TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INSURANCE ASSOCIATION v. Johnson

323 S.W.2d 345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1959
Docket6852
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 345 (TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INSURANCE ASSOCIATION v. Johnson) 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 ASSOCIATION v. Johnson, 323 S.W.2d 345 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case filed by appellee, Arvil A. Johnson. The employer was Cree Drilling Company and the insurance carrier, appellant herein, is Texas Employers’ Insurance Association. The case was tried to a jury and upon findings that appellee suffered 20 per cent partial incapacity for a period of 34 weeks after May 26, 1957, and that such disability increased to total and permanent incapacity on January 20, 1958, the court entered judgment for appellee in accordance therewith.

Appellant’s first two points are argued together and will be considered by us accordingly. They are to the effect that there was no evidence to support the jury findings that at the end of 34 weeks the incapacity, which had theretofore been 20 per cent partial, became total and permanent on January 20, 1958; that the evidence of probative value was insufficient to support such findings; and that such findings were so against the weight and preponderance of the admissible evidence that the discretion of this court should be exercised to vacate same.

If an examination of the record reveals sufficient evidence to support the jury findings challenged by appellant, it becomes unnecessary for us to write on the question of no evidence, because the former refutes the latter. Appellant having also raised the question of the evidence being sufficient to support the verdict and asserting that the verdict was against the weight and preponderance of the evidence it becomes necessary for us to consider and *348 weigh all of the evidence in the case and to set aside the verdict and remand the cause for a new trial, if we thus conclude that the verdict is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence • as to be manifestly unjust — this, regardless of whether the record contains some “evidence of probative force” in support of the verdict. In re King’s Estate (King v. King); 150 Tex. 662, 244 S.W.2d 660.

The testimony shows that as the drilling crew was “rigging up,” with Jim Philpot and appellee stringing a light wire across a steel circulating mud pit 8' feet across and S or 6 feet deep, appellee slipped on a muddy board lying across the pit, fell back against the side thereof, his back, 4 or 5 inches below his belt line, striking the edge of the steel pit, and his body then falling on. down into the bottom thereof. He testified in effect that the fall caused him so much pain he had to be helped out by Jim Philpot, but that he continued to work under severe pain for S or 6 days before going to see a doctor.

Dr. Charles Ashby, a General Practitiom er, ánd a senior member at .the Medical and Surgical Cliñic of Pampa testified for-appellant insurance company, and his testimony leaves no doubt as to appellee having suffered a back injury. Their records show his first visit to their clinic was on June 20, 1957, at which time the clinic took X-ráy pictures. A number of other pictures were taken later. The first time Doctor Ashby saw the patient was on July 8, 1957, and at that time he still had a swelling over his low back and the X-rays showed a fracture of the fifth sacral vertebra, though he continued to work as a roughneck from the date of the injury, May 26, 1957, to January 20, 1958.

Doctor Richard Falkenstein, a General Practitioner of the-Falkenstein and Elder Clinic in Pampa and Doctor Elias Margo, Chief of Staff of the Bone and Joint Hospital and McBride Clinic of Oklahoma City, an Orthopedic Surgeon, a member of the American College of Surgeons, the International College of Surgeons, and the American Academy of Orthopedics testified for appellee, the latter by deposition. The difference in the medical testimony of the doctors used by the respective parties was principally as to the extent and duration of the injury, the effect such injury had on appellee as a workman and their differences in the interpretations of the X-ray pictures. Though admitting there is a slight narrowing between the. lumbosacral joint, that joint between the fifth lumbo vertebra, Doctor Ashby testified in effect that it was not an injury such as to cause pain, while Doctors Margo and Falken-stein disagreed. Doctor Falkenstein, who examined appellee on October 18, 1957, March 12, 1958, April 1, 1958, and May 16, 1958, testified:

“Q. Basing your opinion on the objective symptoms revealed by these examinations, please state what in your opinion is wrong with Arvil A. Johnson? A. Mr. Johnson has a ruptured intervertebra disc with nerve root pressure.
“Q. At what level? A. Possibly at L-5 — between D-5 — and S-l, but he . possibly might also have a disc between L-4 and L-5. I rather think it is between L-5 and S-l.
“Q. Is -L-5 and. S-l commonly re- ■ ferred to as ■-the, lumbosacral joint? A. That’s right. * * *
“Q. What happens when a disc, an intervertebra disc ruptures, please? * *■ * A. The disc usually'presses on the nerves in that area as they do in this particular case on Mr. Johnson.”

Doctor Falkenstein also testified appellee got worse during the time he saw him and that in a case of his type injury there is usually a deterioration or worsening of the patient’s condition. Then in answer to a hypothetical question, based on substantially correct assumptions, he testified that in his' opinion, based on objective symptoms, appellant’s trouble was nerve root pressure *349 from a protruding intervertebra disc and he was totally disabled from performing ordinary manual labor. It would extend this opinion to unnecessary length to quote here extensively from Doctor Margo’s testimony, also, but it was' essentially the same as that given by Doctor. Falkenstein concerning the deterioration or worsening, with time, of appellant’s condition from the date of injury, and with respect to his being totally and permanently .disabled. .

The testimony of appellant shows in effect that he continued to work on the same rig as a roughneck" for several days following his injury; that he was bumped from his job on the large rig and then went to work on a smaller rig where the work was lighter; that he continued to have pain during all the time, but that he had a wife and five children and had to make a living for them; that during the time he was working on the rigs following his injury he tried to find lighter work and could not do so; that the second rig he worked on following his injury closed down’January' 20, 19S8, hut that-he had, on the same day, a chance to go back to roughnecking and he turned it down because, “My back bothered me so bad I couldn’t make a hand. It just kept getting worse all the time.”

- Appellant, by brief, admitted that under. the evidence the Jury had the discretion to conclude that appellee became totally ■ and permanently disabled on May 26, 1957, the date of the injury, and continued to work thereafter only out of necessity, but it insists they could not find he was partially disabled from the date of injury to January 20, 1958, and then became totally disabled.

The testimony of appellee indicated his pain and discomfort growing out of the injury was episodic in nature but that he was able to continue in the work, though not making as good a workman as before. the injury, until January 20, 1958, and that from that date he could no longer work as a roughneck.

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323 S.W.2d 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employersinsurance-association-v-johnson-texapp-1959.