Texas Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Rice

271 S.W. 134, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 360
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 1925
DocketNo. 1211.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 271 S.W. 134 (Texas Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Rice) 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 Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Rice, 271 S.W. 134, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 360 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

'i-IIGTITOWER,'C. J.

The appellant, Texas Indemnity Insurance Company, prosecutes this appeal from an order and judgment of the Fifty-Eighth district court, Jefferson county, refusing to set aside and vacate a judgment by default against it in favor of the appellee for the sum of $5,895.46.

The controvefsy grows out of the following facts:

On June 13, 1923, the appellee, Rice, was an employee of the Magnolia Petroleum Company near the city of Beaumont in Jefferson county, and on that day Rice, while in the course of his employment, sustained in *135 juries in falling to the steel floor of . one of the Magnolia Company’s storage tanks on which Rice was working. The. Magnolia Petroleum Company at that time carried a policy of insurance with appellant, covering its employees, including the appellee, under the Employers’ Liability Act of this state (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, arts. 5246 — 1 to 5246 — 91). After the injuries were sustained by appellee, all necessary notices were given to all parties concerned, and appellant paid compensation to appellee on account of such injuries for a period of 52 weeks at the rate of $20 per week, and declined to pay to appellee further compensation after that period of time. Thereupon, after due and legal notice to all parties concerned, appellee filed his claim \with the Industrial Accident Board of this state for further compensation, claiming permanent total incapacity in consequence of such injuries, and, after a hearing before the board, an award was made allowing appellee additional compensation at the rate of $6.05 per week for a period of 148 weeks. Thereupon appellee gave due aqd proper notice that he would not abide by the award of the board, claiming that his injuries had-permanently and totally incapacitated him, and thereafter filed this suit to set aside the board’s award. He alleged- in his petition, substantially, permanent and total incapacity in consequence of his injuries, and that he was entitled to compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act of this state for a period of 401 weeks at the rate of $20 per week from the date of the injuries sustained by him. He admitted in his petition that he had already been paid by appellant the sum of $l,040t. He prayed for judgment against appellant in the sum of $5,895.46, and prayed that this amount be awarded him in a lump sum; he already having stated in his petition the facts upon which the prayer for a lump sum was based. The suit was filed July 31, 1924, and citation duly issued to appellant on August 1, 1924, and was served upon appellant’s treasurer, at its general office in the city of Galveston, Galveston county, Tex., on August 4, 1924, and the writ was accompanied by a certified copy of the plaintiff’s petition, and appellant was commanded by the writ to appear at the September term of- the district court, which convened on September 15, 1924. Appellant did not appear in answer to the writ of citation, and no answer was filed by -it. On appearance day of the term, September 16, 1924, an interlocutory judgment by default was rendered in favor of appellee against appellant for $5,895.46, and a writ of inquiry was awarded, and on October 6, 1924, the writ of inquiry was heard by the trial judge and the interlocutory judgment in favor of appellee was made final, with the further provision that it bear interest from the date of rendition at the legal rate. On October 8, 1924, appellant filed a motion in the trial court praying that the judgment by default be set aside and that it be permitted to file an ¿nswer to the plaintiff’s petition, which it tendered along with the motion, and the motion, having been heard on the 17th day of October thereafter, was by the trial court overruled; hence this appeal.

It is appellant’s contention, advanced by several propositions, that the trial court’s judgment should be reversed because that court abused its discretion in failing and refusing to set aside the judgment by default. The appellant contends that Its failure to file an answer in the trial court- before the default was occasioned or caused by mere accident, and that appellant - was in no manner delinquent or at fault, and that since its motion showed a meritorious .defense to -plaintiff's cause of action, and since it appeared therefrom that the trial of the case on its merits would not be materially delayed, the trial court was in error in overruling the motion, and that this court should reverse and remand.

We- will concede that the allegations of the motion to set aside the default judgment were sufficient from the standpoint of showing on its face a meritorious defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action, but we have reached the further conclusion that appellant’s motion does not acquit appellant of negligence in failing to file an answer to this suit. The facts bearing upon this point may be substantially stated as follows:

Appellant has its principal office in the city of Galveston. Galveston county, Tex., and the citation in this case was served upon its treasurer at Galveston on the 4th day of August, 1924, as we have before stated, and the motion shows that one O. S. Kuhn, appellant’s assistant secretary in the city of Galveston, on the following day mailed the citation and certified copy of the plaintiff’s petition to Messrs. Craddock & Smith in the city of Dallas, Tex. The motion shows that Messrs. Craddock & Smith are the general agents of appellant in handling compensation cases where the Magnolia Petroleum Company is involved, and that according to the usual custom and routine of appellant’s business in such cases as this, the citation and 'copy of the petition was forwarded by -the Galveston office to these general agents at Dallas. The motion further shows that the citation and copy of plaintiff’s petition were not received by Craddock & Smith, and did not reach their office in the city of Dallas, and that if the citation had reached that office, that firm would have at once sent the citation to appellant’s attorneys in the city of Beaumont, with instructions to file an answer for appellant, and that appellant’s attorneys would have filed an answer for it. There are several affidavits attached to the mo *136 tion, two of them made by tbe general manager and assistant manager in tbe office of' Craddock & Smith at Dallas, and another affidavit made by Mr. Kuhn of tbe Galveston office. The general man.ager of Crad-dock & Smith in the Dallas office, who is kfr. W. V. Westerlarge, states, in substance, that the citation in question never reached the office of Craddock & Smith, but that if it had he would have forwarded it at once to the Beaumont attorneys. The assistant manager of Craddock & Smith’s office, Miss Elizabeth Martyn, stated, in substance, that the citation and copy of petition did not reach Craddock & Smith’s office in Dallas, but that if it had it would have been at once forwarded to the Beaumont attorneys for attention. In other ■ words, the affidavits of Mr. Westerlarge and Miss Martyn are to the effect tliat Craddock & Smith never at any time received the citation in this case or copy of the plaintiff’s petition, and that in consequence of their failure to receive the citation, no answer was filed for appellant in this case. Mr. Kuhn in his affidavit states positively that he mailed the citation to Craddock & Smith, as we have above stated, on the next day after service on the Galveston office. There was attached to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 134, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-indemnity-ins-co-v-rice-texapp-1925.