Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Frankum

215 S.W.2d 899, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1948
DocketNo. 12000.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 899 (Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Frankum) 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' Insurance Ass'n v. Frankum, 215 S.W.2d 899, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1261 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

This is a Workmen's Compensation case, brought by the plaintiff Frankum against the Texas Employers' Insurance Association to recover compensation on account of an injury received by him on December 10, 1943, while working as an automobile mechanic for Earl McMillian Company in Houston.

This is the second appeal of this case. The opinion of this Court on the former appeal will be found in 198 S.W.2d 484, and that of the Supreme Court in 201 S.W.2d 800, 802.

The jury verdict in the second trial — now at bar here for review — was substantially the same as it was in the first trial. In each trial the jury found, first, that plaintiff sustained partial incapacity to work as a result of the injury received by him on December 10, 1943, while so in the employ of Earl McMillian Company; that such partial incapacity was permanent, and began on December 10, 1943; and second, that plaintiff had good cause for delaying the filing of his claim for compensation from December 10, 1943, until December 23, 1944.

In such first trial the jury also found that plaintiff's average weekly wage-earning capacity during the existence of such partial incapacity would be $35, "per 40-hour week," which the Supreme Court — on the former appeal — thus held was erroneous: "What we hold is that when they attempted to fix his earning capacity under the limitation of a forty-hour week when no such limitation was claimed by respondent or supported by the evidence, their answer was not responsive and did not determine the issue submitted to them."

Whereas, on the present trial, following that holding, the jury found that plaintiff's average weekly wage-earning capacity, during the existence of such partial incapacity, would be $39.

This $39 finding this time followed special issues submitted by the court, seeking to elicit such an unconditional determination of that element, and stipulations *Page 901 made by the parties during the trial to the effect: (1) That the plaintiff had sustained the accidental injury he declared upon on December 10th of 1943, and (2) that his average weekly wage during the year before such injury had been $67.70.

There was some testimony tending to indicate that the plaintiff had also sustained two other injuries between the date of the one he received on December 10th of 1943, supra, which alone he sought recovery upon, and the date of the present trial, towit: (1) While he was at his home on July 29th of 1944, and (2) another at his employer's place of business on October 18th of 1944, as to which the trial court had submitted to the jury its special-issues Nos. 11, 12, 14 and 15.

Upon the predicate thus indicated, the trial court entered its final judgment, in part upon the jury's verdict after disregarding its answers to stated special issues Nos. 11, 12, 14 and 15, as having elicited merely evidentiary instead of material findings of fact, and in part upon its own findings from the pleadings and the evidence, whereby the court awarded the plaintiff compensation at $17.22 per week for 300 weeks.

Appellant inveighs in this Court against the judgment so adverse to it below upon these two points of error:

"No. I. The jury having found plaintiff partially and permanently disabled as the result of an injury sustained in the course of his employment; but, having further found that a major portion of his disability resulted from a second injury, which he received outside of the course of his employment at his home, it was error for the Court to award the plaintiff compensation for the disability resulting from the second injury.

"No. II. The Court erred in submitting to the jury Special Issue 9, inquiring whether the plaintiff had good cause for delaying the filing of his claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board from December 10, 1943, until December 23, 1944, over the defendant's objection that said issue does not limit the jury to a consideration of the facts pleaded by the plaintiff as constituting good cause, nor to the facts established by the evidence as constituting good cause."

Point No. II is overruled without discussion, upon the holding that, while the trial court elicited a finding from the present jury — as had been also done in the first trial of the cause — that the appellee had had good cause for not having filed his claim for compensation herein with the Industrial Accident Board until December 23d of 1944, such question had been bindingly settled in this litigation by the Supreme Court's opinion on the first trial thereof, as reported in 201 S.W.2d at page 802, column 2, paragraph 7, wherein it expressly overruled appellant's point raising that feature at that time. This Court had likewise so determined it upon the former appeal to it.

In other words, such judgment of the Supreme Court on the former appeal is now the law of this case on that branch of it, and cannot be overturned here. MacDonald v. Follett, Tex. Civ. App. 193 S.W.2d at page 288, Column 1, Paragraph 1, writ of error denied, and authorities there cited.

Wherefore, the only remaining question of law so left here is that raised by appellant's quoted point No. I.

After extended consideration of the record, that contention also is overruled, upon the holding that, as applied to our Compensation Law, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. Art. 8306 et seq., as applicable to the developed facts of this case, it is an unsound construction, whatever may be the holdings of sister states upon somewhat similar acts to our own.

It is true, as appellant presents, that the jury found, in answering the disregarded issues (Nos. 11, 12, 14 and 15), that the appellee's disability had been caused in part both by the second and third claimed injuries of July 29 and October 18, 1944, respectively, and that, but for such injury after July 29, 1944, he would have had a reduction in his earning capacity of the difference between $67.70 per week and $65 per week, or a total reduction of some $2.70 per week, whereas but for said third injury on October 18 of 1944, his earning capacity would have been reduced from $67.70 per week to $52 per week, or a total reduction of $15.70 per week; that is, by such figures and calculations appellant contended *Page 902 below and does likewise here, that a greater portion of the appellee's incapacity resulted from such claimed second and third injuries than it did from the first injury of December 10, 1943, upon which he alone sued, and which by the undisputed proof he so recovered for.

However plausible it may seem, this contention is considered untenable, further, for this reason: The trial court, on appropriate special issues, further submitted, and the jury found thereon, after finding, as already recited, that the appellee's average weekly wage-earning capacity during the existence of his partial incapacity would be $39, that his incapacity since such asserted injuries on July 29 and October 18 of 1944, respectively, had not been caused solely by the injuries alleged to have been sustained by him on those dates;

Wherefore, it is considered that the trial court did not err in disregarding the jury's findings with reference to those injuries under Special Issues Nos. 11, 12, 14 and 15, as having been evidentiary only upon the whole cause, hence not material to the only recovery the appellee either sought or obtained.

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Related

Williams v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co
194 F.2d 490 (Fifth Circuit, 1952)
Clayton v. Canida
223 S.W.2d 264 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1949)
Texas Employers Insurance v. Frankum
220 S.W.2d 449 (Texas Supreme Court, 1949)

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215 S.W.2d 899, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-insurance-assn-v-frankum-texapp-1948.