Robinson v. Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co.

551 S.W.2d 794, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3096
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1977
Docket5704
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 551 S.W.2d 794 (Robinson v. Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co.) 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
Robinson v. Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co., 551 S.W.2d 794, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3096 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. Plaintiff-Appellant James E. Robinson brought this suit against Defendant-Appel-lee Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co., his employer’s insurance carrier, for workmen’s compensation and doctor’s bills growing out of an injury suffered by him in the course of his employment on July 28,1975. At the time and on the occasion of such injury, Plaintiff was employed by King Tire Sales, Inc. in Waco, Texas, as a tire changer. He sustained a back injury while loading a heavy tire mounted on the rim into the body of a pickup truck. The tire and rim weighed about 120 pounds. Plaintiff alleged total and permanent disability.

Trial was had to a jury which found: (1) Plaintiff received an injury on or about July 28, 1975; (2) in the course of his employment by King Tire Sales, Inc.; (3) such injury was a producing cause of total disability; (4) which began on July 28, 1975; (5) that such total incapacity was temporary; (6) and continued for fifteen weeks; (7) in answer to Special Issue No. 7, the jury failed to find that such injury was or will be a producing cause of any partial disability.

Pursuant to and in harmony with the jury verdict, the trial court entered judgment finding that Plaintiff was entitled to total temporary disability benefits in the amount of $70.00 per week for fifteen weeks plus $130.25 worth of doctor bills. The judgment further recited that the Defendant insurance carrier had already paid Plaintiff for the fifteen weeks’ compensation, and therefore entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff against Defendant for the $130.25 and costs.

From this judgment Plaintiff-Appellant Robinson appeals on a single point of error; to wit, that the jury’s answers to special issues numbers 5, 6, and 7 are so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly wrong and unjust. As stated above, by these answers the jury found (5) that the total incapacity was temporary, (6) that it continued for fifteen (15) weeks, and (7) the jury failed to find that Plaintiff’s injury was or will be a producing cause of any partial incapacity. We sustain this point of error and thereby reverse and remand the cause for retrial on the merits.

In passing upon this point of error, we have carefully reviewed the entire record and weighed the evidence in support of and contrary to the jury’s findings in question, as we are obliged to do. In re King’s Estate (1951), 150 Tex. 662, 244 S.W.2d 660.

Plaintiff Robinson was thirty-eight years of age at the time of trial. His testimony may be summarized as follows: On the morning of July 28,1975, while working for King Tire Sales as a tire changer, flat fixer, *796 and repairman, he was loading a heavy tire mounted on a rim into a pickup truck, when he felt something pop on the left side of his lower back. He at once developed a severe pain in his back which covered the area from his head down to his tailbone. He said, “It felt like a bone broken,” and for about five minutes he “could not breathe good,” he remained standing at half bend for a while, and then sat down for about ten minutes. The injury was reported to Jerry Ponder, the owner and general manager of King Tire Sales, who in turn got a medical appointment for Plaintiff to see Dr. Wilson Crosthwait, the insurance carrier’s doctor. The accident occurred about 8 A.M., Mr. Ponder told Plaintiff of the medical appointment about 9:30 A.M., and the appointment with Dr. Crosthwait was set up for 2:30 P.M. that same date. Plaintiff was driven to the doctor by another employee of King Tire Sales in a company vehicle. Dr. Crosthwait listened to Plaintiff tell of the accident and where he hurt, and then felt around on him and then called Dr. R. K. Gassler’s office and set up an appointment for Plaintiff to see Dr. Gassier, an orthopedic surgeon. The earliest an appointment could be had with Dr. Gassier was two days later, July 30, 1975. Although Plaintiff testified he was in pain at the time, Dr. Crosthwait did not give him any medicine.

Plaintiff complained to Dr. Gassier that he was “hurting all over.” Dr. Gassier prescribed medications for Plaintiff, had X-rays made, and gave him heat treatments (diathermy) in his office. These diathermy treatments were administered to Plaintiff for three weeks, after which Plaintiff was sent to physiotherapy at Providence Hospital. This physiotherapy consisted of Plaintiff being placed on a stretch machine with weights. These treatments were very painful to Plaintiff over his entire spine with the principal location of the pain being in his lower back where he experienced the popping sensation at the time he lifted the tire. These physiotherapy treatments were administered to him for about three to four weeks. Dr. Gassier also gave Plaintiff an elastic belt to support his back. Plaintiff took the medicine prescribed by Dr. Gassier, wore the back brace which Dr. Gassier gave him, went for the physiotherapy as directed, and did everything Dr. Gassier told him to do. However, none of these things Dr. Gassier prescribed gave Plaintiff relief from his pain.

Plaintiff testified Dr. Gassier told him after examination of the X-rays; “I see something in your back, but whatever it is you’ll have to live with it the rest of your life. He didn’t say. He said, it was something, looked like a broken bone but he didn’t say it was broke all the way. But whatever he said it was, I had to live with it.”

While Plaintiff was still under the care of Dr. Gassier, for reasons not shown from the record, the insurance company called Plaintiff and requested him to go for examination to Dr. Stephen Goldberg, a neurological surgeon. Plaintiff testified that he did not know Dr. Goldberg, and had never heard of him before, and that he had made no complaint to anyone about Dr. Gassier or his treatments.

In compliance with the insurance company request, Plaintiff saw Dr. Goldberg at his office on November 5, 1975. Dr. Goldberg saw Plaintiff only this one time, for a period of some 30 to 45 minutes. Plaintiff told Dr. Goldberg that he was under the treatment of Dr. Gassier, and told him about his injury.

Plaintiff testified that Dr. Goldberg felt around on his back, stuck some pins in his legs and back, had X-rays made, and then told Plaintiff he could not find anything wrong with him, and that he would be able to go back to work. Plaintiff told him he was not able to work. According to Plaintiff’s testimony, Dr. Goldberg told Plaintiff he could “take a myelogram and could tell me what was wrong with me”; however, Dr. Goldberg took no myelogram. Plaintiff testified he had no idea what a myelogram was, and Dr. Goldberg did not explain to him what it was. Plaintiff’s testimony with reference to the myelogram was not controverted by Dr. Goldberg, who testified as a witness for the Defendant.

*797 Plaintiff testified that after he had seen Dr. Goldberg, “my pain was still severe in the lower back and I would walk a little bit and I would get stiff and I would get numb in the legs, so after that I started to go back to Dr. Gassier.”

Plaintiff said he went back to Dr. Gassier in accordance with an appointment previously made, and when Dr. Gassier learned the company had sent Plaintiff to Dr. Goldberg, Plaintiff testified Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 S.W.2d 794, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-charter-oak-fire-insurance-co-texapp-1977.