Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Dennis

372 S.W.2d 559, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1781
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1963
Docket16458
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 372 S.W.2d 559 (Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Dennis) 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.

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Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Dennis, 372 S.W.2d 559, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1781 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Olen H. Dennis, hereinafter termed plaintiff,, recovered a judgment for total and. permanent disability benefits under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act against the Texas Employers’ Insurance Association, hereinafter termed the Com7 pany, An appeal thereform has reached this court.

Judgment affirmed.

In view of the nature of the Company’s appeal we^domot have a question involving £he.:maf;tef:. of whether pr not.the plaintiff was-.entitled ,to..compensation... Hjs right thereto, is impliedly conceded....What. is.a question.is the.nature,and extent of plaintiff’s'injuries and the degree.-and permanence of the.disability resulting therefrom.

The injury was to plaintiff’s .back. ..On August 21, 1961, while pulling on a “swab” he felt 'a pain arid popping therein followed’ by a burning and stinging sensation. Three days thereafter he went to a doctor, who immediately caused him to be hospitalized in the .Medical &, Surgical Hospital, Gainesville, Texas. He remained there twenty-one' days. After being out of the hospital a short time' he was again hospitalized for three days, beginning November 7, 1961, in the Methodist Hospital of Dallas, Texas. Thereafter he .again entered a hospital in December of 1961. During or immediately after this third period of hospitalization the Company ceased to pay weekly compensation and refused to pay further medical bills.

‘ Claim procedure through the'Industrial Accident Board of Texas Was followed by trial before a jury-in the' District Court of Cooke County, arid after- judgment by the Company’s áppeal. The most material complaint on appeal relates to the-'-question -of whether certain portions of properly authenticated hospital records constituted improper “hearsay” evidence, not coming within the exception to the “hearsay rule” statutorily provided by Vernon’s Ann.Tex. St. Art. 3737e, “Memorandum or record of act, event or condition * *

The most authoritative decision relative to the admission of hospital records as an exception to the “hearsay rule” within the meaning of Art. 3737e, “Memorandum or record of act, event or condition * * * ”, is Travis Life Insurance Company v. Rodriguez, 1959 (Tex.Civ.App., Austin), 326 S.W.2d 256, approved by the Supreme Court of Texas in a per curiam opinion at 160 Tex. 182, 328 S.W.2d 434. Generally, the -holding óf the Austin Court of Civil Appeals 'affirriied the admissibility of the hospital records, including the entries thereon of diagnostic-recitations, upon the establishment of the authenticity of the records as prescribed by the statute. In the Rodriguez case '.the-'specific'part of the hospital records to which-an- objection was leveled was the entry (or entries).of the diagnosis of leukemia, or chronic leukemia. The objection-'was grounded on the contention that reception in evidence of the diagnosis would be in violation of the rule against admitting ^'hearsay”, that the exception to the “hearsay rule” provided by Art. 3737e did not embrace and'include diagnostic entries, and that if this form of “hearsay” be admitted its allowance would amount to the jury’s reception of inadmissible evidence which could not form the basis-of a judgment.

Skillern & Sons, Inc. v. Rosen, 1962, Tex., 359 S.W.2d 298, did not overrule nor cast doubt of -any kind upon the Rodriguez decision in relation to the matter in question. The Supreme Court, acknowledging the authority of Art. 3737e in respect to the reception of'hospital records generally, held that such authority did not extend to the statement made thereon relative to Mrs. Rosen, viz.: “ ‘The patient slipped- and fell ‘at '5 :30 p. m. while walking in- the slushy - snow in front- of a local *561 drugstore.’ ” The ■ reason' why, said the Supreme Court, was because of the statutory provision' that those admissible portions of hospital records must have been entries made by the hospital’s employee or representative, in the regular course of its business, upon such agent’s personal knowledge of such act, event or condition. It is of interest to note that the court, though holding the aforesaid entry inadmissible under Art. 3737e, held the entry admissible because it.was offered by the defendant Skillern & Sons, Inc. and amounted to an admission against interest on the part of Mrs. Rosen,, the plaintiff, in .that it was inconsistent -.with .her .contention ■ that she had fallen .inside the- defendant’s store.

In a footnote at page .260 of the opinion of the Austin Court of Civil Appeals in the Rodriguez case (326 S.W.2d 256) the court stated that in a construction of Art. 3737e it did-'not appear (to the- court) where a trial court had any' authority to predicate a decision uppn„.the admissibility of record entries on - diagnostic findings, .as part of the hospital records, upon whether - the statement therein amounted to or consisted of something more or other than a mere opinion ¡or a conclusion or of a diagnosis based upon a medical examination or findings of. conditions not- obvious or patently observable to persons generally. This was the exact statement upon an interpretation of Art. 3737e by the Houston Court of Civil Appeals in the case of Martinez v. Williams, 1958, 312 S.W.2d 742, 749. In the footnote the Austin Court favorably referred to a discussion of the question appearing in § 1262, McCormick and Ray, Texas Law of Evidence, 2nd Ed., a part of which reads as follows: “'On the whole, however, it is believed that, even as to these controversial diagnoses, the majority view favoring admission is the more expedient one. It works for simplicity by making it unnecessary to draw a difficult line, itself provocative of doubt and dispute; it serves the modern policy of-the free-use of organizational records; and is not too burdensome on the adversary who may himself call the declar-ant and thus bring out, if he can, any weakness of the diagnosis.” (Emphasis supplied.) This .statement presupposes that such a declarant is alive and available for the purpose.

Of interest to a student of the question is an article by Roy M. Dies, Jr., in 38 Tex.Law Review 645, “Evidence—Admission-in Evidence- — Records—Hospitals — Diagnosis of Leukemia in Hospital Record Held Admissible Under Texas Business Records Act.”. At' page 649 the author states as follows: “To admit into evidence all- diagnoses contained in.properly qualified hospital records seems the clear mandate of the -Texas Business Records Act.” We: agree. We are of the opinion that- the Rodriguez case did effectively so hold, although .the-decision of the case had specific application to the diagnosis of leukemia. ' It is true that the opinion. states that the diagnosis of leukemia is not one about which physicians ordinarily differ, but a - court cannot know such a thing judicially. Certainly it could not become a' matter for evidence in any case where as prerequisite for the court’s decision upon admissibility, it would be called upon to resolve a fact question as to whether the tendered diagnostic entry in the -records was upon a noncontroversial diagnosis, for resourceful counsel would rarely be unable to present testimony to the contrary.

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