Texas Fire & Casualty Underwriters v. Blair

130 S.W.2d 409
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1939
DocketNo. 8811.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 409 (Texas Fire & Casualty Underwriters v. Blair) 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 Fire & Casualty Underwriters v. Blair, 130 S.W.2d 409 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case. The statutory requirements precedent to filing the suit were complied with. Era Blair is the surviving widow of D. L. Blair, deceased. She sued for herself and as next friend -of her minor children. Trial was to a jury on special issues and upon their findings judgment rendered for Era Blair and her minor son awarding compensation to each in the sum of $12.31 per week for 360 weeks, one-third of which was awarded to her attorneys, and denying a lump sum settlement; hence this appeal.

Appellant was the insurance carrier, Farrell & Ehrhardt Oil Company the subscriber, and D. L. Blair the employee. The allegations of plaintiff as to the manner and cause of his death were as follows: “That on to-wit: the 23rd day of April, A. D. 1936, the said D. L. Blair was in the employ of Farrell & Ehrhardt Oil Company at Goose Creek, Texas, working on a lease, that on said particular day, very early in the morning, the said D. L. Blair, deceased, was out arranging the work for the day on the lease, there being two or three other men working with and under him, and during 'the course of the work and before the arrival of his help, was prying up and jacking up heavy timber, and was caused- to strain and exert him.self, and during the course of the work, he became very much fatigued and overheated, and in prying the timber he was caused to accidently fall, and while so performing the duties of his employment and on account of becoming so overheated and exerted, and the work that the said D. L. Blair, deceased, was required to perform required a great deal of strength and he had to exert and strain himself, and the sun was hot, and that the said D. L, Blair was exposed to some hazard that .the public was not generally exposed to, and that while so performing the duties of his employment the said D. L. Blair, deceased, was overcome by heat fatigue or suffered a heat stroke, or suffered a strain of the heart, o’r burst an artery, which caused him to fall out, as a result of which he suffered a heart attack, or apoplexy, from which his death was almost instantaneous.”

The first issue submitted to the jury was: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that D. L. Blair received an accidental injury on or about April 23rd, 1936?” To which the jury answered, “We do.” The term accidental injury was properly defined by the court.

The jury also found in answer to special issues submitted to them:

2. That such injury was received in the course of his employment;
-3. That it was a producing cause' of his-death;
4. That myocardial degeneration was not the sole cause of his death;
5. That the injuries received by him on-September 5, 1935, (in an - automobile-wreck) were not the sole cause of his-death;
6. That his death was not solely the result of natural causes.

The findings on other issues submitted are not. material to our inquiry here. The matters submitted in the three issues last above stated embody the grounds on which appellant denied liability.

Appellant’s first contention is that because in her original petition appellee sued it, though in its proper name, as a corporation; and in response to its plea in abatement, by amended petition alleged it to be a reciprocal insurance exchange, its true character; the amended pleadings constituted a new cause of action or amounted to bringing in a new party defendant. That when so considered the cause of action alleged in the amended petition was not filed within the 20-day period after notice of appeal from the award of the Industrial Accident Board prescribed by Art. 8307, Sec. 5, of the R.C.S.

There is no merit in this. An allegation by amendment merely correcting a misdescription of the character of the defendant insurer, where the true defendant appeared before the Industrial Accident Board, contested appellee’s claim, was notified of the appeal from that Board’s award, and its agents duly served with citation, neither brings in a new party nor *411 •asserts a new cause of action. The only case relied upon to sustain this contention is that by the Court of Civil Appeals in Consolidated Underwriters v. Adams, 97 S. W.2d 323. 'Writ of error was granted in that case, however, and the holding therein reversed by the Supreme Court in 124 S.W.2d 840. The same question is therein fully discussed and determined adversely to appellant, and need not be further noticed here.

The next contention urged at some length by appellant is, in effect, that the «evidence conclusively shows that D. L. Blair’s death was not due to an injury received in the course of his employment. 'The jury found that it was. We have read •carefully the statement of facts and find ■that the evidence was sufficient to sustain ■such findings. The contention is predicated in the main on certain allegations contained in a suit for damages filed against a Beaumont furniture company growing nut of the automobile wreck of September 5, 1935. The record discloses, however, that that suit was filed by D. L. Blair during his lifetime for injuries to himself and to two of his minor children who were injured in the same collision. The furniture company admitted liability and an agreed settlement was reached, whether before or after Blair’s death is not clear. In any event, agreed judgments in two suits for the benefit of these children were entered on June 6, 1936, after Blair’s death. The suit as to injuries to D. L. Blair in that collision was on that date dismissed. The attorney for plaintiffs in those cases testified that after the settlements were agreed upon, the attorneys for the defendant requested that they be permitted, in order to properly protect their client, to draw the petitions on which the judgments and order of dismissal were entered; and that he, who represented Mrs. Era Blair after her husband’s death, did not draw the petition upon which appellant here relies for its contention. Mrs. Blair also testified that she had nothing to do with such allegations. Manifestly under these circumstances such allegations as to facts would not preclude her from showing in the instant case that injuries thereafter received by D. L. Blair in the course of his employment contributed to cause his death on April 23, 1936.

The next contention made by appellant is that the form in which issue No. 1 was submitted “does not confine the jury to a consideration of the matters pleaded by the plaintiffs.” The pleadings in this regard are quoted above.

The rule, long since established in negligence cases, is now well settled that the plaintiff must recover on the cause of action alleged and must establish these allegations by. proper proof. Also, that where specific facts are pleaded as fixing liability upon the defendant, the issues submitted to the jury must be confined to the facts pleaded. City of Winters v. Bethune, Tex.Civ.App., 111 S.W.2d 797; Blickman v. Chilton, Tex.Civ.App., 114 S.W.2d 646; Allcorn v. Ft. W. & R. G. Ry.

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130 S.W.2d 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-fire-casualty-underwriters-v-blair-texapp-1939.