International Travelers' Ass'n v. Dixon

283 S.W. 681, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1926
DocketNo. 3229.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 681 (International Travelers' Ass'n v. Dixon) 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
International Travelers' Ass'n v. Dixon, 283 S.W. 681, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1146 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

LEVY, J.'

(after stating the facts as above),

The appellant contends that the findings of the jury are contrary to the evidence. It is argued that the circumstances show that the paralysis of appellee was due to the very high state of Blood pressure he had been previously suffering from, and that it was not caused solely and exclusively by any purely accidental fall to the ground. It is thought that the evidence is sufficient to warrant the jury in finding on th,e general issue, as in effect they did, that the rupture of the artery, resulting in complete paralysis, was directly and proximately caused by the force of the fall to the ground, and that the force of the fall was the sole emanative cause of such rupture at the time it occurred. It is admittedly shown that the paralysis was due to the rupture of an artery acting on the brain. Under the circumstances as described by the appellee, who was the only witness testifying in that particular, it appears that the appellee was pulling up the weeds in an onion bed.. A particular weed was so rooted as to be difficult to pull it loose from the ground, and the appel-lee gave it a very hard jerk or pull. The 'weed responded to the hard jerk, giving way all at once, and upon that happening the ap-pellee . was overbalanced, and immediately fell backwards, striking the ground full length of the body on his right side, “with all my force.” Appellee at once felt an injury or hurt. He says:

“I felt a hurt in the side of my head anil all along the side and down in the leg. I was unconscious — stunned—for a little while.”

Consequently it is strongly inferable that appellee’s body _ hit the ground with force. Upon regaining'consciousness, he “went into the kitchen,” sat down, and continued to suffer “very, much pain.” In “an hour or an hour and a half” after the fall complete paralysis of the entire right side resulted. The physician said:

“In a small rupture or a slow leakage, the person affected could walk ten minutes, half an hour or even an hour.”

It does not appear impossible, or even improbable, that an injury such as rupture of. an artery could have resulted .from a fall in the manner related. The physician said:

“The sudden fall and impact with the earth was sufficient trauma (violence) to rupture the blood vessel.”

And the testimony is sufficient to indicate that a severe injury did in fact result from the fall. There was complete and permanent paralysis of the entire right side following in an hour or an hour and a half after the moment of the fall. According to the ap-pellee’s evidence, he “was in perfect health” prior “to the time of the accident.” Before the moment of the fall, appellee “never felt any pain or anything queer or out of the ordinary.” He led an active, energetic life in his occupation of insurance agent. These matters would go to negative an inference of the breaking of the artery before the moment of the fall, or that the breaking of an artery “caused the fall” to the ground. And the expert opinion of the physician would corroborate such conclusion. The physician said:

' “He stated that he fell, got up, and walked into the house. Th'at fact alone shows that the rupture took place after the fall to the ground, and that the rupture was not the cause of the fall, because, when a blood vessel ruptures, and a person has a stroke, he falls from that, and is immediately paralyzed. If the rupture had taken place before the fall, and was of such violence as to produce a fall, in my opinion he could not have gotten up and walked into the house and sat around for half an hour or more. From the history of the case, as I have, it, it is my opinion that the fall caused the rupture, and not the rupture that caused the fall.”

The other physician testified, it is true, that—

“It is my opinion that a healthy person by pulling weeds in cultivated ground could not bring on the condition of Mr. Dixon merely from a fall on the cultivated ground. A light fall would bring on serious results, but we don’t expect that. I do not think a light fall, a little distance with little force, would cause an artery to break.”

The force of such testimony entirely depends upon the weight to be attached to it by the jury. The two phyicians made a physical examination of appellee a year and a half after the fall. Their only knowledge of the facts was gained at this examination. At that time the physicians found appellee suffering from a high state of blood pressure and also an enlarged heart. There is no direct evidence that the appellee had a high progressive state of blood pressure or enlarged heart at the time of the fall. The physicians merely gave it as their opinion that “the condition of his veins antedated the fall.” It might have existed in a high degree or a greatly less state. The physicians were only undertaking to show a possibility or probability of appellee’s condition from “a stroke of paralysis” arising through high blood pressure. But, all the evidence considered, the appellee’s as well as the physicians’, the conclusion is permissible to the jury that the hardening of the appellee’s arteries, if existing to any degree through blood pres sure, was not at the time of the fall in an ex *685 treme or high state of danger. They could at least say that it was not to an active state of danger. The whole evidence is not entirely consistent with the long-continued presence of a malignant and active high state of blood pressure before and at the time of the fall. One of the physicians testified that, even if appellee had suffered, but which was not affirmed to be a fact', “a slow leak of the artery for some time prior to the fall, and it grew so as to cause a fall, he would have felt its effects prior to the time he fell, such as headache or swimming of the head or dizziness.” The other physician said the same thing. But appellee says he had none of those symptoms or warnings. He said:

“I never felt any pain or anything queer at all or out of the ordinary before I hit the ground.”

And the physicians merely stated that “a slow leak” was a probability, likely to happen as an occurrence in case the person had a high active state of blood pressure. The evidence does not present a case of an entirely unexplained injury, where the cause of it is wholly conjectural. The whole general issue was a matter for the jury, and their finding that the rupture of the artery would not have occurred at the time it did but for the force of the fall is not contrary to the evidence so far as to justify this court to disturb the verdict. It is made reasonably plain that the immediate cause of the rupture was the force of the fall to the ground, resulting from being overbalanced in pulling up the particular weed. It may have been that appellee had a pre-existing disease, rendering him more susceptible to paralysis from such violent force than he otherwise would have been, but the mere presence of such condition does not relieve against liability for the accident.

The court submitted the following issues to the jury:

“(1) Did the plaintiff, Thomas H. Dixon, on or about May 21, 1928, receive a fall?
“(2) If you answer special issue No. 1 ‘Yes,’ only in that event, you will answer, this question: Was such fall accidental? Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No,’ as you may find.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 681, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-travelers-assn-v-dixon-texapp-1926.