Royal Indemnity Co. v. Yancey

357 S.W.2d 480, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1962
DocketNo. 6520
StatusPublished

This text of 357 S.W.2d 480 (Royal Indemnity Co. v. Yancey) 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
Royal Indemnity Co. v. Yancey, 357 S.W.2d 480, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. Appellee Yancey, employee, was injured August 21, 1960, while working for Stone & Webster on a construction job building the Gulf States Utilities plant at Bridge City, in Orange County. At the time of his injury he was operating a bulldozer, the weather was wet and much mud existed in the area. He had climbed up to sit down on the seat of the dozer when his feet went out from under him and he fell off the dozer, hitting a cleat on the dozer tire with his back and slipping on down to the ground with one leg pinned under him, leaning up against the side of the dozer. He was unable to get up and called for help. Two fellow-workmen pulled him up. He was helped into the seat of a truck and was taken to First Aid and then on to see a Dr. Howard Williams of Orange. The cause was tried before a jury and from a verdict and judgment awarding appellee total and permanent disability, this appeal was taken.

The first point complained of by appellant is that there was no evidence to sustain the finding of total permanent incapacity. The third point asserts that such finding is so contrary to the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong. The testimony bearing on these questions is summarized as follows:

Testimony of appellee: Before this injury he was able to do just about any kind of hard work and was in A-l condition. In 1956 he had an encounter with the superintendent on a previous job and had been hit by him in the fight. This caused him to be off from work a few days but he lost no great deal of time on account of it. He was 39 years of age, of stocky build and had a farm near Silsbee. He had done much work on it himself, such as building his home, plowing and other things that go with ordinary farming operations, but since his recent accident he had been unable to work on it but had to hire all his labor except that which his wife and children did. At the time of his injury he was operating a bulldozer which is considered hard physical work. Since that time he has worked about half the time but has to take light work only. For some four months previous to a week before the trial he ran an air compressor which is considered light work. His duties as operator of an air compressor were starting the machine, which is done with an electric starter like an automobile would have, opening the air valves, checking the oil, shutting it down at noon and starting it back up and shutting it off at night. For a few days before the trial he [482]*482was operating a small hydraulically controlled crane with a boom on it for Natkin Construction Company. This machine has four little levers that he can pull, and a seat to sit on. This machine does not jostle or bounce when it is operated. He stated he was able to do this type of work but his back never stopped hurting; he was always in pain even in doing light work but he had to work to support his family, as he had no independent income. He stated he was not able to do heavy work. He obtained his work through announcement of jobs at his union hall. When they call out for heavy bulldozer jobs at the hall he had to pass them up now, although he had followed this work for 14 years. He stated that he had to do light work that does not require lifting, bending, squatting, stooping or strain of any kind on his back.

He had a good sized bruise over his kidney caused by falling on the cleat on the dozer tire. After his injury he stayed on the Stone & Webster payroll for two weeks and then his work was terminated. When hurt he was taken to Dr. Howard Williams at Orange but after two weeks he concluded this doctor was not doing him any good and he refused to go back. Whether he was discharged on account of this, the record is in dispute. Someone suggested that he see Dr. W. W. Glass, Jr., of Port Arthur. He went to see Dr. Glass on September 19, 1960, and this doctor put him in Park Place Hospital for 9 days during which time he was in traction and was given sedatives. After discharge from hospital he continued to see Dr. Glass through October and then was released for work. He stated he told Dr. Glass he was not able to go back to work and Dr. Glass prescribed a back brace which he got and wore quite awhile but it did not help. He was then sent by his attorney to Dr. Covington of Orange who he said gave him a thorough examination.

Appellee further testified that it seemed to him that his back was continually getting worse, and he did not believe he would ever be able to do manual labor again. His legs and hips as well as his back bother him and he sometimes has headaches. He did not believe he would ever be able to do heavy work. On cross-examination he stated there were both heavy and light types of work with the Stone & Webster people but they did not see fit to give him light work; that he had never had back trouble until he fell off the bulldozer. It may be stated here that appellant put in evidence part of appellee’s deposition taken in the case growing out of the affair with a former employer’s superintendent, above mentioned, in which he testified his back was hurt on account of the altercation. That suit was settled a few years back for about $800.

After he was released by Dr. Glass he worked a few days for American Bridge Company operating a welding machine, which was light work. For about the last four months he has worked for Natkin Construction Company in Beaumont, operating the air compressor and light crane mentioned above. He has done some of the same type of work after the accident that he did before. He has never had but one other suit and that was the one settled for $800.

Adin Davis, witness for appellee: Davis saw Yancey fall from bulldozer, went over to him and he was suffering pain and said he had hurt his back; he had a bruised place on his back from this fall as his shirt was torn at the place and witness could see it. He stated further that at a later time Yancey pointed out to him where he was hurting beneath the shoulder blades and below his waist line.

Testimony of Dr. C. M. Covington of Orange for appellee: While X-rays made did not show a narrowing of the disc spaces in Yancey’s back, he was satisfied that he had had and is now having considerable pain, and is further satisfied that Yancey is developing the symptoms of an impinged disc and a man with such a disc cannot do hard manual labor. He testified that his patient has lost most of the feeling in an [483]*483area of his left leg- and the reflex of one Achilles heel was gone, and that the muscles in his back were tender and sore. This doctor stated the fall he sustained from the dozer would have been sufficient to produce the condition just described, and that Yan-cey’s injury will cause him to be permanently disabled. On cross-examination he said Yancey’s trouble was mostly on his left side; and a myelogram test would have shown whether a disc injury existed, but none was made on Yancey; that X-rays will not always disclose an impinged or injured disc; that while there did not appear to be a narrowing of the spaces between vertebrae, this is not conclusive and he considered Yancey’s trouble to be in the area of the lumbar 2, 3 and 4 region, but it is difficult to pinpoint the exact place in a person as obese as is Yancey.

Appellee’s wife testified: that her husband was well and strong prior to his accident in August, 1960, but since that time he has been unable to do work on the farm or any carpenter work since his injury and his back is not getting better. Yancey stated he was paid as much on the lighter work done after the injury as he had been paid as a bulldozer operator.

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Bluebook (online)
357 S.W.2d 480, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-indemnity-co-v-yancey-texapp-1962.