Texas Employers Insurance Ass'n v. Goodeaux

478 S.W.2d 865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 1972
Docket7332
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 478 S.W.2d 865 (Texas Employers Insurance Ass'n v. Goodeaux) 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. Goodeaux, 478 S.W.2d 865 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

DIES, Chief Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. The parties will be referred to here as they were below.

Plaintiff alleged an eye injury to have occurred on September 7, 1967, when spray from a cooling tower containing acid and chemicals entered his right eye. Trial was to a jury which found that he sustained an accidental injury in the course of his employment which was a producing cause of total loss of sight in the eye which began October 9, 1967, and would exist permanently. Judgment was accordingly entered for plaintiff from which defendant has perfected this appeal.

While defendant urges twelve points of error, essentially they all consist of its contention that the evidence is insufficient to connect plaintiff’s alleged injury with the loss of sight in his right eye. This, then, will necessitate a somewhat long and full discussion of the facts.

Plaintiff, a sixty-two-year-old pipe fitter, testified that on September 7, 1967, he got spray from a water cooler in his eyes. Subsequent testimony shows that the water contained sulphuric acid and hagatreet. Before that time, he had no visual trouble. At the time of the infusion, he was wearing protective glasses to prevent the intrusion of chemicals but some way the spray got under the lenses and in his eye. This caused a burning situation so he went across the street to use an eye wash provided by his employer. He then complained to his “pusher,” was sent to first aid, and then the next morning to a Dr. Caskey who several days later sent him to Dr. Jerry Johnson, a Beaumont ophthalmologist. This latter doctor saw plaintiff on a Monday after the Thursday accident. Some eye drops were administered and twenty-eight days later he went back to work since some improvement was noted. On the .third day thereafter the right eye began troubling him again. He again went to Dr. Johnson’s office and at that time could only distinguish between light and dark.

Dr. Johnson testified that he first saw plaintiff for this condition on September 11, 1967, at which time plaintiff gave a history of having gotten “chemical . . . into his eyes, particularly his right eye” which the doctor diagnosed as “post-traumatic pariconjunctivitis,” which he described as “irritation after a trauma or after an injury.” At the time of the first visit, plaintiff’s visual acuity in the right eye was 20/150. He again examined him on September 15th “and the visual acuity again was quite reduced in the eye” but he could not “pinpoint” the cause of the reduced vision. He next saw plaintiff on September 27th when the vision had improved to 20/100, so he advised him he could return to work but not to work overhead. The doctor saw plaintiff next on October 9th when he made a positive diagnosis of “a hemorrhage or some bleeding back inside his eye.” His vision on this date was 20/400, which condition was permanent.

In answer to a long hypothetical question limited to medical probability, the doctor testified that the incident related “could be a cause” of the loss of sight.

On cross examination, he admitted he did not know what caused the hemorrhage. He stated it could have been caused by a number of things and that plaintiff’s alleged accident was only a possibility and he was unable to “say that based upon reasonable probability this incident caused his loss of vision,” and further, that it was “kinda bad to be an expert witness and not know.”

*867 The only language in the Workmen’s Compensation Act concerning causation of incapacity reads as follows:

“While the incapacity for work resulting from the injury is total . . . ” Art. 8306, § 10, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St.
“While the incapacity for work resulting from the injury is partial . . . ” Art. 8306, § 11, V.A.C.S.

Over the years, causation in many cases was phrased “producing cause” which, in the case at hand, was defined by the court as “a cause which, in a natural and continuous sequence, produces the incapacity, if any, in issue, and is such cause without which the incapacity, if any, would not have occurred.”

Another definition may be seen in 2 Texas Pattern Jury Charges, § 26.03 at p. 129 (1970). It has also been defined as "an efficient, exciting, or contributing cause zvhich in a natural and continuous sequence produces incapacity.” (stronger emphasis supplied) Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Rooth, 268 S.W.2d 539, 542 (Tex.Civ.App., Waco, 1954, error ref. n. r. e.).

There is no difference between th% terms “cause” and “producing cause.” The proper inquiry under the section of the article is whether the injury “caused” the incapacity. Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Ray, 128 S.W.2d 80 (Tex.Civ.App., Eastland, 1939, error dism., judgm. cor.). In this case we believe the jury had sufficient evidence to warrant its finding of causation.

The appellant cites the case of Scott v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 204 S.W.2d 16 (Tex.Civ.App., Austin, 1947, error ref. n. r. e.). There, plaintiff on March 27, 1944, said “ ‘something blowed in my eye.’ ” On April 11, 1944, an eye specialist began treating him and discharged him on May 17, 1944. This doctor testified that when plaintiff first came to see him he had a common, non-malignant growth known as a pterygium and general irritation of the right eye. By May 17, 1944, the eye had returned to normal except for the pteryg-ium. In February, 1946, another doctor found a malignant tumor across the front of the eye and removed the eye. Both doctors testified at the trial that in their opinion the accident of March 27, 1944, had nothing to do with the cancerous condition found to exist approximately two years later. They both also testified that the scientific cause of cancer was unknown. The court commented that plaintiff had only proven his cancer might possibly be caused by the accident, which possibility being contradicted by the expert opinion of his own doctors, did not constitute any competent evidence of causal connection between the accident and the injury.

The appellant also urges its contention is supported by Insurance Company of North America v. Myers, 411 S.W.2d 710 (Tex.Sup.1966). There, Mrs. Myers on December 18, 1962, blacked out in her home, was sent to a neurosurgeon with complaints of tremors to the upper and lower extremities and severe headaches. On February 5, 1963, she was seen by the same doctor for pain in the neck and shoulders. Two days later, the doctor saw her in the hospital emergency room following a convulsion. On November 20th, another neurosurgeon removed a malignant tumor from her brain. Her condition steadily worsened until May 21, 1964, when she died of a glioblastoma of the left frontal and parietal lobes. Her husband and children contended that on July 1, 1963, Mrs. Myers momentarily grabbed a bundle of clothes weighing about 140 pounds causing a violent jerking in the neck and head which “ ‘triggered or aggravated or accelerated the growth of the brain tumor.’ ” Three doctors testified this would not in reasonable medical probability excite or aggravate the malignant brain tumor causing her death.

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