Texas Employer's Insurance Ass'n v. Sauceda

636 S.W.2d 494, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1982
Docket16703
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 636 S.W.2d 494 (Texas Employer's Insurance Ass'n v. Sauceda) 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 Employer's Insurance Ass'n v. Sauceda, 636 S.W.2d 494, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

CANTU, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. The trial court rendered judgment upon jury findings allowing Sauceda a recovery for the total and permanent loss of use of his leg below the knee.

Frutoso Sauceda, appellee, was injured on November 4, 1977, during the course of his employment as a welder’s helper at the Johnson Drilling Company in Hondo, Texas. Sauceda, a 48 year-old man with a third grade education, was injured while working on a drilling rig as he and another employee were pulling pipe out of the ground and breaking the joints loose with a pipe wrench. In loosening one of the pieces of pipe, the wrench slipped, causing Sauceda to fall on his back. The other employee fell on top of Sauceda thus injuring Sauceda’s right foot and fracturing bones in his ankle.

Sauceda was driven to a Hondo hospital by his employer, Thomas Johnson, where he was examined at the emergency room by Dr. Parker Meyer, a local family physician. After the right ankle was x-rayed, a plaster splint was applied to the right leg and ankle and Sauceda was transferred to a hospital in San Antonio where he was treated by Dr. Fred Olin, an orthopaedic specialist.

Sauceda instituted his action to recover benefits for total and permanent incapacity. He pleaded an injury to his right ankle and injury to his body generally. The insurance carrier, hereinafter referred to as TEIA, specifically pleaded that Sauceda’s injury was confined to the right leg below the knee and asserted that permanent disability, if any, was limited to a small percentage of loss of use of the right leg. TEIA also asserted that Sauceda’s incapacity was tern- *496 porary only or was limited to a small degree of permanent partial incapacity.

The jury found that Sauceda had received an injury to his right leg below the knee in the course of his employment on or about November 4, 1977, and that the injury was a producing cause of the total loss of use of his right leg below the knee. The jury further found that the beginning date of the total loss of use was November 4, 1977, and that the loss was permanent. Based upon the jury findings, the trial court entered judgment for total loss of use of a foot.

TEIA brings forth two points of error. Initially TEIA contends that the trial court erred in excluding from evidence a doctor’s letter 1 offered to prove that Sauceda’s loss of use of his ankle was less than total. Additionally, TEIA asserts that there is no evidence or that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s finding of permanent total loss of use of Sauceda’s ankle. TEIA also claims the jury’s finding is so contrary to the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong. The position taken by TEIA during trial and now advanced on appeal is that Sauceda’s total loss of use was not permanent.

Sauceda’s case consisted of testimony of Dr. Parker Meyer, the initial treating physician, the hospital records as summarized by Dr. Meyer, as well as his own testimony. Dr. Meyer examined Sauceda four days before the trial. He testified at length as to the nature and extent of Sauceda’s injuries and described them as several fractures involving the ankle and other non-bone ankle injuries. He described a fracture of the tibia, the main weight-bearing bone of the ankle, the fragmenting of the fibula and the disruption of the supportive structures and tissue from the tearing of the ligaments. He further outlined the procedures employed by Dr. Fred Olin in attempting to restore the ankle to its original position by the use of heavy wiring and screws and explained that a tearing of hyaline cartilage, a smooth surface within the joint, sets up a long term degenerative process in the joint, causing wear and tear, which eventually causes osteoarthritis or degenerative joints. He stated that an operation to replace the tip of the tibia was unsuccessfully attempted.

Dr. Meyer testified that recent x-rays showed that Sauceda did not have a normal amount of space in his ankle joint, that such lack of normal space would be painful and would cause stiffening of the joint. He further expressed the opinion that the condition of Sauceda’s ankle was a permanent disabling condition of the foot and that the right lower foot would not function normally-

Dr. Meyer further stated that he was aware Sauceda had returned to his same job and had been working for approximately two years. However, he cautioned that Sauceda should not be working where he was going to be walking or using his ankle as a weight-bearing joint because of the nature of the injury and the difficulty in reducing the fracture. He concluded that a continued use of the foot, as a weight-bearing member, under working conditions, would only worsen the condition. When given the definition of total loss of use, Dr. Meyer testified that Sauceda met that definition.

Sauceda testified that seven months after the accident, he returned to his same job as a welder’s helper and continued to work eight hours a day, five days a week, earning $3.25 per hour, a rate slightly higher than he was paid before his injury. He testified that the injury had affected the way he walked, that he was unable to squat, to climb ladders or to run. He stated he now had difficulty with certain tasks and movements and at times his leg was stiff and painful, especially when walking on unlevel surfaces.

Sauceda exhibited his swollen ankle to the jury and explained that the swelling had persisted since the date of the injury *497 with the severity of the swelling increasing during the working day. Sauceda demonstrated his walk before the jury in the presence of his employer who later acknowledged that Sauceda walked the same way on the job.

According to Sauceda, he is no longer able to do everything that he is supposed to do as a helper for Johnson Drilling Company. In particular, he no longer is able to do heavy lifting, although the job calls for the constant lifting of heavy pipes. On at least one occasion, Sauceda was taken home from work and was out for three days due to pain in the ankle. Sauceda felt that his employer was satisfied with his work performance in spite of his impairment and acknowledged his willingness to continue discharging his daily duties by giving a full day’s work for a full day’s pay.

In support of their position that Sauceda did not suffer permanent loss of use of his right leg below the knee, TEIA offered the testimony of Sauceda’s employer, Thomas Johnson. Johnson testified that Sauceda’s job had been held open for him until his return some seven months after the date of the injury because Sauceda had been a good, loyal and faithful worker prior to the injury. He also verified that Sauceda’s foot remains grotesquely swollen during the day and that no employment physical examination was required upon Sauceda’s return to work.

TEIA sought to offer a letter from the treating physician, Dr. Olin, which was obtained through written interrogatories propounded by TEIA. 2 Pursuant to the written interrogatories, Dr. Olin supplied all written records in his possession in connection with treatments or examinations of Sauceda, including bills, reports, office notes and all instruments in writing concerning Sauceda.

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Bluebook (online)
636 S.W.2d 494, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-insurance-assn-v-sauceda-texapp-1982.