Lumbermen's Reciprocal Ass'n v. Wells

283 S.W. 208, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1926
DocketNo. 1385.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 208 (Lumbermen's Reciprocal Ass'n v. Wells) 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
Lumbermen's Reciprocal Ass'n v. Wells, 283 S.W. 208, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 441 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was filed by the appellee, Edwin Wells, against appellant, Lumbermen's Reciprocal Association, in the district court of San Augustine county, to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board, made in favor of appellee and against appellant on September 20, 1923, for $332.16, less payments that had already been made to Wells, aggregating $216.49, the remainder of the total award being $115.67.

Stating in substance the material allegations of appellee’s petition, they are:

That about January 31, 1923, he was an employs of the Collwood Lumber Company, and was engaged in the discharge of his duties loading logs on railroad cars out in the woods to be hauled and transported to the Collwood Lumber Company’s mill, and that on the date mentioned,' and while in the performance of his duties for the Collwood Lumber Company, he, was seriously and permanently injured by one of the logs falling from’ the car he was loading, and striking him about the head and face, knocking him down, inflicting serious and permanent injury to his left eye, his left ear, and breaking his right leg just above the ankle, and seriously and permanently injuring the ankle itself, and other bruises about the face and head. He further alleged that the Collwood Lumber ’Company, his employer, was a subscriber under the Employers’ Liability'Act of this state, and that appellant here carried the insurance of the Collwood Lumber Cbmpany covering its employes, including the appellee.

The appellant answered by general demurrer, general and special denials, and by other special pleas unnecessary to here mention, in view of our disposition of this case.

The case was tried with a jury, and was submitted upon special issues, and upon the verdict as returned the trial court, on August 3, 1925, entered judgment in favor of appellee for $4,162.38, payable at the rate of $10.38 a week for 40 weeks, beginning February 8, 1923, less $216.49, which last amount had already been paid appellee before this suit was filed. After appellant’s motion for a new trial had been overruled, this appeal was duly prosecuted, and is now before this court.

Quite a number of assignments of error with related propositions are advanced by appellant for reversal of this judgment, but the majority of them relate to matters that will probably not arise upon another trial, and for that reason we shall not further mention them.

Appellee alleged, in substance, in his petition in this case, that the award made by the board in his favor was entirely too little and wholly unjust, for the reason that the injuries sustained by him at the time in question, as before stated, were such as to permanently and totally incapacitate him, and that, therefore, the award should be set aside and judgment should be rendered in his favor for compensation commensurate with his injuries and damage.

Appellant’s first contention, stated in substance, is that the jury’s finding, in answer to a special issue, that the injuries received by appellee were such as to permanent *209 ly and totally incapacitate him as a workman is so wholly without support in the evidence adduced upon the trial as to require reversal of that verdict and judgment based upon it at our hands. After carefully analyzing the entire statement of facts in this record, we have reached the conclusion that this contention must be sustained. We shall not undertake to quote the evidence of the witnesses as found in this record, but will state the substance of it as showing the reasons justifying the conclusion we have reached on this point.

The evidence shows that at the time appel-lee was injured he was loading logs in the woods onto railroad cars, to be transported to the Collwood Lumber Company’s sawmill, and that his position was what is commonly called “top loader”; that is,' he was up on top of the car upon which the logs were being loaded and piled, and assistants in the business, or coemployés, were working in other positions. Alter the car on which he was working at the time of his injury had been practically loaded, appellee got down on the ground by the side of it, and, for some reason, the logs commenced falling off the car, and one of them struck him about the head, knocking him down on the ground, and another one rolled over his ’ right leg and foot, breaking the right .leg just above the ankle, and injuring the ankle itself. The evidence also shows that his left ear was badly bruised and injured, and that the hearing in it has been impaired to a certain extent, though not in excess of 50 per cent, and that his left eye has been impaired to a certain extent, in that he cannot stand to read as well as he did before the injury, and cannot read as long as he did before the injury, and the evidence further shows that his face was badly bruised and lacerated, and the left cheek bone was so badly mashed that some time after the injury one of the bones of the cheek came out through the flesh. This states, in substance, the material injuries received by appellee for which he is seeking compensation for permanent and total incapacity in this suit.

Appellee’s father, W. T. Wells, testified, in substance, that.before appellee’s injuries he was a sound and healthy young man, and that he had never had any ear trouble or eye trouble prior to 'that time, and that he had no injury to either of his legs or feet; that since the injuries he did not consider that appellee was as good a man physically as he had been before, as there was a slight lameness in his right leg and ankle, and that he had heard him complain on several occasions of pain in his left ear and in his left eye. This witness further testified, in substance, that in the spring and summer of 1924 and 1925 the appellee had farmed land, on witness’ place, the first year about ten acres, and something less than that acreage the second year, and' that he made a fairly good crop each year with the assistance of witness and appellee’s wife. He further testified that about the 1st of 'August, 1924, appellee again went.to work for the Long-Bell Lumber Company, sawing logs in the woods, and after-wards became a log scaler for that company. The witness stated that he did not know just how appellee was paid for the work for the Long-Bell Lumber Company, but thought that he was paid and did his work about like other employes of that company.

J. W. Ryan, a witness for appellee, testified, in .substance, that he was present at the time the injuries to appellee occurred, and saw it, and described it in detail, stating that the right leg was broken above the ankle, and that appellee was bleeding about the head and face and injured in his left eye, and that witness assisted him home in this condition. I-Ie further testified that before the injury appellee was a sound and healthy young man, and did his work of loading logs in a satisfactory manner and witness considered him a very active and vigorous young man. He further stated that he had not seen ap-pellee often since the injury, and could not say whether he had been able to do the same character of work that he was doing before the injury. He stated that the compensation paid appellee before' and at the time of the injury was $3:50 per day.

M. O. Flournoy, another witness for ap-pellee, testified, in substance, that he was just a few yards distant from appellee at the time he received his injuries, and ran to him at once, and described his injuries just about as Mr. Ryan did.

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283 S.W. 208, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumbermens-reciprocal-assn-v-wells-texapp-1926.