Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Murphree

88 S.W.2d 744
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
DocketNo. 13252.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 744 (Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Murphree) 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. Murphree, 88 S.W.2d 744 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

Tom Murphree, a worker in the Archer county oil fields as an employee of the firm of Morrison & Jackson, on June 1, 1932, while running a tubing, rod, and casing pulling machine, got some small particles of steel blown into his eyes, causing some inflammation and inconvenience. His employer, Mr. Jackson, took him to a hospital at Wichita Falls, and a physician, Dr. Man-gum, removed the particles of steel, and Murphree went back to work, still suffering some with the right eye, but the inflammation soon subsided and the injury, to use his own expression, “passed out of his mind.” For several days he wore a bandage over the right eye, and, as time passed, he ceased to suffer any inconvenience with said eye, except now and then a sort of film came over his right eye, but when he would wipe it the film would pass away.

Some seven or eight months afterward, on his way to a dance, at night, riding in a car, he was struck in the face by the limb of a mesquite tree and sustained an injury to his right eye again which caused serious trouble. The next day he was taken to Dr. Parrish, a general practitioner at Hol-liday, Tex., who found the eye badly inflamed and “cloudy and milky.” Dr. Parrish treated the eye a few days and then afterward he was taken to a specialist in Wichita Falls, who discovered that he had a traumatic cataract in his right eye, from the effect of which the-sight of said eye has been completely lost. Murphree then consulted counsel and filed claim with the Industrial Accident Board, and, from an adverse award of the board, brought his case before the district court, where the issues of fact were submitted to a jury, and *745 upon the jury’s verdict the court rendered judgment for Murphree for compensation for the total-loss of his right eye in the sum of $20 per week for 100 weeks.

Motion for a new trial was overruled by the court, and the insurance company brings the case to this court by appeal.

The judgment of the trial court is challenged by appellant in eleven assignments of error; the first three of which present the question of the insufficiency of the evidence. We will treat the three together. Appellant strongly insists that the court erred in refusing a peremptory instruction in its favor and in refusing to grant a new trial upon the same grounds. We have carefully examined the briefs and authorities cited, and have read the statement of facts in an effort to discover just what the evidence was. The real question in the case was whether the loss of appellee’s eye was due to the steel dust from the pulling machine or to the later injury sustained by the blow from the mesquite limb while going to the dance several months later. It was contended by appellant that the eye was pierced by a mesquite thorn.

From an examination of the record we are inclined to the opinion that the evidence rather strongly predominates in favor of appellant’s theory of the case, that is, that the loss of the eye was attributable to the later injury, but as the case must be reversed upon another assignment, and it may be that upon another trial the testimony may not be the same but may be stronger, one way or the other, we will not reverse the judgment for the reasons set forth in assignments 1, 2, and 3. The trial court had a far better opportunity to pass upon the question than we have, seeing and hearing the witnesses as they testified on the witness stand, and appellate courts are not only strongly inclined to give due credit to the verdict of a jury, but also to rely very strongly upon the wisdom and discretion of the trial judge in passing upon the real weight of the testimony in any given case, and we cannot say, from the record before us, that there is no testimony in support of the verdict.

The fourth and fifth assignments of error attack the action of the court in instructing the jury as to the law as follows:

“3. You are instructed that under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of the State of Texas it is the duty of an employee to give notice of his injury to the employer within 30 days from the time the injury occurred, and to file a claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board within six months of the time of his in-, jury, unless good cause is shown for the failure to do so.
“Bearing in mind the foregoing instructions, do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that a reasonably prudent person situated as the plaintiff was situated would have delayed filing the claim, until it was filed?
“4. You are instructed that under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of the State of Texas it is the duty of an employee to give notice of his. injury'to the employer within 30 days from the time the injury occurred, and to file a claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board within six months of the time of his injury, unless good cause is shown for the failure to do so, and by the term ‘good cause’ is meant such an excuse for the failure to give the notice and to file the claim within the statutory period as would appear to an ordinarily prudent person to be a reasonable excuse.”

These charges appear in the transcript to be requested charges asked by the plaintiff below and given by the court. To say the least of the matter, they were wholly unnecessary, and the entire subject was properly covered by special issues 9 and 10 of the charge prepared by the court. In another trial we suggest that only such part of said charge No. 4 be given, if any, as defines the term “good cause.” Both instructions No. 3 and No. 4, requested by plaintiff below, state in identical language a proposition of law with which the jury should not be concerned and wholly unnecessary to their proper understanding of the issue presented in special issue No. 10 of the court’s main charge, and of which the issue presented with instruction No. 3 is a repetition. We are not entirely in accord upon the question of whether this situation presents reversible error, but as the judgment is to be reversed for other reasons, we content ourselves with above suggestions. The trial court can easily avoid the giving of charges partaking of the nature of general charges. Authorities are somewhat in conflict as to what is and what is not a general charge as distinguished from necessary definitions and explanations, as contemplated by the statute governing the submission of cases on special issues and what we have here said may well result in *746 the avoidance of possible error in a future trial of the case.

By its sixth assignment of error the appellant complains that the trial court erred in failing to define the word “injury” as used in the special issues submitted. The attention of the court was specifically called to this omission, and his action specifically excepted to in the appellant’s exceptions and objections to the charge. Appellee makes the point that no definition was prepared and tendered to the court. But this does not seem to be necessary in order to save the point under late decisions. 3 Tex. Jur. § 140, and authorities there cited.

Article 8309, § 1, subd.

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Related

Texas Employers Ins. Ass'n v. Wright
118 S.W.2d 433 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1938)
Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Hicks
94 S.W.2d 824 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)

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88 S.W.2d 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-general-ins-co-v-murphree-texapp-1935.