Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Davis

147 S.W.2d 908
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1941
DocketNo. 3750.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 908 (Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Davis) 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 & General Ins. Co. v. Davis, 147 S.W.2d 908 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment- of the district court of Nacogdoches County, Texas, in a compensation insurance suit. Fred Pellom was the employee, Garrison Lumber Company the employer, and appellant, Traders & General Insurance Company, the compensation ’insurance carrier.Fred Pellom, while in the course of his employment as an employee of the Garrispn Lumber Company, on October 31, 1938, received an injury for which he claimed compensation. Appellant admitted its liability and made several payments amounting to $35, and then made an agreement with Pellom for settlement of his claim, and paid him the sum of $125 additional in full settlement of his claim, which settlement was reduced to writing and approved by the Industrial Accident Board of Texas on December 24, 1938, and notice of its approving same went out January 6, 1939.

On May 24, 1939, Fred Pellom died. On November 27, 1939, his mother, Lillie Davis, appellee, filed her claim for ^compensation with the Industrial Accident Board, based upon the death of her son, Fred Pellom. The Board made its final ruling and award on said claim, denying compensation, on January 18, 1940. Claimant duly gave notice that she would not abide said ruling, and duly filed this suit to set same aside *910 and to recover compensation, as under Section 16 of Article 8306, Revised Statutes of Texas, 1925.

Appellant answered by plea in abatement to the effect that the suit was an attempted appeal from an award of the Industrial Accident Board of Texas, and that the appeal was based upon a claim filed by ap-pellee, Lillie Davis for herself and Willie Mae Davis, Dennis Pellom, and Almos Willie Davis, alleged to be beneficiaries of deceased Fred Pellom, which claim was filed before said Board on November 27, 1939, and which claim for all of, said alleged beneficiaries was by the Board denied on January 18, 1940; that thereafter said Lillie Davis gave notice of appeal from said award, and then filed this suit for herself alone, joined by her husband; that the other alleged beneficiaries were not made parties to the suit, neither as plaintiffs nor as defendants; that in appeal from an award of the Board all parties thereto must be made parties to the suit, and this not having been done there was a nonjoinder of necessary parties wherefore the suit should be dismissed.

The court overruled the plea in abatement, against which ruling appellant assigns error. The assignment is overruled. The facts are: the beneficiaries named with Mrs. Davis in the claim before the Board were Willie Mae Davis, a daughter of Lillie Davis, grown and married, Dennis Pellom, son of Lillie Davis, grown and married, and Almos Willie Davis, small minor son of Lillie Davis. On the date that Lillie Davis filed her amended petition in the instant suit, March 4, 1940, Willie Mae Davis, joined by her husband, Sam Davis, and Dennis Pellom, by written instrument filed in the case, waived any claim they had or might have in or to any portion of the compensation that was subject to the claim for compensation because of the death of Fred Pellom, to Lillie Davis, the mother, and assigned all of their rights and claim to her. And on said date, March 4, 1940, Almos Willie Davis, the aforesaid minor, by his father, William Davis as next friend, by leave of the court intervened in the case and claimed compensation by reason of the death of Fred Pellom, alleging that he was a dependent of said Fred Pellom, his half brother. The hearing revealed that said minor, Almos Willie Davis, was not a dependent of deceased Fred Pellom, there being no evi-. dence raising such issue, but to the contrary all the evidence showed that he was not such dependent. The other alleged claimants, Willie Mae Davis and Dennis Pellom, having appeared in the cause and waived any claim to which they might be entitled by reason of the death of Fred Pellom, and having assigned such claim, if any, to appellee,-Lillie Davis, their mother, took them out of the case, and so the plea of abatement was without foundation, and hence properly overruled.

The case was tried to a jury upon special issues upon their answers to which judgment was rendered in favor of appellee, Lillie Davis, setting aside the award of the Industrial Accident Board, and for compensation at the rate of $7 per week for 330 weeks from and after May 24, 1939, for the death of her son, Fred Pellom; and judgment against the intervenor, Al-mos Willie Davis, because the undisputed evidence showed him not to be a dependent of the deceased Fred Pellom, to any extent ; and against Willie Mae Davis, sister of Fred Pellom, and against Dennis Pellom, brother of said Fred Pellom, deceased, the uncontradicted evidence showing them not to be dependents of said Fred Pellom (by their pleadings they had each waived any right they might have had to compensation, and had assigned same to their mother, Lillie Davis, and so were not entitled to recover). Motion for a new trial was overruled,' and we have the case for review.

The first assignment complains that the court erred in refusing appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict. The assignment is overruled. The contention is that no causal connection was shown between the injury received by deceased and his subsequent death. Special issue No. 1, submitted by the court, was: “Do you find' from a preponderance of the evidence that the injury sustained by Fred Pellom to his right leg as a result of having been struck by the falling lumber on October 31, 1938, was a producing cause of his death?” The jury answered “Yes.” We think the evidence abundantly supports this finding.

That deceased Fred Pellom was an employee of the Garrison Lumber Company on October 31, 1938, and that on said date, while in course of his employment, he received an injury, and that he was covered as an employee of said lumber company by compensation insurance carried by appellant, that he received $2 per day and worked 6 days per week, and that he died May 24, *911 1939, are undisputed facts. Claim for compensation was filed by Lillie Davis, his mother, before the Industrial Accident Board on November 27, 1939. This was only 3 days more than 6 months after the death of deceased. Section 4a of Article 8307, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, provides that claims for compensation shall be filed with the Industrial Accident Board of Texas within six months after the happening of the event giving rise to the right to make claim, and further provides: “For good cause the board may, in meritorious cases, waive the strict compliance with the foregoing limitations as tg notice, and the filing the claim before the board.”

Appellee plead that she had a meritorious case, and had good cause for not filing her said claim sooner than it was actually filed, to wit: “Thereafter, as hereinabove alleged, the said Fred Pellom died on or about May 24, 1939, from and as a natural result of the said injuries so sustained by him, and his mother, Lillie Davis, plaintiff herein, made and filed a claim for compensation for the death of said Fred Pellom with the Industrial Accident Board of the State of Texas on or before November 27, 1939.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-general-ins-co-v-davis-texapp-1941.