Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Hitt

125 S.W.2d 323
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1939
DocketNo. 10866.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 323 (Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Hitt) 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
Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Hitt, 125 S.W.2d 323 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal by the insurance-carrier for the employer of the claimant in a compensation case, advanced for consideration under this Court’s Rule XI, section (c), is from a judgment of the 10th District Court, awarding the claimant $6,668.05 in a lump sum, in response to a jury’s verdict on special issues finding, in brief, that such claimant had sustained an accidental injury while in the course of such employment on January 11 of 1937, that his disability resulting therefrom was total and permanent, that he had not been merely partially disabled but permanently so, that at the date of such injury he did not have kidney-stones or kidney disease, that his average weekly wage at that time had been $32, and that the payment of compensation in' weekly installments would result- in manifest hardship to him.

By apparent inadvertence on its able counsel’s part, the plaintiff in error’s brief violates this Court’s Rule XII as to length.

The stated lump-sum award was enter-, ed by the court upon a calculation of 401 weeks of compensation at the rate of $19.-21 per week from and after the date of the injury as so found and fixed, that is, January 11 of 1937.

In this court, through a great number of assignments and propositions, the carrier assails the judgment so rendered, its major contentions of law following its principal defense upon the facts in the trial court, to the effect that the defendant in error had not shown himself to have been injured or disabled as claimed, but instead had been suffering only as a result of kidney-stones, or a kidney disease — being:

(1) That the court erred in refusing its motion to require the plaintiff to sub *326 mit to a physical examination by its doctor during the trial ;

(2) The receipt of the ¡ testimony of the witnesses Ray Ashe and of the plaintiff himself, over objection, as to what had been their average wages in the tank-building trade, in which plaintiff had been engaged at the time of his claimed accident, was prejudicial;

(3) The court’s action in permitting plaintiff’s counsel to cross-examine his own witness, Lester Sharpe, under the guise of a qualifying examination, and in permitting such counsel to make inflammatory remarks referring to an intimidation of such witness, was reversible error;

(4) The court erred in denying its counsel the privilege of a re-direct examination of the witness Dr. Spiller about his having made examinations at other times for clients of Mr. Helm, one of plaintiff’s attorneys;

(5) The admission of testimony of plaintiff concerning his poverty and indebtedness, to the effect that he owed about $2000 for doctor’s bills and expenses, was ■ inflammatory, immaterial, and prejudicial.

(6) Its .motion for an instructed verdict in its favor should have been granted, there having been no evidence of incapacity from an accidental injury- as alleged;

(7) The court’s charge was erroneous and the special issues improperly submitted, in that they wholly failed to indicate to the jury upon whom the burden of proof rested as to any special issue given, and in defining the phrase “preponderance of the evidence” by referring to it as “a”, rather than “the”, preponderance of the evidence;

. (8) The instruction to the jury that they should not consider the plaintiff’s financial need in determining whether or not he had been so disabled, was erroneous as constituting a general charge, as well as tacitly advising them they could consider his financial need in determining the issues concerning a lump-sum payment and his average weekly wage;

(9)The respective definitions of the phrases, “total incapacity”, “permanent incapacity”, and “producing cause”, were erroneous, upon the weight 'of the evidence, in conflict with other definitions, and each imposed greater burdens upon it than the law permitted;

(10) The submission of each and all of the 14 special issues given to the jury was erroneous and prejudicial, in that neither singly nor collectively did they properly embody the fact-issues raised between the parties by the pleadings and evidence;

(11) The court erred in entering judgment without requiring findings upon special issues 8 to 11, both inclusive, as well as in the submission of such issues, it being undisputed that the plaintiff was then at least partially incapacitated from a disease not compensable, to-wit, pneumonia;

(12) The court erred in refusing to submit its requested special issues A, B, C, D, E, and F, embodying its affirmative defenses, to the effect that the plaintiff’s incapacity had been caused in whole or in part by a disease of the kidneys unrelated to a compensable injury.

None of these contentions, it is determined, should be sustained; as presaged by preceding recitations, the theories of the opposing parties were these: The claimant presented that he was a strong, healthy man, unafflicted at the time by any disabling disease, was a competent tank-builder, earning from $6 to $18 per day at that trade, when, in the course of his employment on January 11 of 1937, he was seriously injured while helping to lift a steel structure in place on a tank (one of the ground men having let it go, thereby throwing its weight on him, seriously and permanently injuring his back); that as a result of such accident, he had been totally «and permanently disabled within the meaning of the compensation law, hence had become entitled to the 401 weeks’ benefits prescribed by the compensation act.

The insurance-carrier, on the other hand, denied the declared-upon cause of action in toto, in turn charging that he had not been injured as claimed, but that his condition was the result of a pre-exist-ing disease in the nature of kidney-stones, or kidney disease, and that at the time of the trial he was also suffering disability in whole or in part as a result of the further disease of pneumonia.

The opposing issues of fact thus raised by the pleadings were likewise supported by .evidence of each side sufficient to carry them to the jury, whereupon the learned trial court embodied the controversy thus joined in these inquiries to the jury, after defining “a preponderance of the evi *327 dence”, “total incapacity”, “partial incapacity”, “permanent incapacity”, “injury”, “accidental injury”, and “producing cause”:

“No. 1. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that John (Jack) H. Hitt sustained an accidental injury on or about January 11, 1937? Answer ‘We do’ or ‘We do not’.
“No. 2. Do you find from a preponderance of the .evidence that since January 11, 1937, John (Jack) H. Hitt has been incapacitated to work and earn money ? Answer ‘He has been’ or ‘He has not been’.
“No. 3. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the accidental injury, if any, received by John (Jack) H. Hitt on January 11, 1937, was a producing cause of his incapacity to work and earn money, if any? Answer ‘It was’ or ‘It was not’.
“No. 4.

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125 S.W.2d 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-ins-assn-v-hitt-texapp-1939.