Western Casualty Co. v. Deleon

148 S.W.2d 446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1941
DocketNo. 14170.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 446 (Western Casualty Co. v. Deleon) 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
Western Casualty Co. v. Deleon, 148 S.W.2d 446 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BROWN,' Justice.

This is a Workmen’s Compensation case, in which Floyd DeLeon is the plaintiff and 'Western Casualty Company, defendant, is the insurance carrier.

DeLeon, while working for Armour & Company, at its Fort Worth plant, claims that he fell down a flight of steps while working at the plant, on December 12th, 1935, and was injured.

On January 6th, 1936, he gave written notice of his injury and made his claim to the Industrial Accident Board, in which we find the following: “The place of injury was Armour plant. Cause of injury: slipped and fell down stair. State part of body injured: ruptured. Nature of injury, as near as possible: -.”

The quoted portions appear in the notice of injury.

The following appear in the claim before the Board: “The place of injury was Armour plant. Cause of injury: slipped and fell on stair ascending from fifth to fourth floor. State part of body injured and nature and extent of injury: ruptured.”

On February 26th, 1936, the Board made its award in the usual language, finding that the claimant had sustained an injury causing a hernia and ordering the claimant to-submit to an operation at the hands of a surgeon selected by the Board.

On March 16th, 1936, the attorney for DeLeon, in connection with DeLeon’s claim, wrote to the Board, stating, among other matters: “It is the contention of the employee, DeLeon, that on December 12th, 1935, he suffered accidental injury Jn the course of his employment, resulting in original hernia, and also received injuries to his back, totally incapacitating him from performing any part of his labor, and that as a result of his injury he is entitled to compensation at the rate of $15.09 per week beginning December 12th, 1935, and that he is also entitled to relief from the hernia by radical operation to be performed at the *448 expense of the insurer and that he is entitled to compensation of not less than 26 weeks, beginning the date of the operation and duration of which to be determined by the outcome of the operation.”

This letter further requested the Board to order the insurer to pay the accrued compensation before the claimant presents himself to the surgeon for the operation ordered,, “so that the employee will get the benefit of his compensation and then get the benefit of surgical relief.”

' The claimant did not report to the surgeon selected by the Board but sought his own physician and was operated on in April, 1936. It is undisputed that the operation was successful.

On May 31st, 1937, DeLeon filed an amended claim with the Board, in which he gave as the nature and extent of his injury: “Hernia and an injury to back, head, legs, side and right shoulder and the body generally, am totally and permanently disabled and ask for compensation for four hundred and one weeks at 60% of average weekly wages.”

On July 6th, 1938, the Board made its award, finding the claimant suffered a hernia, that he submitted to a surgical operation on April 9th, 1936, and was cured, and awarding him compensation for 26 weeks, ordering the insurer to pay the hospital bill and the surgeon’s bill. From this award the claimant has appealed, and his pleading sets forth many injuries and results of injuries. In other words, he has definitely enlarged his claim to cover: “the arteries, blood vessels, nerves, muscles, ligaments, cartileges, tendons and tissues in and around his head, shoulder, back and spine were wrenched, torn, lacerated, bruised and otherwise injured; a s.evere strain to and a separation of the sacro-iliac joints; a severe strain and injury to his back in the lumbar region; a shock to the nervous system ; as a result of said accident and injuries he suffers nervousness, weakness, sleepness (sleeplessness?), loss of weight, loss of appetite; inability to stand erectly, limited motion of his body from the waist, a gradual withering away and weakness of his leg; inability to walk any distance without the aid of a walking cane, severe pain in his back on exertion, headache, as a result of these injuries plaintiff has and will continue to suffer pain.”

He alleges total and permanent disability as a result.

The insurer denied under oath that the claim for the injuries sued for was filed with the Board within the time prescribed by law, and sought to confine the claimant to his claim for the hernia.

The cause was tried to a jury, and on the answers to special issues the trial court rendered judgment for claimant for total and permanent disability. The insurer has appealed, and presents fourteen propositions, supported by assignments of error.

We notice the second and third propositions first, and they urge that where the only claim for compensation filed within six months from date of injury was with reference to an injury described as a rupture, and two and one-half years later a claim was filed setting up for the first time injuries to the back, shoulder and body generally, such claim being filed long after the admitted successful operation of the hernia and long after full recovery therefrom, in the absence of pleading and proof of “good cause” for the delay in filing the claim for general injuries, the court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suit.

The third proposition contends that a claim for compensation for general injuries filed two and one-half years after the date of the injury is not an amendment of or enlargement upon a claim filed for a hernia which had been successfully operated and cured long prior to the filing of the claim for general debility, but such was an original claim which is- required to be filed within 6 months.

We believe that the law-making body of Texas intended, when it enacted the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Vernon’s T.C.S., Arts. 8306 to 8309, inclusive, and amendments), that employees in this State should have a simple, effective and inexpensive method,of applying for relief when injured in the course of employment.

The Board set up to hear and determine all claims is and was intended to be a rather informal, quasi judicial body vested with much discretion and given wide latitude in arriving at the facts in each case. Because we so believe, we are loathe to hold a claimant to a rigid rule in making his claim.

In our opinion, it is the duty of the Board to discover the injuries at its hearings. The law does not contemplate that the injured employee must secure the services of an attorney before the Board. That *449 he may do so does not lessen the duty of the Board to arrive at the facts. Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Huntsman, Tex.Civ.App., 125 S.W.2d 431, error dismissed, judgment correct.

Furthermore, we are of opinion that when a claim is filed in due season, it matters not how the injury may be described, it may be amended at any. time before the Board has finally disposed of the claim. Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Herndon, Tex.Civ.App., 95 S.W.2d 540, writ dismissed.

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148 S.W.2d 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-casualty-co-v-deleon-texapp-1941.