Southern Underwriters v. Thompson

127 S.W.2d 389, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1939
DocketNo. 3803.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 389 (Southern Underwriters v. Thompson) 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
Southern Underwriters v. Thompson, 127 S.W.2d 389, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 588 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

NEÁLON, Chief Justice.

Tommie Thompson, defendant in error in this Court and plaintiff in the District Court, sued plaintiff in error, The South- *390 era Underwriters, workmen’s compensation insurance carrier for C. B. Rains, claiming that he had sustained certain described personal injuries while engaged in the course of his employment as an employee of C. B. Rains. Defendant in error alleged' that he was totally and permanently disabled. The case was tried to a jury which, in response to special issues, found that Thompson, while working as an employee of Cecil B. Rains in the course of his employment on or about June 23, 1937, sustained an accidental personal injury as alleged in his petition; that ás a result of his injuries he sustained total and permanent incapacity and that manifest hardship and injustice would result unless he were awarded his compensation in a lump sum. The jury found that an average daily wage fair and just to plaintiff and defendant should be $6 a day. The court awarded judgment in favor of Thompson and against plaintiff in error in the total sum of $6,825, which would be an allowance of total permanent disability at the rate of $20 per week for a period of four hundred weeks after deducting the discount permitted by law when compensation is paid in a lump sum. One-third of the judgment was awarded to plaintiff’s attorneys. From this judgment plaintiff in error prosecutes this writ of error. ...

Opinion

The brief of plaintiff in error contains eighty-three assignments of error. Twenty-six propositions are urged. We shall discuss first those that we think should control our action in this proceeding.

Several portions of the closing argument of the attorney for defendant in error are challenged as introducing error into the case. By the eighteenth proposition the following argument of counsel for defendant in error is challenged: “He talks about the fact that he collected money twice before; well, they paid him off, and the companies that paid him > must have thought that he was entitled to it, but he is not satisfied with trying to keep you from making his company live up to the written contract, he wants to come into court and slander and blacken and call me a scoundrel and call him an extortioner. No, we can’t .bring you and your insurance company in the court and put you on trial, and I wonder how many times you have kept somebody that is entitled to have the money from having it.

We don’t have them down here, and I am not saying that they ever done it, not saying that they have ever, but the jury doesn’t know, either, about the facts of that other case.”

By the twentieth assignment the following argument of counsel for defendant in error is attacked: “Oh, yes, he criticizes him for hiring a lawyer. Well, now, he worked in the oil field all his life, and how are you going to make the insurance companies live up to their contract if you don’t hire somebody that knows how to do it, and anybody that worked in the oil field must hire a lawyer to collect the insurance that is justly due him.”

We think that the objections to both arguments are valid. Each of them is in the nature of a statement to the jury that the Insurance Company makes a practice of refusing to pay just claims unless compelled to do so. In the first quotation the expression is used by counsel: “I wonder how many times you (meaning counsel for defendant) have kept somebody that is entitled to have the money from having it.” This followed immediately after a statement that counsel was “not satisfied with trying to keep you from making his Company live up to the written contract,” and the further statement, evidently directed at counsel, “No, we can’t bring you and your insurance company into court and put you on trial,” etc. The second quotation contains the positive direct statement, “and anybody that worked in the oil field must hire a lawyer to collect the insurance that is justly due him.” Both statements are in the nature of impeaching character testimony. We cannot saj^ that the jury may not have thought that counsel had peculiar knowledge of the policies of the defendant company and therefore have been influenced, by his statements. Harsh as were the strictures of defendant’s counsel which it is claimed provoked the utterances, we think they did not constitute a justification of the arguments quoted. They were limited to a criticism of alleged conduct of plaintiff and his counsel in the case then on trial. Under the strict rule approved by the Supreme Court in Robbins v. Wynne, Tex.Com.App., 44 S.W.2d 946, also declared in Texas Indemnity Ins. Co. v. McCurry, Tex.Com.App., 41 S.W.2d 215, 78 A.L.R. 760, and adhered to in Woodard v. Texas & P. R. Co., 126 Tex. 30, 86 S.W.2d 38, we must hold that the making of these argu *391 ments introduced reversible error into the' case.

By its twenty-first assignment plaintiff in error urges that error was introduced into the case by the use of the-following argument by counsel for plaintiff: “I ask you to compel this insurance company to do what the evidence in this case demands they do, and that is to pay the compensation they agreed with Cecil Rains they would pay to his employees!” We think the assignment should be sustained. This is a direct appeal to the jury to reach a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against defendant and is argument of a character not permitted in a case tried upon special issues. The function of a jury in such a trial is to state, the facts found in response to questions asked, while the effect of the argument is to ask the- jury to frame its findings in view of a result to be obtained, provided the jury thinks that the Insurance Company should pay. Since the duty of the jury is to make correct answers to interrogatories regardless of the effect such answers may have upon the result, an argument phrased as the one quoted is highly improper and constitutes reversible error.

We find no error in the manner in which special issue No. 15 was submitted, and overrule the assignments complaining thereof.

Plaintiff in error complains of the form of special issue No. 9, which submitted the issue of partial disability in the following language: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff has sustained partial incapacity as a natural result of said accidental personal injury, if any, of date on or about June 23rd, 1937?” There is no merit in this contention. Assignments attacking the form of this submission are therefore overruled. Wright v. Traders & General Ins. Co., Tex.Com.App., 123 S.W.2d 314; Southern Underwriters v. Wheeler, Tex.Com.App., 123 S.W.2d 340.

It is also asserted by plaintiff in error that the court erred in the manner in which it submitted special issue No. 1.

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266 S.W.2d 194 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 389, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-underwriters-v-thompson-texapp-1939.