Sisk v. Glens Falls Indemnity Company

310 S.W.2d 118, 66 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1958
Docket13174
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 118 (Sisk v. Glens Falls Indemnity Company) 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
Sisk v. Glens Falls Indemnity Company, 310 S.W.2d 118, 66 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Justice.

This is an appeal in a workman’s compensation suit instituted by appellant, Joe J. Sisk, to set aside an award made by the Industrial Accident Board and to recover compensation benefits against his employer’s insurance carrier, Glens Falls Indemnity Company. The parties will be referred to as they were in the trial court, as plaintiff and defendant.

It was stipulated that plaintiff, Joe J. Sisk, was injured in the course and scope of his employment with Ed Averdieck Construction Company and that he had been paid $300 for twelve weeks’ compensation.

By his original petition plaintiff alleged that he had sustained total and permanent incapacity as the result of an injury to his “back, neck, shoulder, right elbow, and *120 the crushing of his left foot and leg” as the result of an accident on March 21, 1956. He prayed for a recovery of compensation for 401 weeks at $25 per week, a lump sum payment, apportionment of one-third thereof to his attorney as his fee; and, in the alternative, if he be denied total and permanent disability, he prayed for a recovery of partial disability.

By trial amendment, he allegéd that prior to March 21, 1956, he had a dormant arthritic condition in his back and neck and that the injury aggravated such condition theretofore existing in his back and precipitated the disability of which he complained. In the alternative he further pled that if the injury did not aggravate the arthritic condition, then the injury to his left foot affected him so that he could not walk correctly, thus putting an undue strain on the bones, muscles and nerves of his back, neck and shoulders, which aggravated and incited the pre-existing condition of arthritis and contributed to his total and permanent disability.

Defendant, by its first amended original answer, admitted that plaintiff sustained an accidental injury to his left foot but further pled that such injury was confined solely to the left foot and to the leg below the knee. The defendant also admitted that plaintiff had suffered a 25% permanent partial loss of the use of his left foot and leg below the knee. Defendant admitted therein that manifest hardship would be occasioned if plaintiff should be obliged to collect compensation in weekly payments and agreed that any compensation awarded to him for total and permanent disability should be paid in a lump sum subject to the statutory discount.

Prior to the selection of the jury, pursuant to a motion filed by defendant, the trial court ordered that the plaintiff and his attorney should not read or state to the jury those portions of his pleadings setting forth the maximum number and amount of weekly payments recoverable under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq., for total permanent disability, i. e., 401 weeks at $25 per week. Plaintiff’s attorney was further directed not to read those portions of the petition alleging the amount of the plaintiff’s attorney’s fees or that the plaintiff would sustain manifest hardship if not paid in a lump sum. He was also instructed not to refer to such matters on voir dire examination, in argument, or at any other time during the trial.

By their verdict, in response to 34 special issues, the jury found that plaintiff did not sustain an injury to both his back and left foot; that he did not sustain any injury to his back; that he sustained total' loss of the use of his left foot for 26 weeks, followed by a permanent 60% partial loss of the use of his left foot; that his incapacity to work was solely caused by the loss of the use or partial loss of the use of his left foot, and that $70 per week was a fair and reasonable wage. Based upon such findings, the court set aside the award of the Industrial Accident Board and rendered judgment for plaintiff against defendant for 125 weekly compensation payments of $25 each, of which 57 had accrued amounting to $1,455.72, less $300 theretofore paid plaintiff, or a net of $1,155.72, due as of the date of the entry of judgment, plus 68 payments of $25 each payable weekly beginning May 1, 1957, and awarding plaintiff’s attorney the reasonable and customary fee of one-third.

By his first point plaintiff complains of the trial court’s action in instructing the plaintiff’s attorney not to read from the pleadings, adduce in evidence, or argue' before the jury, that under the law in Texas a claimant sustaining total and permanent disability is entitled to 401 weeks at $25 per week, whereas if his disability is confined to the foot he can only recover 125 weeks at $25 per week. In support of the contention that such action on the part of the court was error, plaintiff says, in his restatement of Point No. 1:

*121 “When the trial court forbade his attorney to interrogate the jury panel •on voir dire on their qualifications as jurors under the workmen’s compensation act involving 401 weeks at $25.00 per week * * * and informing the jury that a foot injury was worth only $125.00 a week under the law, immediate and irreparable harm and damage was done to plaintiff’s cause of action, in that he was prejudicially deprived of being able to qualify the prospective jurors properly for a case of this kind and was not able to fully go into the entire case as to be presented by plaintiff. Thus, depriving the plaintiff of a great right in this type of case.”

He further urges that such instructions by the trial court deprived him of his “rights to a fair and complete trial in this type of case before any jury” and resulted in “depriving the plaintiff’s attorney of arguing in his opinion and closing argument for 401 weeks at $25.00 per week, and showing the jury that the foot was only worth 125 weeks at $25.00 per week and a maximum of $25.00 per week.”

In reply the defendant submits that it was not error for the trial court to instruct plaintiff’s attorney not to inform the jury that the Workmen’s Compensation Act provides a maximum of $25 a week for 401 weeks for total and permanent disability but only $25 per week for 125 weeks if the injury is confined to the foot because (1) it is within the sole province of the court to inform the jury as to the law of the case, (2) such matters could have had no bearing on the material fact issues before the jury, and (3) it would have only served the purpose of advising the jury of the legal consequences of their findings.

It is elementary that not all of the pleadings in a workman’s compensation suit to set aside a ruling of the Industrial Accident Board and to try the issues de novo in court before a jury should be read to the jury. In Federal Underwriters Exchange v. Bickham, 138 Tex. 128, 157 S.W.2d 356, Chief Justice Alexander, speaking for the Court, stated that it is a sound rule that it is improper for counsel to disclose to the jury the decision previously made by the -Board in the same case. In the later case of Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation v. Young, Tex.Civ.App., 203 S.W.2d 822, it was held that it was error over an objection to apprise the jury in any manner of such proceedings. In Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n v. Poe, 152 Tex. 18, 253 S.W.2d 645

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 118, 66 A.L.R. 2d 1, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sisk-v-glens-falls-indemnity-company-texapp-1958.