Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Schaffer

161 S.W.2d 328, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 203
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1942
DocketNo. 5403.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 S.W.2d 328 (Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Schaffer) 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. Schaffer, 161 S.W.2d 328, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 203 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in a compensation suit obtained in the District Court of Yoakum County, Texas, by the appellee, A. J. Schaffer, against the appellant, the Texas Employers Insurance Association, for accidental injuries appellee claims to have sustained while engaged in the course of his employment as a roughneck for Davidson Drilling Company, Inc., which carried insurance for its employees with the appellant.

At the time he was injured he was tightening a nut on a bolt with a wrench in order to tighten the liner in a pump. Another man was holding the other end of the bolt with a wrench and in exerting the force necessary to tighten the liner the wrenches slipped off and appellee fell forward on his face against the pump and liner, knocked his teeth loose so the upper ones had to be extracted, crushed his nose, which necessitated the removal of the bones thereof and the membranous walls between his nostrils. He alleges injuries to his nerves, spine, neck, head and muscles in detail and says that he grew nervous, had spells accompanied with unconsciousness and as a consequence of such injuries he became afflicted with traumatic epilepsy and was totally and permanently incapacitated from doing any kind or character of work.

The court submitted to the jury 31 special issues in his main charge, each of which except No. 23 was answered in favor of appellee. In response to Issue No. 23 the jury found that the injury which appellee received to his eye in the year 1934 was the sole cause of his present incapacity.

The appellee made a motion non obstante veredicto in which, he prayed that the court set aside and hold for naught the .finding of the jury on Special Issue No. 23 because it was without support in the testimony. The court sustained this motion and set aside this issue for insufficiency of the testimony to support the jury’s finding thereon. This holding was correct or judgment would be here rendered for appellant. The court in his judgment, after reciting the filing of the motion and the issue sought to be set aside, the giving of notice and the hearing thereof and holding that it should be disregarded for want of testimony, says that after setting aside Issue No. 23 it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the appellee, A. J. Schaf-fer, do have and recover from the appellant, Texas Employers Insurance Association, the sum of $6,600, together with interest, of which amount -the sum of $2,200 with in *330 terest thereon is adjudged and decreed to Anderson & Dickson, the attorneys for appellee, for their services.

The appellee pleaded that he was entitled to recover compensation on his own average weekly wage under subsection 1, section 1, of article 8309, Vernon’s Annotated Texas Civil Statutes, and if he was mistaken in such plea that he was entitled to recover on the average weekly wage of others under subsection 2, section 1, and if neither of such allegations were sustained then he was entitled to recover under subsection 3.

In response to Special Issues Nos. 16, 16A and 17 the jury found that appellee had worked substantially the whole of the year for Davidson Drilling Company, Inc., and received an average wage of $6.50 per day. In answer to Issues 18 and 19 the jury answered that other employees of the same class worked substantially the whole of the year preceding June 9, 1939 in similar employment in the same neighborhood and received an average wage of $6.50 per day. To other special issues submitted they found that $45.50 per week was just and fair between the parties.

It is unnecessary, in our opinion, to set out the special issues submitted and the answers of the jury thereto but hereafter we will discuss such special issues as we deem necessary to a disposition of the appeal.

We will first consider the action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion praying the court to declare a mistrial and permit it to withdraw its answer of ready for trial. This motion is based on a very unusual occurrence which happened in open court before the jury during the trial of the case. Appellant’s statement in its motion of this occurrence, which is not challenged and find support in the record, is as follows: “The defendant wants to make a record at this time of the plaintiff’s spell on the witness stand. The record is here made that at this point in the course of plaintiff’s cross-examination, the plaintiff began to tremble slightly, and then soon began to shake, and together with some moaning, ran his fingers over his head, rumpling his hair, knocking off his glasses, made grimaces with his face, and plaintiff’s counsel rushed up to the witness stand and took a position behind the plaintiff, reached over his shoulders and grabbed each of the plaintiff’s wrists, and then attempted to hold and quiet him, the plaintiff, who continued to struggle and at one time said “Oh, my head’’, and while being held rocked forward and sideways with the upper part of his body and head down about the railing around the witness chair, and after this seizure had gone on some two or three minutes, all in the presence of the jury, the jury was then recessed for the time being, and the plaintiff was taken from the court room for a rest, and in view of these circumstances, which in their dramative and unexpected nature, were obviously and inevitable likely and almost certain to make a deep impression on the jury and be prejudicial to the defendant herein in the maintenance of its defense, the defendant at this time, while the jury is still withdrawn, moves the Court for leave to withdraw its announcement of ready and to declare a mistrial in the case.”

There was testimony before the jury by appellee and several of his witnesses to the effect that he suffered with nervous spells. His conduct and the effect thereof they described with some particularity but we think it is certain that no witness could portray to a jury by words so accurately, so vividly and so forcibly this attack and the effect thereof as was presented by this ocular demonstration to the jury while they were' sitting in the jury box. There is no contention that appellee did not suffer some character of nervous spells on occasions somewhat similar to the attack he had while on the witness stand but the issue was not whether he suffered nervous spells but whether the injury he had sustained had any causal connection with such attacks. The expert testimony on this issue was sharply conflicting and we surmise without evidence to support us that this attack suffered in the presence of the jury beclouded the real issue to such an extent that it was given little or no consideration. The record shows that the jury in their deliberation agreed that the attack was genuine, not faked and not feigned. The record does not indicate that this attack by appellee was other than involuntary and unavoidable. If the testimony presented an issue of fraud or malingering for the purpose of deceiving and influencing the jury we would have little difficulty in disposing of the matter but the record contains no such indication from the testimony and, in our opinion, for this unfortunate and unavoidable occurrence appellee should not be denied the right to appear at the trial of his own case and testify therein.

*331 In 64 C.J.

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161 S.W.2d 328, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-ins-assn-v-schaffer-texapp-1942.