of the hospital records of the Uvalde Hospital for the same reasons. Shall I go ahead?
THE COURT: Let's just have the record show that the same objections are leveled at each one of them. As I understand you, Mr. Weed, you are offering all of them for that purpose, the purpose as you've stated?
MR. WEED: Yes, for that purpose. I am not saying solely for that purpose, but I'm saying it's primarily for that purpose.
THE COURT: That's the ruling of the Court.

It is noted that TEIA sought admission into evidence of the whole medical records and not particular or specified parts. After reciting that Hurtado vigorously objected to the exhibits because they contained inadmissible letters, notes, opinions, guesses, conjecture and speculative matters, the Court of Civil Appeals stated that the problem is one of determining which party has the burden of separating inadmissible portions of a proffered exhibit from the admissible portions. The Court held that the trial court had discretion in deciding which party should specifically point out to the trial court the objectionable parts of the records and, inferentially, that there was not an abuse of discretion here. Cited was the statement of the rule in Brown & Root v. Haddad, 142 Tex. 624, 180 S.W.2d 339 (1944): "A general objection to evidence as a whole, whether it be oral or documentary, which does not point out specifically the portion objected to, is properly overruled if any part of it is admissible." The dissenting Chief Justice was of the view that the attention of the trial court had been specifically called to the inadmissible nature of the medical records; and that there was no justification for the holding that the trial court did not err in ruling that all of the records were admissible. We are in agreement with this view.

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Related

Brown & Root, Inc. v. Haddad
180 S.W.2d 339 (Texas Supreme Court, 1944)
Hurtado v. Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n
563 S.W.2d 360 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1978)
Hurtado v. Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n
574 S.W.2d 536 (Texas Supreme Court, 1978)

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574 S.W.2d 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurtado-v-texas-emp-ins-assn-tex-1978.