Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Long

180 S.W.2d 629, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 736
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1944
DocketNo. 9439.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 629 (Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Long) 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. Long, 180 S.W.2d 629, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 736 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. Appellee, Marshall D. Long, recovered judgment against appellant, Texas Employers’ Insurance Association, for the lump sum payment of workmen’s compensation for total and permanent disability. The accident by which he was injured occurred in the course of his employment with Davidson Sash & Door Company, as a carpenter’s helper. He was working near a ramp on which other employees were pushing a dolly .truck loaded with heavy counter tops. When the truck reached a point near appellee it overturned, and the counter tops fell on his back and left leg, the greater part falling on his leg, resulting in a comminuted fracture of the fibula, dislocation of the ankle, and a fracture of the tip end of the big bone or tibia; and resulting in injury .to his nervous system and general health. The trial was to a jury on special issues, which *630 were answered favorably to appellee, and judgment was accordingly rendered for him.

Six points of error presented by appellant are as follows:

1. That the evidence is insufficient to support the compensation judgment for total permanent disability.

2. That over objection appellee was permitted to testify that he would not be able to perform labor in the future.

3. That there is no jury finding that ap-pellee’s disability would be permanent.

4. That no permanent disability was proved except to the leg.

5. That the average daily wage of $4, as found by the jury, was not supported by the evidence.

6. That the lump sum judgment was not supported by the evidence.

Neither of these contentions is sustained.

Points 1 and 4 relate to the question of the insufficiency of the evidence to support' a compensation judgment for total permanent disability. The evidence supporting the judgment will be stated in substance.

Appellee was injured on August 18, 1942, at which time he was 42 years of age. He had an 8th grade education; had never been employed except at heavy manual labor, and had always been and was in good health at the time of his injury. Five doctors testified on the trial of the case as to the seriousness of the character of the fractures and injury to appellee’s leg, and some of them testified as to the resulting injury to his nervous system and general health. The injury to his leg healed slowly; an open sore developed; and appellee was in the hospital three times over a period of several months for the treatment of his injury. When the case was tried, IS months after the accident, appellee was still suffering 'from the injury to his leg and the resulting injury to his nervous system and general health. Appellant’s doctor treated appellee from the time of his injury until February 1, 1943, when he dismissed him as being able to do light work. He testified that the X-ray taken at the time “showed union of all the fragments and good position of the bone with normal callous tissue formation”; that ap-pellee has a “traumatic arthritis, or traumatic type of rheumatism, which I thought had probably been contributed to by his teeth.” He further testified that his “teeth are clear”; and no evidence showed that appellee’s teeth caused his rheumatic condition. This doctor further testified that appellee “had approximately 20% permanent partial disability as applied to the foot.”

After appellee was dismissed by appellant’s doctor, he went to a doctor of his own choosing, who treated him for the injury to his leg and resulting injury from February 1, 1943, until the date of the trial, November 9, 1943. He testified that at that time appellee was not in a condition to do any manual labor whatever, and had not been able to work during the entire time he had been treating him; that he was unable to estimate how long his total incapacity to do manual labor would continue; that the kind of injury suffered by appellee is a painful injury, especially since it involves the joint, and that symptomatically, taken in consideration with what appellee had told him about his condition, he was of the opinion that the injury had affected his general health, causing nervousness, irritability, nervous indigestion, loss of sleep, and loss of weight. This doctor estimated the disability of ap-pellee’s leg to be 65% of its normal movements or uses, and testified that as long as the leg was sore appellee would not be able to do any work; and “that he has been totally incapacitated to perform manual labor.”

Appellant’s doctor who made the X-ray pictures of appellee’s leg from time to time, the last one being the day before the trial, testified that “considering the type of fracture, the progress has been favorable”; that “it is practically healed now as far as it will ever be healed”; and that “no-bone that has been fractured as that is, or as that -has been, can ever be the same-as a bone that has not been fractured,', but there is at the present time stable, substantial callous union of those comminuted, fractures.”

A doctor appointed by the court to examine appellee’s leg testified that the ankle-was swollen; showed some limitation of' motion and some pain; that he considered: “the result good considering the magnitude-of the original injury,” and estimated disability at 35% below normal use of the-leg itself. He further testified that if the-leg still pained appellee he could not work.. *631 Another doctor appointed by the court testified that appellee’s ankle was enlarged and was “swollen painfully” and that there was “deep scarring” on the leg; limitation of motion of the foot and ankle, and an “inversion or turning in of the ankle”; that appellee has “had a good deal of trouble in the bones and ankle, and the feet too from inflammatory reaction, and still has some”; that he was not able to work, and that he did not have the “slightest idea when he would be able to return -to work”; -and that witness was of the opinion that there existed 40% disability to the leg itself; and that by the fact that there was 40% disability to the leg itself did not mean that appellee was able to do any manual work. He further testified that with the kind of injury suffered by appellee, there was necessarily a great deal of pain; that pain is the natural physical condition which affects the general nervous condition and the general physical condition of the patient; and that it was a natural result of a painful injury of the kind suffered by appellee; that his nervous system would be affected, and that he would suffer such symptoms as loss of sleep, weight and appetite.

Appellee had been married 23 years at the time of his injury. His wife testified “that he had never been sick, but had been in perfect health; that after the accident his general health became very poor; he lost 15 pounds in weight; was nervous and irritable; did not sleep at night, and had very little appetite. Appellee testified that at the time the entire load of heavy counter tops fell against him, he was hit in the back, up next to the shoulder; that the whole load was lying on him; the “biggest part of it was on my leg,” and “some of it on my back”; that the shock rendered him numb and without sensation of pain until he was in an ambulance on the way to the hospital, when “it got to hurting awful bad”; and that at the hospital a bandage was placed on his shoulder and his leg was placed in a cast.

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180 S.W.2d 629, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-ins-assn-v-long-texapp-1944.