Texas General Indemnity Company v. Mannhalter

290 S.W.2d 360, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1956
Docket12950
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 290 S.W.2d 360 (Texas General Indemnity Company v. Mannhalter) 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 General Indemnity Company v. Mannhalter, 290 S.W.2d 360, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2249 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

HAMBLEN, Chief Justice.

Appellant’s statement of the nature and result of this suit, the correctness of which appellee concedes, is as follows:

This is an appeal from a judgment in a Workmen’s Compensation case. Plaintiff filed her original petition on September 27, 1954, alleging that she injured her right foot, ankle and leg while working for her employer, Montgomery Ward & Company, Inc., in Texas City, Texas, and that as a result of such injury she sustained a 20% partial permanent disability to her right leg below the knee. Plaintiff’s first amended original petition filed on April 4, 1955, changed the allegation of percentage of permanent partial disability to the right leg below the knee to 75%. Trial was to a jury and commenced on June 17,1955. A verdict was rendered by the jury on the 20th of June, 1955, wherein the jury found that plaintiff suffered a 30% permanent partial disability to her right leg below the knee and that plaintiff’s average weekly wage computed under Subdivision 3 of Section 1 of Article 8309 of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes as amended was $44. Judgment was entered on the 29th day of June, 1955, awarding plaintiff recovery for 30% permanent partial incapacity for the loss of the use of her right leg below the knee of $7.92 per week for 125 weeks.

In eleven formal points of error, appellant presents three basic contentions upon which it predicates its right to a reversal of the judgment rendered in the trial court. First it contends that there is no evidence, or alternatively insufficient evidence, to justify the submission of or to support the jury verdict, in response to special issue No. 5 wherein the jury found that appellee suffered 30% partial permanent loss of the use of Her right leg below the knee after April 21, 1954. Appellant next contends that there is no evidence, or alternatively insufficient evidence, to justify the submission of or to support the jury verdict in response to special issues Nos. 6 and 7 wherein the jury found that there was not another employee of the same class as appellee working substantially the whole of the year immediately preceding March 26, 1954, in the same or neighboring place and that the just and fair weekly wage for the appellee is $44. Finally, appellant complains of asserted improprieties committed by counsel for appellee in voir dire examination of the jury panel, the nature of which will be hereinafter set forth.

Appellee was employed as an inventory clerk by Montgomery Ward. Her employment began December 1,1953, at which time she was 36 years of age. On March 26, 1954, she fell while walking, injuring her right ankle, her knee and her elbow. It was stipulated that as a result of such accident appellee suffered a 75% disability of the right leg below the knee for the period of March 26, 1954, to April 21, 1954, for which she was paid compensation in the amount of $67.87, and that she returned to work on April 21, 1954. There is evidence in the record that after returning to work appellee performed her duties satisfactorily and without complaint for a period of three to four weeks when she was discharged because of a reduction in force. Appellee was unemployed until October 1, 1954, at which time she was employed as a sales clerk by J. C. Penney Company.

The principal basis for appellant’s first contention presented in points of error Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 8 is the fact that' three medical doctors who examined and treated appellee, and who were all of the medical doctors who did examine and treat appellee, estimated her disability at from 3% to 10%. We do not construe its complaint to be directed to the proposition that there is no evidence of permanent partial disability. The only medical witness who testified was called for appellant and expressed a medical opinion-that appellee suffered a 6% disability in her right leg below the knee which was probably permanent. In view of the issues joined by the pleadings of the liti *362 gants, the submission of special issue No. 5 was required. Appellant’s complaint is that there is no sufficient evidence to support a finding of a percentage of disability greater than 10% and that the jury’s finding of 30% is contrary to the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence, and that the judgment rendered on such finding is excessive. We overrule their points so directed.

Both litigants concede that a jury may make its own estimate of the percentage of disability resulting from impairment of use of a portion of the body without any witness specifying the percentage. Traders & General Ins. C. v. Snow, Tex.Civ.App., 114 S.W.2d 682. Appellant contends, however, that where, as here, three qualified witnesses testified to not more than 10% disability, the jury is limited in its finding to the maximum testified to. We are unable to agree with this contention.

Appellant’s medical witness testfied that he reached his stated conclusion of a 6% disability by using a formula premised upon the assumption that a complete loss of motion of the ankle joint would constitute a 30% disability in the leg below the knee. He estimated appellee’s loss of motion of the joint at 20% and, therefore, her disability at 6%. He testified that this method of estimating disability was in common use by doctors for estimating disability in industrial cases and was probably the method used by the other doctors who examined and treated appellee. He further testified that this method of estimating disability made no allowance for the activity which might be required of the impaired member and that the same disability estimate would be reached under the formula in the case of a toe dancer as in the case of a sedentary person. With the witness’s testimony thus explained, we are unable to see that it can be held to have the limiting effect, as a matter of law, which appellant contends.

After examining the entire record, as we are required to do when the fact reviewing jurisdiction of this Court is invoked, we conclude that there is sufficient evidence to support the jury finding of 30% disability and we cannot see that such finding is contrary to the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence. Appellee testified that her ankle had gotten no better; that since she returned to work it had gotten worse and had become more painful; that it was swollen each evening; that the longer she stands the “worse it hurts” and sometimes is almost unbearable; that it is never completely “at ease”; that she supports her weight when standing primarily on the uninjured leg and has difficulty in climbing stairs. Appel-lee’s brother testified that appellee favored her injured leg, appearing to have quite a bit of pain in it, particularly in the evening, and was quite cautious in ascending and descending stairs. Appellee’s mother testified that appellee limps at all times; that her left side is larger than the right in the hip region and that one calf is larger than the other by one inch. Testimony to the same effect was given by the witness, Mrs. L. W. Holder. The jury had before it evidence of the character of the work performed by appellee and the extent of the demands which that work would make upon her injured leg. In view of the circumscription of the medical testimony, we cannot say that the finding of 30% disability was contrary to the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence, nor that the judgment rendered thereon is excessive.

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290 S.W.2d 360, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-general-indemnity-company-v-mannhalter-texapp-1956.