Maryland Casualty Co. v. Stevens

55 S.W.2d 149
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1932
DocketNo. 1016.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 149 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Stevens) 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
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Stevens, 55 S.W.2d 149 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, J.

Frank Stevens, for an injury received by him on October 31, 1928, as the result of his horse stepping into a pipeline ditch in a public highway-, and falling with and upon him, thereby breaking several ribs and crushing his chest, made claim against the Magnolia Pipeline Company, the owner of the pipe line, for damages. The ‘claim was, on or about December 12, .1928, by compromise agreement, settled for $275; the agreed damages were paid, and a full release executed and delivered. The release purported to include any subsequently developing injury or damage. Frank Stevens, at the time of said injury, was employed as .¿n oil lease -pumper for D. 15. Reading, who had provided compensation insurance in favor of his employees with Maryland Casualty Company as the insurer. Ste *150 vens made no claim for compensation insurance. On February 7, 1928, be died. After-wards Ms wife, Mrs. Ania B. Stevens, and his minor children, Levall Stevens, Henry Keller Stevens, and Sherwood Stevens, presented to the Industrial Accident Board a claim for compensation insurance on the ground that Stevens’ death had resulted from the above-described injury. The board awarded compensation at the rate of $17.31 per week for a period of 360 weeks. * In due time, and after proper notice, Maryland Casualty Company filed this suit in the district court of Taylor county to set aside the award. The defendants filed a cross-action, reasserting their claim as the legal beneficiaries of thel said Frank Stevens for compensation insurance for his death. The cross-action, in addition to other necessary and proper averments, alleged, in effect, that Stevens had been in the employ of said Reading only a short while, and had not worked substantially the whole of the year immediately preceding such injury, and that the average daily wages of employees of the same class, working substantially the whole of the year immediately preceding the injury, were $5.50 per day. Compensation was claimed in a lump sum on the basis of $5.50 per day for 360 weeks, and was allowed on the basis of $5 per day for said term. From the judgment in said suit, Maryland Casualty Company has appealed.

Appellant’s first proposition presents the question of whether the settlement and release by Stevens of his claim for damages against the Magnolia Pipeline Company precludes the right of the appellees as his legal beneficiaries to recover compensation insurance for his death resulting from the same accident and being an outgrowth of the same injury. Material to the consideration of this question, we quote the following provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Raw:

“Where the injury for which compensation is payable under this law was caused under circumstances creating a legal liability in some person other than the subscriber to pay damages in respect thereof, the employee may at his option proceed either at law against that person to recover damages or against the association for compensation under this law, but not against both, and if he elects to proceed at law against the person other than the subscriber, then he shall not be entitled to compensation under this law. If compensation be claimed under this law by the injured employee or his legal beneficiaries, then the association shall be subrogated to the rights of the injured employee in so far as may be necessary and may enforce in the name of the injured employee or of his legal beneficiaries or in its own name and for the joint use and benefit of said employee or beneficiaries and the association the liability of said other person, and in case the association recovers a sum greater than that paid or assumed by the association to the employee or his legal beneficiaries, together with a reasonable cost of enforcing such liability, which shall be determined by the court trying the case, then out of •the sum so recovered the association shall reimburse itself and pay said cost and the excess so recovered shall be paid to the injured employee or his beneficiaries. The association shall not have the right to adjust or compromise such liability against such third person without notice to the injured employee or his beneficiaries and the approval of the board, upon a hearing thereof.” R. S. 1925, art. 8307, § 6a.

“The following words and phrases as used in this law shall, unless a different meaning is plainly required by the context, have the following meanings, respectively: * * * Any reference to any employe herein who has been injured shall, when the employe is dead, also include the legal beneficiaries, as that term is herein used, of such employe to whom compensation may be payable.” R. S. 1925, art. 8309, § 1.

It may be conceded in the outset that, unless the Workmen’s Compensation Raw (R. S. 1925, arts. 8306 to 8309, as amended)', makes provision to the contrary, the effect of the release given by Stevens was to cut off any right of action by the appellees against the Magnolia Pipeline Company under the death statute (i. e., R, S. 1925, arts. 4671-4678). Thompson v. Ft. Worth & R. G. R. Co., 97 Tex. 590, 80 S. W. 990, 1 Ann. Gas. 231; St. Rouis) S. W. R. Co. v. Hengst, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 217, 81 S. W. 832; Blount v. Gulf, C. & S. F. R. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 82 S. W. 305. Upon the same condition- it would also seem logically to follow that appellant would thereby be cut off from any right of subrogation. From these consequences, considered in connection with the statutory provisions above, and particularly of the definition, of employee to include legal beneficiaries, appellant argues that the effect of the release was likewise to cut off appellees’ right to compensation insurance.

If it should be granted that the Workmen’s Compensation Raw has made no change in the effect of a release of a right of action at law, as' such effect was declared in Thompson v. Ft. Worth & R. G..R. Co., supra, and that, because of that effect appellant can avail itself of no right of subrogation as provided for in said article 8307, § 6a, it does not necessarily follow, we think, that appellees would be precluded from their right to recover compensation insurance. In passing upon the question here‘presented, we shall merely assume, without deciding, that the effect of the release was such as to preclude the appellees from asserting any cause of action against the Magnolia Pipeline Company and to preclude the appellant from asserting any such cause of action under a claim of subrogation.

*151 The Workmen’s Compensation Law, in no uncertain terms, creates a cause of action for compensation insurance in favor of the legal ■beneficiaries of a deceased employee for the death of the employee. That cause of action, for all practical purposes, is separate and distinct from the cause of action for compensation which the same statute just as certainly creates in favor of the injured employee. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Morgan (Tex. Com. App.) 295 S. W. 588; Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Morgan (Tex. Civ. App.) 289 S. W. 75; Milwaukee Coke & Gas Co. v. Industrial Commission, 160 Wis. 247, 151 N. W. 245, 248 ; 28 R. C. L. p. 783. These causes of action consist largely of common elements. They are each dependent up-ojn the existence of the same accident, the same resulting injury, sustained in the course of employment. The only practical difference is that the employee’s individual cause of action covers the full extent of the injury except his death, and the cause of action of the beneficiaries is for the death only.

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