Maddox v. Texas Indemnity Ins. Co.

224 S.W.2d 495, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1949
DocketNo. 14095
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 224 S.W.2d 495 (Maddox v. Texas Indemnity Ins. Co.) 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
Maddox v. Texas Indemnity Ins. Co., 224 S.W.2d 495, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2198 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

Basis of suit is claim of total and permanent disability under Workmen’s Compensation Act, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq. Of fourteen issues.submitted to the jury, only three were answered. Issue 1 inquired as to whether plaintiff sustained personal injuries on or about July 25, 1947, to which the jury answered “No”; and, under the charge, no further consideration of issues was required. However, the jury answered “No,” to issue 13 of whether compensation should be paid in a lump sum, and further in answer to issue 14, found that plaintiff told his superior, Mrs. Hillard, that he had hurt himself on or about above date.

The six points relied on for reversal complain, in substance, that (1) certain statements of the jurors while considering issue 1 constituted overt acts on their part and misconduct necessitating a. reversal; and (2) the court’s error in permitting defense counsel on cross-examination of plaintiff to interrogate him as to his drinking on the job and in allowing Mrs. Hillard to so testify.

Plaintiff’s alleged disability occurred while working for Southern Ice Company. His back injury (ruptured disc), he stated, was suffered in connection with handling a heavy block of ice in the company vault, which injury he had reported to Mrs. Hil-lard at the time. However, he worked the balance of that day and continued to perform regular duties of employment without interruption, until September 1, when he was discharged. As to whether plaintiff received an injury depended solely upon his own testimony so far as direct evidence was concerned, he testifying fully with respect to fact of injury and its aftereffect on other bodily functions. He stated that his wife would rub the area of injury with alcohol nearly every night, but she did not appear at the trial. As bearing upon appellant’s charge of jury misconduct, we might add this further development of testimony: Having directly testified to working for Texas Prefabricated Housing Company following the accident, Maddox denied on cross-examination that he had made any written application therefor or filled out any kind of questionnaire in such connection. He was later called to the stand and admitted his signature to defendant’s exhibit 1, which was a photostatic copy of application for employment to the Prefabri-[497]*497eating company; admitting further that the answer to one of the questions therein was that applicant had no hack injury.

On motion for new trial the court heard testimony of five jurors and made findings, viz.: “The court finds that before special issue No. 1 the court’s main charge was answered and while the jury was discussing said special issue that several of the jurors made the statement in the jury room in the hearing of all the jurors that the plaintiff should have produced some witness to testify to his honesty, integrity and veracity. The court further finds that while the jury was engaged in its deliberation of this case and before it had answered special issue No. 1 that the statement was made in the jury room by several jurors that the plaintiff should have on the trial of the case produced some witness to testify that he complained of trouble in his back after the alleged date of his injury”; then concluding as a matter of law that “the statements made by the jurors hereinabove set out are not misconduct.”

The testimony relative to plaintiff’s “drinking on the job” was consequent upon the following cross-examination of plaintiff by defense counsel:

“Q. How did you happen to be discharged there on September first? A. Well, I went on. That was pay day and I went there that morning and got my check and went over to 13 to visit Mrs. Rosa and I drank a couple of bottles of beer and I ate dinner at this covered wagon. When I went there that evening, Crawford told me, he said, ‘You can go to the office. Spear-man will work in your place this evening.’
“Q. Did he say why to go to the office? A. He didn’t say.
“Q. Did you go to the office? A. No, sir.
“Q. Why didn’t you go to the office? A. I went home.
“Q. ' ‘I say, why didn’t you go to the office? A. Well, I thought he done smelled that beer on me, he would fire me anyhow, so I figured I was fired anyhow.
“Q. So you just didn’t give him an opportunity to tell you so, you just figured you were fired anyway? A. That’s right.
“Q. And didn’t go? A. That’s right.”

Later while on the stand at instance of defendant, Mr. Gowan further inquired of Maddox as to whether he had been drinking whisky there at station 13 on September 1 in presence of Mrs. Hillard, to which witness answered “No, sir”; and Mrs. Hillard, being asked by defendant about seeing plaintiff drinking intoxicants on same day, answered: “Well, I don’t remember him drinking right on that date, but I remember he come out there kinda, his face was flushed and I don’t know — whether it was about that date or not.”

It is to the latter course of questioning that appellant objects and comprehended in points 3 to 6, inclusive, on grounds of no pleadings in support, of no claim that the drinking inquired about had anything to do with his disability; being collateral to any issue and an attempt to prejudice appellant with the jury as to his drinking habits. Error was also charged in the court’s refusal to instruct the jury that whether plaintiff drank or did not drink would not affect his claim.

The points just outlined will be first discussed. We can conceive of no possible error in the interrogation complained of because plaintiff himself voluntarily interjected the sum of all testimony on the subject in response to the proper and legitimate inquiry of the reason for his discharge on September 1, whether on account of physical disability following injury or from some other cause. The further questions by counsel to plaintiff and Mrs. Hillard produced evidence along a line wholly negative in character, and error, if any, in pursuing such inquiry is viewed as harmless.

We further agree with the trial court’s finding of no misconduct on part of the jury in their deliberations, bearing in mind the provisions of Rule 327, Texas Rules of Ovil Procedure, that same arises only in case of “any communication made” or “other testimony” received by them. We must view these jury discussions in their actual setting which was this: The debate involving a proper answer to issue 1 (whether claimant sustained injury or not) extended into the next afternoon, some of [498]*498the panel taking a negative position from the start. All evidence on fact of injury was from plaintiff alone whose testimony, on another aspect (denying that he had made written application for the prefabricating job), was shown on examination by defendant to be, at least, self-contradictory. In turn, all dissertations of jurors relied on by plaintiff as misconduct are seen to center on plaintiff’s testimony as a whole and their dissatisfaction with it upon application thereto of the court’s definition of “preponderance.’’, Such was the manifest trend of jury testimony on motion for new trial, as evidenced by extracts therefrom, viz.:

(Juror Duncan): “* * * Did you hear anybody make any statement to the effect that he ought to have had somebody to vouch for his veracity? A. Yes, sir, we all

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224 S.W.2d 495, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maddox-v-texas-indemnity-ins-co-texapp-1949.