Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Harlan

352 S.W.2d 342, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2055
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1961
DocketNo. 3660
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 352 S.W.2d 342 (Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Harlan) 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
Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Harlan, 352 S.W.2d 342, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2055 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. George B. Harlan was employed by Humble Pipeline Company. Petroleum Casualty Company was said employer’s insurance carrier. A jury found that Mr. Harlan sustained an injury while he was in the course of his employment by Humble. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs, Harlan’s widow and daughter, for death benefits under the compensation law. The insurance carrier has appealed.

Appellant contends, among other things, that there was no evidence Harlan sustained the injury while he was in the course of his employment and, in the alternative, that a finding that he did is so contrary to the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. Appellant also says that the court erred in permitting Harlan’s widow to testify that after Harlan returned home on June 11, he told her that he got a tick on him that day. Mrs. Harlan testified that when Harlan made that statement he was not sick; he was not excited; he was not in pain. Mrs. Harlan’s testimony was simply to the effect that “shortly after” he came home Harlan casually said that he got a tick on him “today” and he wanted her to remove it. The next day, June 12th, he became violently sick, was taken to a hospital, and his ailment was diagnosed as Rocky Mountain spotted fever, which can be transmitted by a tick. He died on June 17th. The expert testimony is to the effect that, the shortest period within which such a fever can develop is three days and that the usual incubation period is five days. The record shows that Harlan had been working for Humble about six miles from his residence on a cleared spot surrounded by a fence; that he had been repairing heavy machinery; that there was no vegetation on the yard where he worked; that it was kept sprayed and was covered with crushed shell. The evidence shows that ticks abhor such conditions but thrive where there is vegetation. Mr. Harlan had as his hobby the raising, caring for and fighting of gamecocks. Mrs. Harlan testified that on Sunday, June 7, her husband carried some young roosters from his home to the home of a partner in Luling where they kept gamecocks; that usually on Saturdays and Sundays he visited the chickens that he kept at various places, worked with them, cleaned out the yards, and the like.

After careful consideration of the record and considerable research we readily agree with appellant that the finding that the tick got on Harlan while he was at work for Humble is so contrary to the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. However, if appellant is correct in its contention that there is no evidence that the tick got on Harlan while he was at work for Humble appellant is entitled to have the judgment rendered. Before deciding the [344]*344question of no evidence, we deem it advisable to decide whether the testimony of Mrs. Harlan that “shortly after” Harlan came home on June 11th he told her that he got a tick on him “today” was admissible.

As stated, Mrs. Harlan’s testimony is that when he made the statement he was not sick; he was not in pain; he was not excited. Apparently Harlan casually told her that he got the tick on him and wanted her to remove it. She said that when she removed the tick, in the afternoon of June 11th, it was filled with blood, the spot where the tick was removed was red and irritated and the flesh was hard. The evidence shows that such conditions do not normally exist when a tick has been on a person for so short a time; that a tick may be on a person several days before such conditions exist and before irritation would attract the attention of a man to the fact that a tick was on him. The question of the admissibility of Mrs. Harlan’s said testimony cannot be readily determined from general statements of exceptions to the hearsay rule applicable to res gestae statements. Appellee cites only Texas Employers Insurance Ass’n v. Shifflette, Tex.Civ.App., 91 S.W.2d 787 (Writ Dis.), and Texas Employers Insurance Ass’n v, Wade, Tex.Civ.App., 236 S.W.2d 836 (Reversed and judgment of the trial court affirmed 150 Tex. 557, 244 S.W.2d 197, 201) as authorities sustaining the admission of Mrs. Harlan’s testimony that her husband said, “I got a tick on me today.” In the Shifflette case testimony of the widow of an employee as to what he said and did when he arrived home was admitted under the following circumstances. He was suffering from a heart disease known as myocarditis which prevents taking violent exercise. He climbed from the first floor of his place of employment to the fourth floor in the morning. He left the mill about 1:00 p. m. in his automobile and arrived at his home about 1:15 p. m. His custom was to park in front of his residence. This day he drove into the driveway and stopped just opposite the window where his wife was sitting. She immediately went to his car and found her husband, pale, his features drawn, gasping for breath and apparently suffering great pain. She asked him what was wrong and he replied “ ‘My heart,’ and he says, T had to rush up those steps and I fell and it hurt me.’ ” The wife assisted her husband out of the car, into the house and onto a bed, where he continued to gasp for breath and apparently to suffer great pain. This fact situation is not comparable to the instant case.

The decision in point in the Wade case is clearly shown from the following quotation from the Supreme Court’s opinion:

“We are still of the opinion reached on granting the writ of error, that the reversal cannot be supported on the ground, rejected below, that the trial court erred in admitting as part of the res gestae the declarations of Mr. Wade proved by the witnesses, Muesse and Gormey. Conceding that Mr. Wade was ‘ill’ at the plant during the morning of April 12th, such would not, under the peculiar facts of this case, necessarily make his declarations of that afternoon the narration of a past event occurring in the morning. See Texas Law of Evidence, McCormick and Ray, § 433. Whatever the cause of his being unwell in the morning, if he had at a given moment in the afternoon said that he was then and there being overcome by the inhalation of gas, surely such declaration would be admissible evidence of an injury received from gas at that time, and this is substantially the evidence admitted. The situation is accordingly quite different from those involved in Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co. [of California] v. Schlakzug, 143 Tex. 264, 183 S.W.2d 709, and City of Houston v. Quinones, 142 Tex. 282, 177 S.W.2d 259, in both of which there was no contention that the injury was received at or about the time of the [345]*345declaration. Here the petitioners’ case was not pitched on an injury received in the morning but rather on one occurring at some undetermined time during the work day, probably about the very time Mr. Wade, giving signs of illness, said ‘This gas is about to get me.’ ”

We, of course, agree with the quoted statement. But, it has no application to the facts of this case. We think the following authorities compel the conclusion that Mrs. Harlan’s testimony as to what her husband said was not admissible.

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Bluebook (online)
352 S.W.2d 342, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroleum-casualty-co-v-harlan-texapp-1961.