Potomac Insurance Company v. Milligan

335 S.W.2d 648
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1960
Docket16101
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 648 (Potomac Insurance Company v. Milligan) 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
Potomac Insurance Company v. Milligan, 335 S.W.2d 648 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinions

[649]*649RENFRO, Justice.

This is an appeal by defendant from a total and permanent disability judgment.

The controlling question is whether the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for continuance after plaintiff filed a trial amendment.

Plaintiff went to trial on the following plea:

“Plaintiff, while working for said employer, West Texas Rendering Plant, on or about December 22, 1958, was loading a truck with barrels of manure and was pulling a barrel over to roll it when his feet slipped and he fell backwards onto another barrel which had a large meat hook inserted or hanging on it. The meat hook was driven through the Plaintiff’s back on the left side at an angle under his shoulder blade, penetrating his chest cavity and causing severe damage to the muscles, ligaments and tendons and to the vertebrae in his spinal column, resulting in a herniation of the disc spaces between Lumbar 2 and 3, fracturing the 8th, 9th and 10th ribs, which has caused damage to the lungs. That all of said injuries have affected his entire nervous system and resulted in total and permanent disability, as those terms are defined under the Workman’s Compensation Act of the State of Texas.”

Defendant answered that any disability sustained by plaintiff was partial and temporary, and that any disability plaintiff “may have is due to prior compensable injuries and/or a combination of prior com-pensable injuries and diseases or infections in his body not connected with the accidental injury alleged by him * * * and is solely due to prior diseases and conditions in his body totally disassociated with and not contributed to by the accidental injury.”

The plaintiff and six lay witnesses testified as to plaintiff’s injury and physical condition as of the time of trial. No mention had been made of arthritis' at the time plaintiff rested.

Defendant introduced as its first witness Dr. Morrison, who, on direct examination, testified that x-rays showed that plaintiff had a degenerative type arthritis of his spine, but that it was not due to the injury. On cross-examination Dr. Morrison was asked, “Now, then, is it not correct * * * that trauma or a blow or injury to the back will aggravate or accelerate arthritis ?” Defendant objected to the question because aggravation was not pleaded, whereupon the plaintiff, with permission of the court, filed this trial amendment:

“Comes Now the Plaintiff, and with leave of Court would file this, his trial amendment to the Plaintiff’s Original Petition on file herein, and after the testimony of Dr. Cameron Morrison, in which he alleges that the plaintiff had a pre-existing arthritic condition of his back, and would ask that the Court, in addition to the other allegations of injury contained in Plaintiff’s original petition, he allow the plaintiff to add that, should the plaintiff, Willie Milli-gan, have had any pre-existing arthritis or other conditions of his back, that the same in no way incapacitated him prior to the accident in question, and that if he is suffering any incapacity at this time due to arthritis, such incapacity was produced or caused by an aggravation or acceleration of any pre-existing arthritic condition in the plaintiff’s back.”

Defendant objected to the trial amendment on the ground of surprise, asked permission to withdraw its announcement of ready and moved for continuance. Defendant’s objection and motion were overruled and plaintiff elicited from Dr. Morrison, over defendant’s objection, testimony that trauma might accelerate an arthritic condition.

After defendant rested, plaintiff called Dr. Hargrove, who testified, in substance, that the injury aggravated plaintiff’s arthritis, and that plaintiff was permanently and totally disabled.

The jury found that plaintiff was totally and permanently incapacitated as a result [650]*650of the injury, and that his incapacity was not solely the result of a condition in his back wholly disassociated from the injury.

Rule 66, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, gives the trial court wide discretion in determining whether a trial amendment should be allowed. He should, under the rule, allow such amendment when the ob-pecting party fails to satisfy the court that a trial amendment would prejudice him in maintaining his action or defense upon the merits. The rule also provides that the court may grant a postponement in event a trial amendment is filed.

The original pleadings of plaintiff plead damage to the vertebrae. The defendant did not except to the pleadings as insufficient. The testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses, introduced before plaintiff rested, was sufficient to have upheld a finding of total and permanent disability.

The controlling issue in all compensation cases is whether claimant received an accidental injury in the course of his employment and whether such injury resulted in incapacity. Gulf Casualty Co. v. Tucker, Tex.Civ.App., 201 S.W.2d 81. At the time plaintiff rested he had met that issue.

In Commerce Realty Co. v. McElvey, Tex.Civ.App., 250 S.W.2d 931, 934, a trial amendment was allowed which set up aggravation of Buerger’s disease by trauma. The court of civil appeals held: “Plaintiff's original petition alleged that she sustained severe and serious injuries to her right foot and leg. The defendant answered by a general denial only and sought no fuller pleadings of the injuries. In that state of the record, the evidence relating to the Buerger’s disease was proper without any trial amendment at all.” In the instant case, plaintiff made out a prima facie case of total and permanent incapacity without any evidence of arthritis. It was only after plaintiff rested and defendant introduced evidence that plaintiff had arthritis and that such arthritis had no connection with the original injury that plaintiff sought to show that if plaintiff did have arthritis it was aggravated by the injury.

Defendant plead surprise at such testimony. Defendant had already offered evidence, however, to show that plaintiff had arthritis and that arthritis had no relation to the injury. In the face of that evidence we cannot say that the trial amendment, and the testimony offered thereunder, was such as was reasonably calculated to work an injustice upon the defendant.

Under the record we cannot say the trial court abused his discretion in overruling the motion for continuance.

Defendant contends that under the decir sion of the court in Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Dillingham, Tex.Civ.App., 262 S.W.2d 748, 753, this case must be reversed.

In the instant case the plaintiff, as previously stated, introduced sufficient evidence, before he rested, to support recovery without the jury having to take into consideration the subsequent testimony concerning arthritis. In the Dillingham case the plaintiff introduced the question of arthritis while introducing his opening evidence. In fact in his opening testimony he proved that prior to his injury he was suffering from arthritis and that the injury aggravated the arthritis. In the instant case the question of arthritis was introduced by the defendant.

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Potomac Insurance Company v. Milligan
335 S.W.2d 648 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1960)

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335 S.W.2d 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potomac-insurance-company-v-milligan-texapp-1960.