Service Mut. Ins. Co. of Texas v. Vaughn

130 S.W.2d 392, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1939
DocketNo. 3477.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 392 (Service Mut. Ins. Co. of Texas v. Vaughn) 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
Service Mut. Ins. Co. of Texas v. Vaughn, 130 S.W.2d 392, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1217 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This is a workman’s compensation case, filed by appellant, the Service Mutual Insurance Company of Texas, in the district court of Jasper County as an appeal from the final award of the Industrial Accident Board; appellees, Mrs. J. C. Vaughn and her minor daughter, Bernice Vaughn, the compensation claimants, are the surviving widow and daughter of the deceased employee, J. C. (Carl) Vaughn; A. L. Mays was the employer. The trial was to a jury. After overruling appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict, and after the verdict was returned, the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, judgment was entered in appellees’ favor for compensation in the .sum of $3,246.18, to be paid in a lump sum. The jury found the following facts: On or about the 27th day of August, 1938, “in the course of his employment for his then employer, J. C. Vaughn sustained an injury” by “being struck over the head” by Joe. Hopkins which “naturally resulted in his death.” *393 The jury gave a negative answer to the following question: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the sole motive for Joe Hopkins killing J. C. Vaughn (if he did kill J. C. Vaughn) was the feeling existing because of the separation of Joe Hopkins and his wife, Pauline Hopkins ?”

Additional facts were found sufficient to support the judgment. Appellant has regularly prosecuted its appeál to this court.

On the 'undisputed evidence, it is our ■ conclusion that the court should have granted appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict in its favor, and on the return of the verdict, its motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. We give appellees’ summary of the facts:

“While J. C. Vaughn was on duty, alone on a lonesome road, in the course of his employment, in the furtherance of his master’s business, working as a night watchman, watching road machinery, he was killed by Joe Hopkins, who (about 10 o’clock at night) slipped out of the darkness, behind a tree against which J. C. Vaughn was sitting, and struck him in the head with a hammer. Joe Hopkins was J. C. Vaughn’s son-in-law. Joe Hopkins and J. C. Vaughn’s daughter had been having marital troubles for many, many months. Mrs. Hopkins had left Joe on several different occasions. Several weeks before Mr. Vaughn met his death, Joe Hopkins threatened to kill J. C. Vaughn, the father of his wife. However, Joe' Hopkins threatened to kill many people, particularly the members of the J. C. Vaughn family, and particularly Nancy Christian, a member of that family. There were eleven children. in that family, all. living and all above twenty-one years of age except one. There was but one night watchman, and that night watchman was the only one of the family killed by Joe Hopkins. * * * Three times were Joe Hopkins and his wife separated. They were separated before Mr. Vaughn ever began working as a night watchman. * * * During these troublesome days Joe Hopkins and J. C. Vaughn were seen together ‘from time to time up until the date of this tragedy’. None of the other members of the large family were ever injured because of the separation. Mr. Vaughn was never injured because of the separation, or otherwise, until Joe Hopkins found J. C. Vaughn on a lonesome highway, guarding machinery at 9:30 o’clock at night, where no light shed any kind of protection, but where darkness lurked everywhere, * * *. From day to day, even after the last separation, Joe Hopkins and J. C. Vaughn were together. No harm was done until J. C. Vaughn was found on a night watchman’s job. Until J. C. Vaughn was found on a lonesome, unlighted, country place as a night watchman, all alone, he and Joe Hopkins, in meeting often, acted as if they were friends and acted in a friendly manner, even on Thursday before the final day. Joe Hopkins was with J. C. Vaughn on Thursday and on Friday, and on each occasion they were talking in a friendly way. * * * Every opportunity was available for Joe Hopkins to kill J. C. Vaughn during the day preceding the murder. * * * Joe Hopkins threatened numerous people. He threatened to kill Mr. Dickerson. He threatened to kill Mr. Maxwell. He threatened to kill many others. None of these men were working as a night watchman. * * * None of them were killed. Mr. Vaughn, on the lonely, unlighted highway job, working as a night watchman, alone, was murdered by Joe Hopkins.
“On Thursday before the fatal Friday, Joe Hopkins went to J. C. Vaughn’s home and visited Mr. Vaughn for ten minutes, but did him no violence. On the following Friday he was also visiting J. C. Vaughn and did him no violence. It was on Friday night, in the darkness, when J. C. Vaughn was all alone * * * that he met his death at the hands of an assassin.”

Opinion;

It was shown without controversy that J. C. Vaughn, while discharging the duties of his employment, was murdered by Joe Hopkins. The evidence does not support the jury’s finding that the injury which resulted in Vaughn’s death was “sustained in the course of his employment.” Article 8309, R.C.S., a section of our Workmen’s Compensation Act, declares that the term “injury sustained in the course of employment” shall not include:' “An injury caused by an act of a third person intended to injure the employe because of reasons personal to him and not directed against him as an employe,- or because of his employment.”

Under all the evidence, Hopkins killed Vaughn because of reasons personal to him, that is, because of the feeling he *394 had against Vaughn caused by the refusal of his wife, Vaughn’s daughter, to live with him. He did not kill Vaughn because of anything he had against him as an employee of Mays, nor because he was employed by Mays; nor was he induced to go to the place of the homicide because of some motives such as robbery, arson, etc., directed against Mays, nor the business operated by Mays. He went to the place of the homicide simply to kill Vaughn, and to kill him, as stated above, solely for reasons personal to him. Every element of the motive that induced Hopkins to kill Vaughn was, man to man, between Hopkins and Vaughn, and had no relation whatever to Vaughn’s employment. Hopkins was not an employee of Mays, but a stranger to him and to his employment. If Hoplcin’s wife had been the daughter of some other man, he would not have killed Vaughn. If he and his wife had not been separated, if they had been living happily together, he would not have killed Vaughn. The irresistible logic of the facts is that Hopkins killed Vaughn because he was Vaughn’s son-in-law, and not because of anything connected with Vaughn’s employment. In discharging the duties of his employment, Vaughn assumed no' greater hazard, by reason of his employment, than other night watchmen engaged in the same character of work. The authorities, as we understand them, sustain our construction of the statutory exclusion to the definition of “injuries sustained in the course of employment,” put in issue by the uncontroverted facts. We have found no Texas case directly in point, but the Court of Appeals of Kentucky had the very point before it in January-Wood Co. v. Schumacher, 231 Ky. 70S, 22 S.W.2d 117, 119. The court said: “The fundamental principle of liability, it seems to us, is that the injury sustained was such as in the light of experience might reasonably have been foreseen as a result of the service and nature of duties performed (28 R.C.L.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 392, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/service-mut-ins-co-of-texas-v-vaughn-texapp-1939.