Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Gregory

521 S.W.2d 898, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 1975
Docket1131
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 521 S.W.2d 898 (Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Gregory) 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. Gregory, 521 S.W.2d 898, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550 (Tex. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

TUNKS, Chief Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case.

Carl Albert Gregory was an employee of Dow Chemical Company. Texas Employers’ Insurance Association was the compensation carrier for the employer. While on his employer’s premises and during his working hours, Gregory fell from the top of a building and received physical injuries from which he died. (By use of the word “fall” herein it is not intended to exclude the possibility that Gregory intentionally jumped from the building.) His daughters, Carla and Sotonya Gregory, filed suit for death benefits and his administra-trix sued for funeral expenses. All relevant facts were stipulated except the question as to whether Gregory’s death was suicide. The only issue submitted to the jury was the following:

Special Issue No. 1
Was the death of Carl Albert Gregory the result of intentional self-inflicted injury on his part?
Answer “It was the result of intentional self-inflicted injury on his part” or “It was not the result of intentional self-inflicted injury on his part.”

There was no objection to such issue.

The jury answered: “It was not the result of intentional self inflicted injury on his part.”

After overruling the insurance carrier’s motion for judgment n. o. v. the trial court rendered judgment on the verdict and stipulations for the claimants. The carrier’s motion for new trial was overruled and it has perfected this appeal.

Appellant’s first two points of error raise the “no evidence” and the “insufficient” or “against the weight of the evidence” questions as to the jury’s answer to the issue submitted.

On December 10, 1969, Gregory died almost instantly as a result of injuries he *900 received in the fall from the building; The fall was from the roof of a building in which Gregory normally performed the duties of his employment. The fall occurred around 11:15 a. m. during Gregory’s lunch break. The performance of Gregory’s duties did not require him to go into the roof of the building.

Joseph H. Andrews, an employee of Tel-Iepsen Construction Company, was doing work near the scene when Gregory fell. He said that he saw Gregory after he left the roof and before he hit the ground. There was a stairway on the side of the building from which Gregory fell. There was a landing on the stairway which was about half way between the ground and the top of the building. The building was forty-three feet high. This stairway and landing extended out about six feet from the side of the building. On one corner of the landing was a light fixture extending upward about three feet from the hand rail. On another corner a pipe extended upward about seven feet. Andrews said that when he first saw Gregory’s body falling it was slightly above the stairway landing. It was falling with his feet pointing outward from the building and his head pointing toward the building. It was at about a thirty-degree angle from the horizontal with the head higher than the feet. It maintained that posture until it hit the ground. The body was not tumbling or turning. A pool of blood formed where the head hit the ground. That point measured twenty feet from the edge of the building.

Appellant called as a witness Wiley B. Noble, a mechanical engineer, who qualified as an expert witness. He testified that, applying the laws of physics as to falling objects, the body would have had to be moving horizontally at a speed of 9.15 miles per hour at the time it left the roof in order to land at the point where it fell. The roof was forty-three feet high and the center of Gregory’s body was three feet higher. A body will fall forty-six feet in 1.7 seconds. To travel twenty-three feet horizontally during that time (1.7 seconds), the center of Gregory’s body had to be moving horizontally at 9.15 miles per hour when it left the roof.

Noble admitted that a body falling straight downward may be propelled horizontally by striking a stationary object on the way down. Pictures taken after the incident show the fixture at the corner of the stairway landing. There were three lights on the fixture. One of the light bulbs in the fixture appears to be broken. Ap-pellees argue that this fact permits the conclusion that Gregory’s body struck the light fixture as it fell and was thereby propelled out away from the building to the point at which it fell. They say that this possible conclusion rebuts that of the witness, Noble, to the effect that the body of Gregory was moving horizontally at a speed of 9.15 miles per hour when it left the roof. That argument is unacceptable for several reasons. The body would have had to be propelled outward to strike the light fixture. It is most improbable that the resistance from hitting the light bulb and its breaking would have exerted sufficient force to propel the body outward to such a distance that the head hit thirteen or fourteen feet from the vertical of the light fixture. The eyewitness testified that the body fell without any turning or tumbling motion. The evidence conclusively establishes that Gregory’s body was moving horizontally at an appreciable and significant speed when it left the roof.

The roof of the building from which Gregory fell is generally flat. There is, however, a large round tower protruding from the roof. From the nearest edge of the roof to the side of the tower is a distance of five or six feet. Appellees argue that Noble’s conclusion as to horizontal speed could not be correct because Gregory could not have attained a speed of nine miles per hour by running the five or six feet between the side of the tower and the edge of the roof. To that side of the tower which would be to the left of one facing the building from the spot where *901 Gregory hit, there was a distance of about six feet to the edge of the building. It was possible for one to run along this space so as to attain a speed in jumping off the building. Since it was scientifically and mathematically proved that Gregory left the building at a horizontal speed of about nine miles per hour, it may be assumed that he ran along this unencumbered space before jumping.

In Begley v. Prudential Insurance Company of America, 1 N.Y.2d 530, 154 N.Y.S.2d 866, 136 N.E.2d 839 (1956), the Court considered evidence bearing some similarity to the evidence in this case. That was a case wherein the plaintiff sought to recover under the double indemnity for accidental death provision of an insurance policy. The insured had fallen from a second story window. The insurance company defended on the ground of suicide. In holding against the insurance company, the Court said at page 868 of 154 N.Y.S.2d, at page 841, of 136 N.E.2d:

Other sharply controverted proof was offered to show that the insured was mentally depressed during the weeks immediately preceding his death and that the few feet separating the body from the wall of the building might have been due to horizontal velocity when it left the window, but nowhere was it shown that the deceased did not roll over or crawl after he landed and before he died.

In this case the decedent’s head was twenty feet from the building rather than a “few” feet as in the Begley case.

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Bluebook (online)
521 S.W.2d 898, 1975 Tex. App. LEXIS 2550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-insurance-assn-v-gregory-texapp-1975.