Pennsylvania Threshermen & Farmers Mutual Casualty Insurance Company v. K. J. Gloff

238 F.2d 839
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1957
Docket16062
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 238 F.2d 839 (Pennsylvania Threshermen & Farmers Mutual Casualty Insurance Company v. K. J. Gloff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Threshermen & Farmers Mutual Casualty Insurance Company v. K. J. Gloff, 238 F.2d 839 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

CAMERON, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, K. J. Gloff, refusing to abide by the award of the Industrial Accident Board, brought suit against appellant, Pennsylvania Threshermen & Farmers Mutual Casualty Insurance Company, seeking recovery under the Workmen’s Compensation Statutes of the State of Texas. 1 He sought to recover benefits for total permanent disability to his back resulting from an injury occurring while he was picking up a piece of concrete weighing between seventy-five and one hundred pounds. The award of six weeks’ disability made by the Board was paid and, in this action, the jury found for appellee “total disability for twenty-six weeks and further disability in a partial degree at fifty per cent and such partial disdbility will last for two hundred seventy-four weeks, and that his weekly wages were eighty dollars.” From the judgment entered thereon and the order denying motion for new trial, this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellant argues earnestly that the proof showed virtually without contradiction that appellee’s disability was temporary and that he was fully paid therefor; that any subsequent discomfort he may have experienced resulted from congenital conditions and former injuries; and that appellee has worked continuously since resuming his work and has made more money than he was earning prior to the injury. Convincing evidence, both lay and professional, was introduced from which the jury could have found in line with these contentions.

But appellee, while admitting that he had worked with regularity and at ad *841 vanced wages, claimed that he had done so under the drive of compelling necessity, and his proof was sufficient to raise issues for jury decision under the liberal rules evolved by the Texas Courts and recognized by this Court. Such a multitude of cases involving so many varying factual situations have been decided by the courts that plausible authority can be found for almost any contention. No good purpose will be served by detailing the facts developed here or the cases relied upon by the respective parties. It is sufficient merely to list some of the cases while pointing out that no one of them is absolutely determinative of the factual situation here presented. 8 The case is not a strong one, but we are not able to say that the jury did not have before it evidence to sustain its verdict or that the Court below abused its discretion in denying the motion for new trial. But several procedural errors are reflected in the record which, in our opinion, require reversal.

Appellant assigns as error the action of the Court below which it complains enabled appellee to get before the jury part of a report made by Gloff’semployer to the Industrial Accident-Board. The employer, Peacock, was asked by appellee’s attorney if he had not sat through the whole trial as representative of appellant, and if he was not interested in the outcome of the suit, and an affirmative response was given to each question. Thereupon the employer was asked if Gloff’s average weekly wage was not $80 and, upon receiving a negative answer, the attorney confronted him with one of these reports in an attempt to show that, on it, the employer had shown the weekly wage to be $80. 2 3 We think this was clear error. The employer had been forced, in the presence of the jury, to admit his signature and the asking of the question was sufficient to carry the clear inference that the report contained a statement at variance with the testimony just given by the employer. Such a procedure was in direct derogation of the statute law 4 and the decisions of Texas Courts.

*842 The purpose of exhibiting'the report in the presence of the jury was to use its contents as establishing an admission and as evidence in a ease where the employer who signed the report was giving evidence apparently in conflict with it. It could not have had any other purpose and the practice comes under the explicit condemnation of Texas cases. 5

Appellant also urges that the Court below erred in its submission to the jury of the standard by which appellee’s “incapacity for work resulting from the injury” should be determined by the jury. It takes the position that the Court charged the jury under § 12 of Article 8306 6 which covers enumerated or specific injuries, instead of under § 11 covering general injuries such as those claimed by appellee. It submitted a requested charge drawn substantially in the language of § ll. 7 It claims that the case of Texas Employers Insurance Association v. Swaim, Tex.Civ.App. Amarillo, 1954, 278 S.W.2d 600, is directly in point and required that the jury be charged in line with the instruction embodying the provisions of § 11, which is set forth supra. It would seem that appellant’s position in that regard is sound and that its said requested instruction should have been given if the Swaim case is accepted as the law.

Appellee counters with the assertion that the charge actually given by the Court fairly covered the requested instruction and that the inclusion in it of the tests of § 12 was harmless and was, moreover, proper under the later case of American General Insurance Co. v. Bailey, Tex.Civ.App. Galveston, 1956, 287 S.W.2d 290. He points out that the Galveston Court, in Bailey, did not feel constrained to follow Swaim, but chose rather to rely upon the decision of the Texarkana Division of the Court of Appeals in the older case of Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Robinson, 1949, 222 S.W. 2d 266. It is difficult to follow the subtleties and refinements of the various Texas decisions brought before us, but we are of the opinion that appellant’s position here is nearer to the statute and that requested instruction No. 6 should have been given.

Appellant argues a number of assignments of errors based upon other failures of the Court to charge the jury as requested by it in writing. We agree that some of these requested charges should have been given.

For instance, appellant requested special charges Nos. 2, 3 and 9, dealing with the duty of the jury to separate the incapacity resulting from the injuries presently sued on from injuries received by appellee in former years and from an arthritic condition said by some of the witnesses to be of long standing. The Court covered this aspect of the case in general terms, but we think the charge should have been more specific in view *843 of the convincing evidence elicited from appellee on cross-examination and established by other witnesses. 8 The three requested instructions, taken together, contain a fair statement of the law of Texas 9 and their substance should be included in the Court’s charge on another trial.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F.2d 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-threshermen-farmers-mutual-casualty-insurance-company-v-k-ca5-1957.