National Mut. Casualty Co. v. Lambert

149 S.W.2d 1086, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1941
DocketNo. 3825.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 S.W.2d 1086 (National Mut. Casualty Co. v. Lambert) 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
National Mut. Casualty Co. v. Lambert, 149 S.W.2d 1086, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 245 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

This is a compensation insurance case. Sheehan Pipe Line Construction Company was the employer; Claude Lambert, appel-lee, the employee; and The National Mutual Casualty Company, the compensation insurance carrier. On September 29, 1939, while engaged in the course of his employment as an employee of Sheehan Pipe Line Construction Company, Claude Lambert received an injury for which he claimed compensation. He filed his claim before the Industrial Accident Board. On June IS, 1940, the Board made its final ruling and award, and appellee gave notice that he would not abide said award, and duly filed this suit in the district court of Jasper County, Texas, to set aside said award, and to recover compensation as for total and permanent disability.

This suit was filed June 24, 1940, and citation served on Hon. Walter C. Woodward, who was then Chairman of the Board of Insurance Commissioners for the State of Texas, on June 27, 1940, who was agent and attorney in fact of appellant, the defendant, having been duly- designated by appellant as such to receive service of citation. On that date, June 27, 1940, Woodward by registered mail forwarded copy of the plaintiff’s original petition and copy of citation, to appellant at its home office at Tulsa, Oklahoma, and in his letter of transmittal called appellant’s attention to the fact that the citation was issued on June 24, 1940, and was returnable on July 22, 1940. This was received and acknowledged by appellant on June 29, 1940. This was 25 days before appearance day. The term of the district court of Jasper County, at which the judgment against appellant was had, convened on July 22, 1940, and ended on August 17, *1087 1940 — a four weeks term. The appellant filed no answer and on July 26, 1940, judgment by default (after hearing evidence) was rendered against appellant in favor of appellee in the sum of $6,208.38. This represented in lump sum the amount adjudged to appellee after allowing discount as required by law. The judgment was filed and entered upon the minutes of the court on July 26, 1940, the day of its rendition.

On August 10, 1940, appellant filed its motion to set aside the default judgment entered July 26, 1940, and to grant it a new trial, and alleged in its motion various matters for the purpose of showing that its failure to file answer as cited to do was not intentional, nor the result of conscious indifference on its part, but was due to mistake or accident, and further alleged that it had a meritorious defense to appellee’s suit; and further that the judgment was grossly excessive; and that it would proceed to a prompt trial of the case on its merits, and would defray any expenses which appellee may have incurred in obtaining the default judgment. Appel-lee answered the motion by general demurrer, general denial, several special denials, and pleaded matters - attempting to show that appellant had been consciously indifferent to the cause, or inexcusably negligent in failing to answer, and alleged that the judgment rendered was just and fair, and that it would work a grievous wrong to appellee to set aside the judgment and allow a trial of the cause to be delayed as a trial could not be had at that term of the court, and attached to his answer numerous exhibits of letters and documents connected with and had in connection with appellee’s claim and suit for compensation, offered for the purpose of showing that appellant was fully informed of the filing and pendency of the suit, and the appearance day of the- term of the court. On August 12, 1940, the court, “after hearing such motion and the evidence adduced in support of such motion,” overruled the motion. This appeal is from that order.

On said date, August 12, 1940, appellant filed its answer consisting of a general demurrer, general denial, and specially denied (a) that plaintiff, Claude Lambert, sustained any injury while in the employment of the Sheehan Pipe Line Construction Company, and alleged that if appellee was suffering from any character of disability, that same was the sole result of disease or infirmity existing prior to the date of his alleged injury; and (b) that if plaintiff, Lambert, had suffered any character of disability, which was denied, that same was -slight and only temporary; and (c) that if plaintiff was then suffering from hernia, •that same was not sustained in the course of his employment, but existed prior to the date of his alleged injury. In this answer, there was no plea of meritorious defense.

Appellant’s first proposition reads: “It was error for the trial court to overrule and refuse to sustain appellant’s motion to set aside the default judgment rendered in this cause, for the reason that the failure of the appellant to answer before judgment was not intentional nor the result of conscious indifference on its part, but was due to a mistake or accident; and further, because appellant’s motion to set aside said default judgment and the evidence adduced in support thereof set up a meritorious defense, and such motion was filed at a time when the granting thereof would not have occasioned delay or worked an injury to the appellee.”

The term of the court at which the judgment was rendered convened on July 22, 1940, and. ended August 17, 1940. It was a four weeks term. The suit was filed June 24, 1940. Citation was served on Hon. Walter C. Woodward, Chairman of the Board of Insurance Commissioners, who had -been duly designated by appellant its agent and attorney in fact to receive service of citation, on June 27, 1940. On that date, June 27, 1940, said Woodward by registered mail forwarded copy of the plaintiff’s original petition and copy of the citation to appellant at its home office at Tulsa, Oklahoma, and in his letter of transmittal called to appellant’s attention the fact that the citation was issued on June 24, 1940, and was returnable on July 22, 1940. Woodward’s letter was received by appellant at its home office on June 29, 1940. This was 25 days before appearance day. The letter from appellant’s home office to Walter C. Woodward acknowledging the receipt of his letter transmitting to appellant the copy of plaintiff’s petition and copy of citation was signed by “George C. MaS-sey, Claim Department.” A copy of this letter was mailed-from appellant’s office by Massey to C. Villiva, Beaumont, Texas. ' Villiva was an agent of appellant. Appellant also had a lawyer, Hon. Lamar Cecil, residing at Beaumont, but he was in no manner notified of the pendency of the suit. The motion to set aside the default judg *1088 ment was not filed until August 10, 1940, two weeks after the judgment was rendered.

Hon. Lamar Cecil, attorney for appellant, and who attended to matters for appellant in this territory, testified that on August 7, 1940, he received a long distance telephone call from Mr. J. A. Tillotson of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Assistant Supervisor of Claims in the Home Office of The- National Mutual Casualty Company at Tulsa, and who had charge of compensation insurance claims carried by said company, and who told him that he, Tillotson, had overlooked appellee’s case then pending at Jasper, Texas, and that he, Cecil, at once went to Jasper to see the status of the case, and found that judgment by default had been rendered against the company on July 26, 1940; that he immediately returned to his office at Beaumont and prepared the motion to set aside the judgment, and forwarded copy of the motion to counsel for appellee, which motion was filed on the 10th.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Craddock v. Sunshine Bus Lines, Inc.
133 S.W.2d 124 (Texas Supreme Court, 1939)
Dowell v. Winters
20 Tex. 793 (Texas Supreme Court, 1858)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 1086, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-mut-casualty-co-v-lambert-texapp-1941.