Miles v. Commercial Insurance Co. of Newark, New Jersey

568 S.W.2d 912, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3549
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 1978
DocketNo. 5865
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 568 S.W.2d 912 (Miles v. Commercial Insurance Co. of Newark, New Jersey) 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
Miles v. Commercial Insurance Co. of Newark, New Jersey, 568 S.W.2d 912, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3549 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

This is a suit for workmen’s compensation brought by Delores Miles against Commercial Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, workmen’s compensation insurance carrier for plaintiff’s employer, Fox and Jacobs, Inc. It was plaintiff’s contentions on the trial that in September 1972, she suffered a disabling low-back injury on the job, that she was hospitalized and treated for the injury, and that as a result of the injury she was totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of our workmen’s compensation laws. Among other defenses relied upon by defendant was its pleaded defense that neither it nor Fox and Jacobs received notice of plaintiff’s asserted injury within 30 days after it allegedly occurred, as required by Article 8307, Vernon’s Tex. Civ.St., for payment of benefits.

Trial was to a jury in March, 1977. The jury found that plaintiff sustained an injury on or about September 14, 1972, in the course of her employment, and that the injury was the producing cause of only total temporary incapacity from September 15, 1972, until December 4, 1972. However, in its answer to special issue number 14, the jury failed to find that plaintiff’s employer had notice of the injury within thirty days after its occurrence. Based upon this finding, judgment was rendered that plaintiff take nothing. Plaintiff appeals.

Special issue number 14 and the explanatory instruction submitted with it read as follows:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Fox & Jacobs, Inc., had notice of such injury within thirty days after its occurrence?
“Notice to or actual knowledge on the part of a foreman or other supervisor, or an agent designated by the employer to receive such notice, is ‘notice’ to the employer.
“Answer ‘we do’ or ‘we do not.’ ”

The jury answered the issue “we do not.”

Plaintiff asserts that the evidence conclusively establishes that her employer had notice of her injury within thirty days. Alternatively, she contends the jury’s answer [913]*913to special issue 14 is against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.

Plaintiff is a black female. On September 14,1972, the date of her alleged injury, she was 48 years of age. She had been an employee of Fox and Jacobs for five years. She had never suffered an on-the-job injury and had no prior experience with workmen’s compensation claims. Her duties consisted of removing kitchen cabinet doors from a shelf onto a work table, and then sanding the doors and installing hinges on them. Her working hours were from 7:00 A.M. until 3:30 P.M. each day. She testified that about 8:30 A.M. on the day in question when she lifted several cabinet doors at one time from the shelf she felt a sharp pain from her neck down to her low back. She became ill and went to the restroom and vomited. She continued working the rest of the day, with intervals of going to the bathroom for relief, but the pain in her back worsened. That night she could not sleep because of the pain, and her son carried her to the hospital. She was given medication and sent home. The next day she returned to the hospital and was admitted for treatment.

The evidence is undisputed that plaintiff entered Baylor University Medical Center on September 15, 1972, with an admission diagnosis of “acute low back strain”; that she remained in the hospital until October 4, 1972, during which time she was treated for her back problem; that after she left the hospital she received further treatment by her personal physician in his office until December 4,1972, at which time he released her for work and she returned to work with Fox and Jacobs. She continued working there until September, 1974, when she quit her job.

Plaintiff testified that when she left work at the end of the day she hurt her back she told her supervisor, Ken Hopper, “I may not be able to come to work tomorrow because I hurt my back. And he said ‘Okay.’ ” She did not at that time tell him how or when she injured her back, but she testified that in a telephone conversation the next day she told him that she hurt her back when she “pulled too many doors,” and that Hopper’s response was, “Keep in touch with me and let me know how you are doing.” She conceded, however, that in her deposition taken prior to trial she stated that in the telephone conversation “He didn’t ask me [how I hurt my back or when I hurt my back] and I didn’t tell him.” Plaintiff also admitted that she signed some forms denominated at the top “Group Life And Health Insurance Disability Claims” which were furnished to her by her employer, and that she received benefits under them relating to her injury, but she testified that she did not then and does not now understand the difference “between Blue Cross Insurance coverage and Workmen’s Compensation Insurance coverage.”

Ken Hopper testified that he had been employed by Fox and Jacobs for eighteen years, and that on September 14, 1972, he was supervisor of the cabinet manufacturing department in which plaintiff worked. He denied that plaintiff told him on that day that she had hurt her back. He testified that in a telephone conversation the next day “she told me that she was sick and had to see a doctor, and I said, ‘Well, what’s wrong?’ and she said, ‘I’m sick, I have to see a doctor.’ So I said, ‘Call me back as soon as you find out what’s wrong. I would like to know when you are going to be back to work.’ ” He said that a day or two later she called him again “to tell me that she was in the hospital and she had had chest pains, back pains, and stomach pains, and she wanted to talk to personnel about her insurance forms, hospitalization forms. So I transferred her to the personnel department and they took care of it from there on.” He testified that plaintiff never told him that she hurt her back at work, and that the first time he learned she was claiming a job-related injury was more than a year later. Hopper also testified that plaintiff began working for Fox and Jacobs in 1968, that she was a good worker and a regular worker, and that until the time in question she never made any complaints about her back.

[914]*914In September, 1972, Karen Haviland was employed in the personnel department of Fox and Jacobs as administrator of the employees’ benefits and insurance programs. She testified that on the 20th or 21st of September, 1972, plaintiff called her from the hospital “to inquire about the benefits that she was entitled to. I asked her at that point what was wrong with her. She said she had stomach pains, that she had been vomiting, and that she had some back pain. I inquired of her at that time as to how it happened, and she said, T don’t know.’ At that point, I told her I would be sending her a Blue Cross disability form and gave her the instructions as to how to complete it and that it needed to be mailed back to me and then she would receive weekly disability payments. Nothing was said about her being injured while on the job lifting doors or moving doors or anything of that nature.” Mrs. Haviland said she had two later conversations with plaintiff, but “again, she did not know how it happened or what was wrong with her specifically ... If she had told me specifically at that time that she was lifting doors and hurt herself, it would have been processed as a workmen’s compensation claim.” The witness said she first learned plaintiff was claiming “to have injured her back” in June or July, 1975.

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Bluebook (online)
568 S.W.2d 912, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-commercial-insurance-co-of-newark-new-jersey-texapp-1978.