United General Insurance Exchange v. Brown

628 S.W.2d 505, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1982
Docket9308
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 628 S.W.2d 505 (United General Insurance Exchange v. Brown) 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
United General Insurance Exchange v. Brown, 628 S.W.2d 505, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

DODSON, Justice.

Georgia Ann Brown * and Melissa Ann Brown, the surviving spouse and minor daughter, respectively, of Clyde Roy Brown, brought this action for death benefits under the Worker’s Compensation Act. In their pleadings, the plaintiffs alleged that Clyde Roy Brown was fatally injured on 14 August 1978 while in the course of his employment by D. C. Well Service, Inc., the insured employer. United General Insurance Exchange, the defendant insurance carrier, claimed that Brown was not in the course of his employment, because he voluntarily turned aside from the duties of his employment and willingly engaged in horseplay which resulted in his death. The evidence shows that Brown received his fatal injury when he fell from the bed of the employer’s pickup truck while the pickup was traveling from a well location in the field to the employer’s yard in Sundown, Texas. In response to one special issue, the jury found that Brown received his fatal injury in the course of his employment. The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs.

The defendant appeals from the judgment with five points of error. By its first point, the defendant maintains that the court erred by refusing to grant its motion for a directed verdict because the evidence conclusively established that Brown did not suffer his fatal injury in the course of his employment, because the injury was the result of horseplay. By its second and third points, the defendant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s answer to the “course of employment” issue. By its fourth and fifth points, the defendant claims the trial court erroneously admitted certain evidence in response to leading questions. The plaintiffs present two cross-points. They maintain that the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to award them lump sum attorneys’ fees on a portion of their recovery, and they request this court to assess defendant additional damages for taking a frivolous appeal. Concluding that the parties’ respective positions do not present cause for disturbing the judgment, we affirm.

The defendant’s first three points of error require a review of the evidence. Brown was employed by D. C. Well Service, Inc. at Sundown in Hockley County, Texas. He worked on an oil well pulling unit which was mounted on a truck. The pulling unit crew consisted of an operator (Lloyd Smith), a derrick man (Brown), and two floormen (Steven Hogg and Cecil Almeida). On 14 August 1978, the pulling unit was located at a well 12 to 14 miles west of Sundown. The crew’s work day began and ended at the company yard in Sundown. Each employee was paid for travel time to and from the yard and the field location. The crew traveled in a company-owned pickup. The pickup was a four-door vehicle with front and back seats.

At approximately 4:00 p. m. on the day in question, the crew completed the pulling operation at the well site. Preparing to *508 move the unit to the company yard in Sundown, the crew cleaned its tools and secured the rig on the truck. When the crew left the well site, Hogg was driving the rig truck, Smith was driving the pickup, Brown occupied the front passenger seat in the pickup, and Almeida was standing on the T-sill located on the back of the rig truck. Almeida guided Hogg, who backed the truck about two hundred yards from the well site to a dirt road. After the truck reached the dirt road, Almeida left the truck and got into the bed of the pickup. As the crew traveled to the yard, the pickup was driven a good distance behind the rig truck, so the crew members in the pickup could watch for articles falling from the truck.

Almeida and Brown were good friends and had engaged in friendly horseplay on the day in question and on other occasions since first beginning to work together at D. C. Well Service, Inc. On this particular day, after Almeida got in the bed of the pickup, he threw some water at Brown through a small opening in the window. Shortly thereafter, Almeida got on top of the pickup’s cab and told Smith to stop at the next turn so he could get inside. While Almeida was lying sideways on the cab, Brown rolled down his window and hit Al-meida on the leg with a hair brush. As Brown rolled up his window, Almeida slapped Brown on the knuckles.

Smith slowed down and almost came to a stop before he turned onto a county dirt road. At this time, Almeida jumped from the bed on the driver’s side of the vehicle and got into the rear seat. At the same time, Brown got out of the cab and jumped into the bed of the pickup. Almeida jumped over the front seat and occupied the passenger’s position. From a water can located in the bed of the pickup, Brown first threw some water through a small window panel on Almeida’s side of the pickup. Shortly thereafter, he threw the remaining water in the can onto the cab and mostly on the passenger’s side of the windshield. The dirt from the county road mixed with the water and caused Smith to turn on the windshield wipers.

The pickup proceeded to the intersection of the county road with the blacktop road, stopped at the intersection, made a 90° turn onto the blacktop road, and proceeded east toward Sundown. Shortly thereafter, Al-meida jumped in the backseat of the pickup, got some pineapple juice, and threw the juice at Brown. Almeida returned to the front seat and looked back to see what Brown was doing. The record shows the following questions asked by the defendant’s attorney on direct examination and Almeida’s answers:

Q What was he [Brown] doing then?
A He was in the back looking around, trying — looking for something to throw at me, I guess.
Q And then what did you do after you saw him looking for something to throw at you?
A I started closing the window.
Q And was your attention on the window or on him at that time?
A It takes two hands to roll up the window.
Q Okay. And then what happened?
A Well, we went a little ways and I turned back to see what he was doing and he wasn’t there any more.

The accident occurred on the blacktop road after the pickup had traveled approximately a mile from the intersection. Al-meida did not see Brown fall from the picküp.

Hogg, the driver of the rig truck, stated that after both of the vehicles had turned onto the blacktop road he saw the pickup’s windshield wipers going and Brown in the pickup’s bed. He testified that Brown “was on top of the diesel tank in a kneeling position, what I mean is, he was on his knees, had his arms extended in the air letting the wind blow because it was plenty hot, plenty hot, I guess he was cooling off, didn’t have a shirt on, no kind of hat or nothing.” The diesel tank was mounted in the front part of the pickup bed. The tank was higher than the sides of the pickup bed. Other evidence shows that the top of the *509 diesel tank was oily and slick. Hogg did not see Brown fall from the pickup.

While Brown was in the bed of the pickup, Smith, the pickup’s driver, could see Brown through the rear window. However, Smith did not see Brown fall from the pickup.

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Bluebook (online)
628 S.W.2d 505, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 3861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-general-insurance-exchange-v-brown-texapp-1982.