Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Swaim

278 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1954
Docket6375
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 278 S.W.2d 600 (Texas Employers' Insurance Ass'n v. Swaim) 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. Swaim, 278 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

'NORTHCUTiy Justice.

■This, is .a- compensation case. , T. G. Swaim, hereinafter called plaintiff, was employed by Davidson Drilling Company as a laborer .and-Texas Employers’ Insurance-Association was the insurance carrier for 'Davidson Drilling Company. Swain brought suit against Texas- Employers’ Insurance Association, hereinafter called- defendant, for damages alleging that on May 4, 1952, he injured his back whi-le handling drill collars on- a ■ drilling week Plaintiff waives. „all rights or claims to a lump sum recovery.'

‘Defendant answered "alleging that the incapacity, if any, of plaintiff was temporary and partial and had long since ceásed and terminated and that plaintiff had been "able to - and had obtained and retained employment in the' oil fields at all times subsequent to his alleged injury on May 4, 1952, and that his" earnings and earning capacity had been at' least as much or moré per week subsequent to May 4, 1952, than it was before' May 4, 1952, and there ha'd been na decrease "in plaintiff’s earnings and earning capacity. Appellant further alleged plaintiff within a day or two after May 4, 1952, was in the same physical condition as hejwas priór to May 4, 1952.

The case was tried to a jury upon-, special issues. Upon the answers of the jury that the- plaintiff was 50 per -cent partially disabled arid that his average weekly wage before he was injured was $88.40. Judgment *602 was granted for the plaintiff for $16.67 per week for three hundred weeks and also $8.33 per week for three hundred weeks for plaintiff’s attorney. Defendant presented its motion for a new trial but the same was overruled by the trial court and hence this appeal.

The appellant presents its appeal upon fifteen assignments of error. The first two points are presented together since they deal with the testimony of the financial condition of plaintiff and the statements made by the plaintiff’s attorney about the plaintiff working under the whip of necessity.

This is an action for a general injury and not for any specific injury as covered by Article 8306, Section 12, of the Workmen’s Compensation Law. This is not a case in which a lump sum recovery is sought and any issue as to a lump sum recovery was waived by the plaintiff. Plaintiff, before any evidence was ever offered by the defendants as to the plaintiff’s working after he was injured, continued to bring before the jury his alleged necessitous condition because he owed for a car and was afraid he would lose it and concerning other items of need;' seeking to show his hardships. After plaintiff had testified about being afraid he would lose his car and was asked other questions by his counsel about his car and the same was objected to by the defendant and such objection sustained by the court as to the car, plaintiff’s attorney again called attention before the jury about the car by telling the plaintiff, “We’re not going into anything about the car.” The Court of Civil Appeals in the case of Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company v. Leigh, Tex.Civ.App., 57 S.W.2d 605, held, opinion by Judge Hickman, that no evidence should be admitted as to the poverty or necessitous condition of the injured party where his alleged incapacity, is only partial. It is said in Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n v. Hitt, Tex.Civ.App., 125 S.W.2d 323, 329:

“(8) While, as. already indicated, testimony as to a claimant’s financial condition in a compensation case,. where the issue of a lump-sum settlement ' is also raised, is admissible, it seems, clear that the court should not permit testimony as to financial distress to influence the jury in passing upon the question of whether or not— vel non — an actual disability exists, and the extent of it; for this reason the court did not err in instructing the jury not to consider this plaintiff’s financial need in determining whether or not he had suffered the disability claimed; whether or not that instruction was necessary, it was clearly not harmful.”

In 45 Tex.Juris., Page 685, it is stated: “In cases where a lump sum award is not proper, evidence of the poverty and necessitous condition of the claimant is not relevant to any issue and so is not admissible.”

Under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, the damages recoverable is not for pain and suffering nor for the actual damages lost but is for the difference between .his average weekly wage before the injury and his average weekly wage-earning capacity during the existence of such partial incapacity. Under Article 8306, Section 15, in case of death or total permanent incapacity a lump sum is provided for where manifest hardship or injustice would result. (Emphasis ours.) The court is without jürisdiction to render a lump sum judgment under Workmen’s Compensation Law for partial disability. The testimony offered as to the necessitous condition of the plaintiff was introduced, over the objections of defendant before any effort was even made to show plaintiff had continued to work, to show the plaintiff’s hardship at the time and could have no bearing upon the extent of plaintiff’s incapacity to work but would 'Only apply where lump sum settlement is involved. Appellant’s Points 1 and 2 are sustained.

Appellant’s third assignment of error is to the effect that the trial court erred in not granting judgment for it because the evidence shows the appellee earned as much after his.alleged injury as he earned prior thereto. The fact that plaintiff worked and *603 earned money after his injury is not con-elusive on the issue of his'average weekly wage-earning capacity but is evidentiary only and may be considered by the jury .along with the other evidence in determining the extent' of his wage-earning capacity. Appellants third point is overruled in view of the ruling hereinafter made.

Appellant by its fourth assignment of error complains of the findings of 1;ne jury to the effect that the plaintiff was partially incapacitated and that such incapacity was permanent and that .such incapacity was 50 per cent. " Under the record here it is not shown that the appellee worked continuously from. May 4S. 1952, the. date he claims to have.been injured, to the date of the trial. It is undisputed that appellant continued to work from May 4, 1952, to May 20, 1952, with the exception of one day. He quit his job at that time to take his wife to the hospital. He worked some in Jime, 1952, and then in August, 1952, was working up in Kansas when he received a letter from his attorney to come .back and go to see his doctor. He quit work at that time because of the request of his attorney and not from an inability'to'work; After returning from Kansas, appellee worked'most of the time up until about five days before the trial. Appellee testified he made approximately $4,500 from May 4, 1951; to May 4, 1952. The undisputed record shows that during the .months of October, November, and December, 1952, he -made $1,-391.68 but the record does not>fehow the amounts made by appellee during the, other months from the date1 of injury, May 4, 1952, to April 13, 1953, the date of the trial. The record shows, however, that appellee did the same kind of work he had been doing before his injury.

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278 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employers-insurance-assn-v-swaim-texapp-1954.