Traders & General Insurance Company v. Derrett

340 S.W.2d 305, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1747
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1960
Docket6364
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 340 S.W.2d 305 (Traders & General Insurance Company v. Derrett) 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 Insurance Company v. Derrett, 340 S.W.2d 305, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1747 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

Having fallen from a scaffold in the afternoon of May 10, 1957, while employed as a carpenter by the East Texas Development Company on a construction job in the City of Nacogdoches severely injuring himself, appellee claimed total and permanent disability under our Workmen’s Compensation Act, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq., against appellant, insurance carrier. The case was tried by the court, sitting with a jury, and on its verdict judgment was rendered for total and permanent disability.

Appellant presents its case here upon 20 points. The first two are that the jury’s finding of total incapacity is against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the evidence and the evidence is insufficient, as a matter of law, to support the jury’s findings. We have carefully read the statement of facts, and the verdict of the jury is not subject to the complaints made. This we think is correct as we point out hereinafter: first, factually, and then as to the legal question raised.

Appellee at the time of trial was 42 years old and had an eighth grade education. For some ten years prior thereto he had been in the building contracting business and when he' was not engaged as a contractor he would work as a carpenter for some other employer.' He had worked six days -for his employer when the accident *308 involved took place. He and a fellow-employee were on a scaffold five feet from the ground working on the wall of a building. The scaffold broke and he fell to the ground and his fellow-employee fell with him and either fell directly upon him or bounced from the upper part of the scaffold over onto him so that his knees and hands landed on appellee’s stomach. As appellee fell his head, neck and shoulders struck a concrete wall which stood about five feet from the wall of the building upon which they were working. No part of his body struck the top of the concrete wall but as he fell his back was toward the concrete wall and when he came to rest he was pushed down in the angle of space between the concrete wall and the ground. He was taken immediately to Dr. Chas. W. Coussons in the town who, after examining him, took him to the local hospital where X-rays were made. This having been done, the doctor released him to go to his home in Alto. When he reached Alto he went to see Dr. Rossman, a general practitioner, who examined him and put him in a hospital in the neighboring town of Rusk where he spent five or six days. X-rays were made of him at that place. While appellee was in the hospital, Dr. Rossman decided that the case was one requiring a specialist and so he sent appellee to Dr. Leland Wilcox, an orthopedic physician in Tyler. Dr. Wilcox examined appellee, made further X-rays and, since appellee complained of continuous pain in his neck and shoulders, recommended that appellee apply traction to his neck at intervals and also wear a special collar.

Appellee returned to his home and obtained traction apparatus and collar and used them for some while but did not seem to get any particular relief. Somewhat later after employing attorneys he was sent by them to Dr. E. P. McKinney of Nacogdoches, who examined and treated appellee. Still later, and almost two years after injury, appellee went to. Jacksonville where Dr. V. W. Pryor examined him.

The cause has been tried twice. On the last trial appellee testified that he suffered continuously from headaches and his neck and shoulders gave him pain practically all of the time; that he could turn his head only with difficulty and to a very slight angle, and could do little physical work and that with difficulty. At the former trial he testified that he could not move his head over an inch either way, but after some moving pictures were made of him and exhibited at the last trial he stated that he had been able to move his head more at times than he could at others, but whenever he moved his head in any way from a forward position he suffered pain.

All of the doctors mentioned testified upon the trial, but to give a full summary of their testimony would serve no useful purpose, as actually appellant stresses the point that since appellee could and has, since his injury conducted a building contracting business, therefore, both factually and legally, he could not be totally disabled permanently. Suffice it to state for appellee that Dr. McKinney’s testimony on the earlier trial was offered, (he having died in the meanwhile) the substance of which was that in his opinion appellee was totally and permanently disabled from doing manual labor; and Dr. Pryor testified he found muscle spasm over the cervical spine and much tenderness over appellee’s rib cage, that in his opinion appellee had sustained a diaphragmatic hernia, “in other words the stomach had- been pushed up into his chest, partially”, that appellee could turn his head 45 degrees, that while appellee has tended to exaggerate his trouble, in this doctor’s opinion he was totally and permanently disabled. It is sufficient to state for appellant, Dr. Rossman testified he had sent appellee to Dr. Leland Wilcox, an orthopedist, but in the doctor’s recent examination of appellee he found tenderness and limitation of motion in the cervical spine, and his conclusion was that appellee’s condition was indeterminate; he could find no end to it. Dr. Wilcox, for appellant, testified that appellee’s principal complaints *309 were pain in his neck, back and shoulders; while he stated he found no muscle spasm, he said there was some straightening of the lordotic curve of the neck from muscle spasm but he did not attach much importance thereto; that he recommended occasional traction for neck and use of special collar; that he had examined appellee several times and in his opinion he could be passed upon objective symptoms alone for industrial work; he appeared to move his head freely on the June 3, 1959 examination, but, at the June 12, 1959, examination complained of soreness in chest which the doctor was unable to account for. Dr. Wilcox concluded his testimony by stating he did not think there was anything wrong with appellee. Dr. Coussons, also for appellant, testified he could find nothing objectively wrong with appellee and that he would pass him for industrial work, but, having in mind his complaints, he wouldn’t pass him for work, but he could do some carpenter work.

Appellant also asserts, as mentioned above, that appellee under the undisputed evidence, as a matter of law, cannot be held to be totally incapacitated. By virtue of his training and experience he is still capable of acting, and does act, as manager or foreman of his contracting business. From this fact, appellant contends that loss of “earning capacity” such as an employee is fitted to do is the test to be applied and as appellee can still manage his contracting business he cannot be totally disabled, while appellee contends that the Workmen’s Compensation Law is intended to insure against loss of capacity to earn wages as “an employee” of another. In view of the record made below, it is not necessary for us to decide between the positions taken. Whether one or the other, the trial court’s definition given in the charge reads :

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Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.2d 305, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traders-general-insurance-company-v-derrett-texapp-1960.