TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INSURANCE ASSOCIATION v. Sevier

279 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1829
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1955
Docket3164
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 279 S.W.2d 473 (TEXAS EMPLOYERS'INSURANCE ASSOCIATION v. Sevier) 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. Sevier, 279 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1829 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. Luther G. Sevier brought suit against Texas Employers’ Insurance Association to recover compensation for injuries alleged to have-been sustained in the course of his employment as an employee of Admore Drilling Company, Inc. The case was tried before a jury and judgment entered on its verdict awarding Sevier compensation for total and permanent disability in the amount of $8,030.50. Texas Employers’ Insurance Association has appealed:

Appellee -alleged in his petition as plaintiff that on or about October 25, 1953, while employed and in the course of his employment with Admore Drilling Company, the stepladder of an oil well derrick on which he was working fell and struck him on his back, right side, right shoulder, hip and right leg, and created serious injury by bruising and mashing said portions -of his body, and bruised his right hip bones and caused him to suffer severe pain in -that portion of his body.. He alleged that by reason of such injuries he became totally and permanently disabled.

In its answer appellant insurance company denied generally appellee’s allegations -and alleged that if appellee did suffer the claimed injury that the injury and any resulting disability was confined to his right leg; that the disability, if any he had, was the result of prior injury or disease arising independently of and disconnected with the injury complained of.

It- was found by the jury that appellee was injured as alleged and as a result, sustained total and permanent incapacity to labor. The jury further found, in answer to special issue No. 26A, that a prior injury received by appellee in an automobile accident on January 10, 1951 had not contributed to the incapacity which they found he had suffered.

Appellant contends in its first point that the evidence conclusively shows appellee injured his right leg in the 1951 automobile accident, and shows without dispute that such prior injury to appellee’s leg contributed to -the incapacity following the accident which is the basis for this suit; that the jury finding in answer to special issue 26A to the effect that appellee’s prior injury has not contributed to his disability is *476 unsupported by and “so clearly contrary'to the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to indicate that the jury was biased or prejudiced against appellant.”

In our opinion, the point is not well taken. There is evidence indicating that-the prior injury to appellant’s leg in the car wreck contributes to his present disability. There is also evidence, however, that after appellee’s automobile accident he recovered from the results of the injury shffered thereby insofar as his ability to work was concerned and suffers and haS suffered no disability on account of such injury since he went back to work the latter part of 1951. Appellee testified that" in-the latter part of 1951, which was several months after the automobile accident, he secured employment with a drilling company working on derricks; that he worked on that job about a month and a half and was able to do all that was required of him.' He testified that he then worked for other oil field companies for about six or eight months after which he went to the state of Indiana and there worked first in a filling station and then for International Harvester Company. He testified that from .the time he went back to work after the car collision and prior to the time .of the injury for which he claims compensation he lost no time by reason of physical disability'; that during such period he -ha;d no trouble; of any kind with his right leg which had been injured in the car wreck; -that he had-physical examinations for four different job's •and received employment after each examination. ' He testified that since -the injury involved in this -suit he has had- to be in bed a lot and has' used crutches most of the tme; that he has pain in his back and in his hip and right side; that the pain and soreness extends above his belt line and that he did not have these pains prior to the injury complained of; that the only kind of work he has done since his last injury was with a tourist camp where the work was' light and his wife helped him with'that; that he cannot do hriy kind of heavy work; that when'he received-the injury complained of he weighed about 185 pounds ánd at the time of the trial weighed only. 140 to 145 pounds. Appellee’s wife testified that she married him prior to the -time he started to work for International , Harvester and that from that time until the ■time of his injury he worked regularly and lost no time on account of any disability except two or three days., on one occasion when he hurt his toe; that he had no limp or other indication that there was anything wrong'with his right leg.' She also testified that after the injury complained of he had difficulty doing the work at the tourist camp and had to take several rest periods during the day. 1

.. The witness É.'B. Pierce testified -that he knew when Sevier returned to work in the oil fields in 1951 -after the car wréck, and worked on the same job with '.'him; that Sevier worked as many hours and did as much work as any of the other men on the job; that, he carried his part of the load; that he had the appearance of being an able-bodied, healthy man and he saw nothing about his leg that' interfered with his work in any manner.

The answer to special issue No. 26 A to the' effect that the injury sustained by appellee in the 1951 car wreck did not contribute to appellee’s- incapacity is 'not unsupported by, and contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence. The issue is amply supported by the evidence in this case. The points complaining of these matters are overruled.

Special issue No. 16 inquired whether Sevier’s injury was not confined solely to his right leg. , In this connection, the charge of the court contained the following instruction:

“ * * * the term ‘leg’ wherever it appears in this charge shall -have the following meaning: ‘All of the bones of the leg and all of the muscles, tendons, ligaments, ner.ves and ,-c.artilage ■incident to and necessary to the use of the leg -at or above the knee to the hip joint, but not including the hip joint. You are instructed that in answering *477 this issue that all injuries to the leg at ■ or above the knee are designated as injuries to the leg.’”

■Appellant objected to the above definition because of the language to the effect that the leg did not include the hip joint. It is urged that the definition is too restrictive and amounted to.a comment.on the weight of the evidence; that it is contrary to the provisions of Article 8306, § 12 of Vernon’s Revised Texas Civil Statutes because' by the terms of such statute any part of the leg above the knee is a part-of the leg; that the leg includes all of the thigh bone or femur which fits into and is a part of the hip joint, and that it is, therefore, incorrect to say that the hip joint is 'not a part of the leg.

The statute in question provides compensation for the “loss of a leg at or above the knee.” This portion of the leg is generally referred to as the thigh. The thigh bone or femur extends from the knee to the trunk to which' it is joined: Webster’s International Dictionary; 41 Words & Phrases, Thigh, p. 556. An injury confined to the femur is also confined to the leg.

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279 S.W.2d 473, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employersinsurance-association-v-sevier-texapp-1955.