Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Kincaid

93 S.W.2d 499, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1936
DocketNo. 1531.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 499 (Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Kincaid) 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. Kincaid, 93 S.W.2d 499, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 331 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

C. O. Hoskins, an employee of Humble Pipe Line Company, was shot and killed by J. G. Moore, another employee of said company. Hoskins at the time was engaged in or about the furtherance of the affairs or business of his said employer. The employ *500 er carried compensation 'insurance with-Petroleum Casualty Company. An award of the Industrial Accident Board having been made, after due notice and claim for compensation, said insurance carrier duly filed this suit to set it aside. By cross-action Mrs. B. F. Kincaid (née Hoskins) for herself and as next friend for Juanita Hos-kins, an adopted minor daughter, asserted their cause of action for compensation. Upon a nonjury trial, judgment was given for plaintiffs, $200 being allowed Dr. G. C. Wood to cover a medical bill. Petrole.um Casualty Company has appealed.

Appellant, by a combined assignment of error and proposition, presents the sole contention, in effect, that under the findings of the court based upon uncontradicted evidence the death of Hoskins was not an “injury sustained in the course of employment” as that term is defined in R.S.192S, art. 8309, second subsec. 2, § 1, because it comes within the statutory exception reading: “An -injury caused by an act of a third person intended to injure the employee because of reasons personal to him and not directed against him as an employee, or because of his employment.” We take it to be conceded, or at least not contested, that Hos-kins’ death was an injury “having to do with and originating in the work, business,” etc., of the Humble Pipe Line Company, and was therefore “an injury sustained in the course of employment,” unless the uncontroverted evidence established conclusively (as a matter of law) that Hoskins’ death was “caused by an act of a third person intended to injure the employee because of reasons personal to him and not directed against him as an employee or because of his employment.”

The usually troublesome question of whether the injury was one “having to do with” and “originating in” the work or business of the employer is not involved. In other words, in so far as any challenge is made of the correctness of the proceedings culminating in the judgment, the death of Hoskins was compensable unless Moore’s act in shooting him was intended to injure Hoskins because of reasons personal to Hos-kins and not directed against him as an employee or because of his employment.

Material conclusions of fact were: “J. G. Moore shot and killed Charles O. Hoskins on account of a belief on the part of J. G. Moore that the said Charles O. Hoskins was intimate with the wife of the said J. G. Moore, or was attempting to impose himself upon-the wife of the said J. G. Moore”; that “this belief on the part of the said Jj G. Moore was a hallucination and no reasonable grounds upon which to base said belief [existed] and that the said Charles O. Hos-kins had never been intimate with the said wife of the said J. G. Moore at any time, but that the said J. G. Moore honestly believed that the said Charles O. Hoskins was intimate with the wife of the said J. G. Moore or was attempting to be intimate with her”; that “such hallucination on the part of J. G. Moore resulted from and was caused by the fact that the duties of the employment of Charles O. Hoskins with his employer * * * required him to frequent the Chaney Pump Station of the Humble Pipe Line Company to inspect the telephone lines and apparatus in said station, and to test said lines and to make reports of trouble or corrections of trouble and on two occasions required him to visit the home of the said J. G. Moore,, one to put in a telephone and one to remove a telephone from said residence”; that “J. G. Moore lived near said Chaney Pump Station”; that “J. G. Moore and Charles O. Hoskins never at any time had any difficulty or trouble over their work, or employment, or at any time had any harsh words or trouble concerning their respective employment or duties with the said Humble Pipe Line Company, and that the only trouble existing between the said J. G. Moore and Charles O. Hoskins was ■the hallucination of the said J. G. Moore that Charles O. Hoskins was having, or atr tempting to have improper relations with the wife of the said J. G. Moore” ; that “on tbs date of the fatal shooting said J. G. Moore manipulated the telephone test board in the Chaney Pump Station in order to put the line out of order knowing that it would be the duty of, and that the said Charles O. Hoskins would be sent there to repair it”; that “Moore concealed his automobile * * * in order that his presence at the pump station would not be discovered”; that “prior to the date of the killing it had been made known to the Division Superintendent and the district foreman of the Humble Pipe Line Company that said J. G. Moore harbored in his mind against Charles O. Hoskins a suspicion of improper conduct on the part of the said Charles O. Hoskins with the wife of J. G. Moore and that said J. G. Moore having requested of the district foreman of the Humble Pipe Line Company that he be transferred out of the territorj’ in which Mr. Hoskins worked, or that deceased Charles O. Hoskins be transferred out of .the territory in which he, tbe said J. *501 G: Moore worked; that after these suspicions were made known to the Division Superintendent and the district foreman, both talked to the said J. G. Moore and believed that everything had been straightened up.”

Do the foregoing facts, given, as they must be, their fullest reasonable effect in support of the judgment, establish conclusively that Hoskins’ death was “caused by an act” of Moore “intended to injure” Hos-kins “because of reasons personal to him [Hoskins] and not directed against him as an employee or because of his employment?” We do not think so.

According to the findings, the belief of Moore, because of which he killed Hoskins, was an “hallucination.” The word “hallucination” has been said to be something in the nature of a delusion. 32 C.J. 611, § 69. Distinguishing between hallucination and delusion, it was said in Bensberg v. Washington University, 251 Mo. 641, 158 S.W. 330, 333: “Hallucinations are tricks of the senses. One may see, in delirium tremens, spiders, serpents, or bugs where there are no such things. Delusions are false beliefs, as when one believes that another is his enemy or that he is pursued by persons who are trying to do him harm, or that he is the object of persecution or is being poisoned.” (Italics ours.) It is clear enough that the trial judge in his employment of the word “hallucination” as descriptive of a belief, and not as descriptive of some sense impression, used the term as meaning the same as delusion. “Delusion” is variously defined, as, for instance, “a delusion is a belief in a state or condition of things, the existence of which no rational person would believe.” Or, “a belief of facts which no rational person would have believed,” or, “a diseased state of the mind in which persons believe things to exist, which exist only, or to the degree that they are conceived of only, in their own imaginations, with the persuasion so fixed and firm that neither evidence, nor argument can convince them to the contrary.” Or, “a false conception and persistent belief, unconquerable by reason, of what has no existence in fact,” etc. 32 C.J. 604, §50.

In support of the judgment, we must give to the unchallenged findings upon-which it depends such a construction as will effect that end if they reasonably permit of it.

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93 S.W.2d 499, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroleum-casualty-co-v-kincaid-texapp-1936.