Vineyard v. Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n

263 S.W.2d 675, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1672
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 1953
Docket14683
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 263 S.W.2d 675 (Vineyard v. Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n) 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
Vineyard v. Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n, 263 S.W.2d 675, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1672 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

This is a suit to set aside a compromise ■Settlement agreement approved by. the Board August 31, 1949, for alleged fraud in its procurement. Plaintiff Vineyard was injured in the course of his employment while working as a laborer for Fant Milling Company of Sherman, Texas.

On the trial of this cause to set aside the settlement agreement, the trial court at the conclusion of the evidence instructed a verdict for insurer and against Vineyard, and Vineyard has duly perfected this appeal from the judgment entered upon the instructed verdict.

Appellant briefs two points in substance, .(1) the, trial court should not have considered paragraphs 1 and 2 of the insurer’s motion for instructed verdict because (1) they were each too general and did not allege specific grounds for an instructed verdict, and (2) the instructed verdict was not justified by .the evidence. These points are countered by insurer that the “trial court correctly instructed a verdict for the defendant .at the -close of the evidence.” The points and counter points will be considered together.

The two paragraphs in the motion for instructed verdict filed by insurer were in substance that plaintiff has failed (1) to plead, or (2) to prove actionable fraud sufficient to set aside the compromise settlement in question.

Appellants’ contention ds to lack of pleading must be overruled on the authority of Harvey v. Elder, Tex.Civ.App., 191 S.W.2d 686, error ref., and Baylor v. Eastern Seed Co., Tex.Civ.App., 191 S.W.2d 689. As said there, the only question is whether the evidence, as a matter of law, sustained the court’s action.

On that question the evidence here before us is undisputed that Vineyard was required to undergo a pre-employment physical examination by Dr. Brown who w'as associated with a clinic regularly used by Fant Milling Company, the employer *677 here, for all its medical and surgical work. After Vineyard’s injury he was again examined by Dr. - Brown who was still connected with the same clinic.

Vineyard testified that after Dr. Brown examined him, the doctor told him he “ * * * had a minor injury, lumbago, or a slight sprain, and that it would clear up within two or three weeks.” That he believed Dr. Brown and that his back would clear up and therefore did not go back to see the doctor; that he returned to work and worked one or two days more, then quit work; that he went out to his- football practice and while, on the field one day around the last of August, an adjuster for the insurer approached him and they discussed his injury and a settlement of his case; - that at that time the adjuster showed him the report from Dr. Brown. Vineyard testified as to'his conversation: -

“Q. And did you and he have a conversation at that time? A. Yes sir.
“Q. What was that conversation about? A. Well, he showed me this settlément agreement, the agreement that they wanted me to read over and sign. We discussed the amount of money that was to close the case' off of the books. ,-That is what'he wanted to do.
“Q. What amount of money was agreed upon? A. $75.00 .
.
“Q. Now; how did you, happen ■ to agree to the sum of $75.00? A. Well; he figured out that I lost approximately two weeks work and figured it at sixty percent of my normal wage, I believe is the way he figured it, and -that didn’t come out to quite $75.00. It -lacked eight or ten dollars, something like that, and he said that he would just-throw in the remainder of that, just to-, make it a round figure.
“Q. And at that time did you and he agree to the $75.00? A. Yes, sir; we did.
“Q., Now, did he show you anything or show you any papers of'any , kind? A. Yes, he did.
“Q-. What did he .show you? ,A. Well, he had a typewritten copy of Dr. Brown’s statement with him, and also these forms that he wanted me to sign, these agreement forms.
. , “Q. He had a typewritten statement of Dr. Brown’s? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did he give you the statement ? ' A. I read it, yes.-
“Q. You read, the statement? A. Yes, sir.
“Q.. What did the statement say? A. Well, it has been three years ago. I couldn’t say exactly what it said, but it was the same thing that Dr. Brown had told me in his office,- that I had lumbago or a sprained back, or something of that sort, and it would clear up within two or three weeks, that it was nothing serious.
“Q. Why did you enter into ’ the settlement agreement at that time ? ' A: Because Dr. Brown told me there was nothing wrong with me, and that it would clear up in three or four weeks.
“Q. All right. A. And 'that I wtiuld 'be all right, perfectly all right as soon as that was over, and'that is the reason I settled it.
“Q. Did you rely upon what Dr. Brown had told you at the time of the examination, and did you rely on what was. in the statement? A. Yes, sir.
. “Q. That the adjuster had, in entering into the settlement agreement ? A. Yes sir, I relied wholly on that.
“Q. You say you relied wholly on that? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Would you have entered into and made that settlement agreement if the statements that Dr. Brown had made about your condition had not *678 been made or said? A. No sir, I would not.”

Vineyard further testified that his back did not get better, but got worse until he went to Dr. Butte in Dallas who performed a surgical fusion operation on him.

Dr. Butte testified in substance that Vineyard was referred to him in September 1949 by Dr. Donoghay of Sherman, and that he (Butte) saw him thereafter for eight or nine months; supplied him with a spine support and talked with him about an operation. Dr. Butte further testified: That “Vineyard had a congenital weakness in his back, the lumbar vertebra being displaced forward on the upper surface of the sacrum a good inch; that the displacement is a developmental defect or a congenital defect with this amount of slipping, this amount of degeneration of the lumbar sacral disc, is bound to have been there for a long long time in my opinion. * * * The underlying trouble was the congenital defect in his fifth lumbar vertebra and the forward slipping of the vertebra because of these defects.” That such condition “has existed ever since his birth or early childhood * * He further testified:

“A. Well, I think he did have a back sprain. It was probably not a serious back sprain or he would have actually been laid up.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W.2d 675, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vineyard-v-texas-employers-ins-assn-texapp-1953.