Traders and General Insurance Company v. White

320 S.W.2d 702, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1862
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1959
Docket6831
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 320 S.W.2d 702 (Traders and General Insurance Company v. White) 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
Traders and General Insurance Company v. White, 320 S.W.2d 702, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1862 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

This is a Workman’s Compensation case tried to a jury upon pleadings which included allegations for total and permanent disability alleged to have been caused when appellee, while working as a cotton tier at a compress “kicked” a bale *704 of cotton, in line with his duty, and allegedly injured his low back. According to' his testimony he was standing on his left foot, holding to an iron bar with his hands and “kicked” the bale with his right foot so other workmen could straighten the tags and “kick” it back to the tiers. Up-ten proper issues submitted and admissions made the jury answered the questions in such manner that the trial court rendered judgment for the claimant, John L. White against appellant, Traders & General Insurance Company for the sum of $25 per week for 401 weeks and that said sum be paid in a lump sum, after allowing appellant the usual statutory 4% discount. Appellant, through the answer upon which it went to trial had admitted that if the claimant recovered total and permanent disability he was entitled to a lump sum settlement, thus removing from the consideration of the jury the question of appellee’s “manifest hardship and injustice” requiring a lump sum payment.

Our Supreme Court has held that where it was stipulated that any award should be paid in lump sum it was error to permit the claimant even to read in the presence of the jury portions of his pleadings having to do with his personal financial status, bearing on his right to a lump sum. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Lee, 152 Tex. 227, 256 S.W.2d 569. Additionally, this court in Traders and General Insurance Company v. L. A. Rockey, Tex.Civ.App., 278 S.W.2d 490, 492, has held, “When essential elements of an alleged cause of action are specifically admitted by an adversary in open court, they need no evidence to substantiate them and such elements need not be submitted to a jury in such event.” Such being the rules we believe questions to witnesses that emphasized appellee’s impoverished condition and references in his argument to his poverty and the needy condition of his children would be clearly improper, especially where such references were placed before the jury in tendered testimony, repeated in his argument, and appellee’s poverty contrasted with the insurance company’s wealth, such as in this case.

Appellant is before us upon 28 points of error upon a record properly supported by timely objections, exceptions, motions and requests. . More than half of the points go to objections made to the argument of appellee’s counsel, to part of which the jury was instructed not to consider and to part of which argument the court failed to sustain appellant’s objections.

Three doctors testified in the case for appellant. Dr. Elmer Hawkins of Hamlin and Dr. McKinley Howell of Plainview, in person, and Dr. Ralph Donnell of Abilene by deposition. Dr. Jack Estes of Abilene testified for appellee. In his argument to the jury counsel for appellee, in speaking of the cross-examination of Dr. Estes by appellant’s counsel said, “Dr. Jack Estes has been crucified on the cross on the fact that he had the nerve and intestinal fortitude to face an insurance company.” To this argument an objection was sustained.

Mr. Bowers arguing further for appellee said, “This insurance company can call in five doctors to our one: and I think you can see that from the witness stand. It’s a bad situation, but that’s what the situation is.” The court then said, after objections were made to the argument, “The jury will not consider that.”

Appellee’s counsel arguing then in reference to Dr. Hawkins’ testimony, after commenting on the fact that the doctor had treated appellee 31 times, charged him $168, had written the insurance company that claimant had some injury, the amount of disability not then established, and then testified at the trial he did not have any disability said:

“I know some people who needed that one hundred and sixty-eight dollars a lot worse than Doctor Hawkins did, I know, who could have used that three dollars to buy some shoes and clothes with, are sitting right over there -in Hamlin County, or Hamlin, Texas, *705 right now. If he wants to take money from somebody that is wealthy and rich who is going to pay it to a doctor, regardless of whether there is anything wrong with them or not, let him take their money; hut don’t let him take the food away from six little colored babies over there in Hamlin County, and then come in here and laugh about it, * *

To said argument the following transpired :

“Mr. Simpson: We take a bill of exception to that whole line of argument about taking money away from six little colored children, and previous reference to that they can take it from rich people but to leave it for the poor, * * *
“The Court: Yes, you may have your exception.
“Mr. Simpson: And it is an appeal to prejudice, your Honor.
“The Court: All right.”

From this record it is clear that the court was saying to counsel for appellant that he could have his bill of exception to the argument, and that he permitted it to go to the jury unhampered by any caution not to consider it. The record as a whole bears out said fact.

The trial court should have sustained the objections and immediately instructed the jury not to consider such argument. By saying in the presence of the jury that counsel could have his bill of exceptions to the argument and in failing to sustain the obj ections and instructing the jury not to consider the argument the trial judge was in effect placing his sanction upon such argument. Airline Motor Coaches, Inc. v. Bennett, 144 Tex. 36, 187 S.W.2d 982.

During the testimony appellee’s counsel had injected into the case appellee’s impoverished financial condition by having him testify he quit going to the doctor because “I wasn’t able, I didn’t have the money * * * ” and by asking the question, “Now, John, you got six kids, I believe you told us over there, how many of those are down sick in bed right now ? ”

It is true the testimony that he was not financially able to go to the doctor any more was probably invited and the objection to the question as to how many of his six children were sick in bed was sustained, still, those matters had been placed before the jury by counsel for appellee and were such as to make the arguments above quoted of a more harmful nature because of that background.

The question then presents itself as to whether such a record requires reversal. Before the Supreme Court adopted Rules 434 and S03 of the Texas Rules of'Civil Procedure in 1941 the rule of “Presumed Prejudice” would have made reversal clearly mandatory under the recora before us. Since the adoption of the two rules just mentioned, Judge Calvert of our Supreme Court, in writing for the Texas Law Review, has said, “The Supreme Court of Texas has not sought in any of its opinions to work out a formula by which it will be guided in all cases.

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Bluebook (online)
320 S.W.2d 702, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-and-general-insurance-company-v-white-texapp-1959.