Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Bailey

50 S.W.2d 484, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 554
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 1932
DocketNo. 2141.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 S.W.2d 484 (Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Bailey) 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
Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Bailey, 50 S.W.2d 484, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 554 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was filed in district court of Jefferson county by appellee, W. D. Bailey, against appellant, Indemnity Insurance Company of North America, in the nature of an appeal from an adverse award of the Industrial Accident Board. Appellee alleged that on March 4, 1930, he was an employee of the Gulf Refining Company of Port Arthur; that his employer carried its workmen’s compensation insurance with appellant, as insurer; that on the date mentioned he received serious personal injuries resulting in his total permanent incapacity; and generally he pleaded the essential jurisdictional facts necessary in an action to recover compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Rev. St. 1925, arts. 8306-8309, as amended). He also prayed for a lump sum settlement. Appellant’s answer consisted of general and special demurrers and certain special defenses not involved in this appeal. Upon trial to a jury, it was found that appellee suffered total and permanent incapacity as the consequence of the alleged injuries, that his average weekly wage was $34.66, and that he was entitled to a lump sum settlement.

Appellant asserts that the finding of total and permanent incapacity was without any support in the evidence, and also that it was so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong. On this issue, we quote as follows from the testimony of the witnesses. Appellee himself testified:

“My name is W. D. Bailey. I live at Pear Ridge. On or about March 4 of 1930 I was living at Pear Ridge. I was working then at the Gulf Refining Company at Port Arthur, Texas. I did receive an injury while working for the Gulf Refining Co. at Port Arthur Texas on or about March 4 of 1930. On March 4, 1930, about 5:40 in the afternoon I received an injury from falling where I was working in a ditch. I had been called out of this ditch by Mr. Joe Goodale the job foreman, to assist somelaborers in driving some sheet piling at the end of another ditch where they had been working, about three of them, I believe, nearly all day. I called his attention to it and he called me out and told me to go ahead and direct this work and drive that piling; I did so, and I went up to Red Kelso and a couple more laborers, and we stepped out to one side and got a six by six about 20 feet long, brought that up and laid it down, to drive this piling by the side of it. That was a shoulder to catch the piling. That was getting right along, by the time we finished this little job there, it was getting right along about quitting time, and I had left my tools in the bottom of this ditch, and most near all of them was quitting or going to the carpenters’ shack. I believe all the carpenters by that time what wasn’t already at the shack was slipping so they could get there mighty quick when the whistle blowed. Yet I was there and remained there, getting this work through. My attention was called to the time, it being close to quitting time; and as a usual thing we bunched up there about three or four minutes before quitting time, and get the mud off our shoes or boots, and so were ready at quitting time. On the day before this I had gone to the first aid ‘with a finger that I had mashed the end of it about half off. I believe you can see a scar around it yet; and this hand right here you can see another scar that I had knocked a good piece of hide off by getting a-out of a concrete wall. I had been to the first aid and had both of those hands done up, and they were both pretty sore the next day. And when I started back into this ditch after my tools, there was some — the spreaders that we put across there was I suppose about that far (indicating) apart; and when I put my hands on them like that (indicating) to let myself down in the ditch my hands slipped off; naturally being sore they slipped off and I dropped the full depth of this ditch, striking a piece of one by eight or something; I don’t remember the dimensions, but there was a piece of shiplap that the laborers kept down there to stand on in the bottom of the ditch to keep from bogging; lots of places down there if you stepped off the board you very near had to have help to get out. My feet *486 slipped from under me and I fell sort of back to the wall. I felt a, slight sting. One of the laborers asked me if I needed some help. He asked me first, ‘Mr. Bailey are you hurt • much?’ and I said, T don’t know if I am hurt much or not.’ He said, ‘You need some help to get out?’ I said, T believe so.’ He picked up my tools and threw them out on the bank for me, and got out himself and helped me up on the bank. And by that time, I believe myseir then and those two negroes were really all that were right there; nearly everybody else was gone. I stooped down to pick up a little stick to rake the mud off my boots, and when I started to raise up, then is when I knew I was sure enough hurt, because I didn’t get but about half up and a catch caught me then.
“ * * * I fell the whole distance of the ditch, because when I started to take myself off of the bank up here, put my hands up there and it gave away, that let me drop the full distance. The ditch was about six feet wide at that point.' My feet hit on a board in the bottom of the ditch. The board was slippery and muddy. My feet slipped out from under me; I fell in a little slant like that (indicating), and my feet slipped out from under me, and I fell backwards.
“ * * * I have suffered pain with that condition ever since these injuries. The pain strikes me mostly right across my back in here (indicating) and then up sort of each side of my back, like, plumb across here (indicating). It does not pain me all the time. Of course, I have some times at ease, when I get set down in a certain position where that I get steady or maybe standing up and get steady, or lying down sometimes I get in a position lying down, and it don’t pain me all the time. My main pain is when I am going about or trying to move, to stoop over, turn or twist around any way at all; then there is quite a soreness gets in me, all in here (indicating), and then when I make any kind of a move, any disposition to do anything at all— well, I have been miserable all this week. I believe I have been suffering more than I have any time because I have been driving back and forth from here to Port Arthur all that time, and there is a few rough holes in the road, and Just these little jolts shaking me around, it hurts me. I hurt all the time. I learned a long time ago there wasn’t any use in crying, and I get all that, and just take it all and go along with it. I would have to say that practically the whole of my body seems to have been affected by that injury I received on March 4. I am affected all over from the injury. My back, of course, being the worse of it) and was the main place that was hurt in the start, but I am affected considerably all over. Next to my back I notice it in my legs, both of them. Next to the legs, is my general body system. * * * The work of a carpenter calls for physical strength and muscular effort. You have to do lifting in the work of a carpenter at the Gulf Refining Company. . There is heavy lifting connected with that. Before the time of my injury on March 4, 1930, I was able to do my work as a carpenter.
«⅜ * ⅜ Before March 4, 1930, I was able to do the work of a carpenter. Since that time I have not been able to do the work of a carpenter nor any other kind of work. I haven’t done any work since then.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W.2d 484, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indemnity-ins-co-of-north-america-v-bailey-texapp-1932.