Zurich General Accident & Liability Ins. Co. v. Lee

135 S.W.2d 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1939
DocketNo. 3558.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 505 (Zurich General Accident & Liability Ins. Co. v. Lee) 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
Zurich General Accident & Liability Ins. Co. v. Lee, 135 S.W.2d 505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

This is a workman’s compensation suit. Appellee, J. M. Lee, was the employee; the Pure Oil Company the employer; and appellant, Zurich General Accident & Liability Insurance Company, Ltd., the compensation insurance carrier. On May 20, 1936, while engaged in the course of his employment as an employee of Pure Oil Company, appellee received an injury for which he claimed compensation. He filed his claim before the Industrial Accident Board on August 23, 1938. On October 29, 1938, the board made its final ruling and award, denying compensation, and ap-pellee duly gave notice that he would not abide said award, and duly filed this suit in the district court of Jefferson County, Texas, to set |side said award, and to recover compensation in the sum of $2,666.-66, or in the alternative that he have judgment for whatever character and sum of compensation to which he might show himself entitled.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, several special exceptions, general denial, and by special sworn denial to the effect that appellee had failed to file his claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board within six months of the date of the injury as required by law, and that having wholly failed to file his said claim as required by law, he was not entitled to recover compensation.

At the close of the evidence, appellant moved for an instructed verdict, which was refused. The case was then tried to a jury upon special issues upon the answers to which judgment was rendered for appellee that he recover compensation for 100 weeks (loss of eye) amounting to $1,726.20 in equal monthly installments of $17.26 beginning January 25, 1939, and continuing weekly until said sum was fully paid, unpaid weekly installments to bear six per cent interest from their due date. Motion for a new trial .was overruled and appellant brings this appeal.

There is no question as to appellee being at the time of his injury an employee of Pure Oil Company, nor that he was covered by compensation insurance carried by appellant, nor that he was acccidentally injured on May 20, 1936, by a piece of iron pipe ¾ inch in diameter and some 20 feet long falling from a scaffold some 12 or 14 feet high striking him in the face on or over the left eye. The jury found that the injury resulted in the loss of the sight of the eye, and that such loss of vision was permanent.

Appellant’s first three assignments of error assert, in effect, that appel-lee failed to show good cause for his failure to file his claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board within six months after receiving his injury, and, therefore, the court erred in refusing its motion for an instructed verdict.

Appellee’s injury occurred on May 20, 1936. He filed his claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board on August 23, 1938. The statute, art. 8307, Sec. 4a, R.S.1925, requires that claims for compensation shall be filed with the board within six months after the occurrence of the injury, but provides that for good cause shown the board may, in meritorious cases, waive strict compliance with the filing requirement. Appellee' alleged good cause for not filing his claim within six months after the injury, and continuously up to the filing on August 23, 1938, and offered evidence to show same.

Appellee was an employee of the Pure Oil Company for some 13 years. He continued to work for the company after receiving his injury on May 20, 1936, up until about June or July,, 1938, when he was laid off. He filed his claim with the board on August 23, 1938. It was denied by the *507 board on October 29, 1938. The case was tried on appeal in the district court of Jefferson County, January 24, 1939.

Briefly, the record reflects that immediately after appellee received his injury he was taken to Dr. Gardner, a company physician, by Mr. Park, safety first man at the Pure Oil plant. Dr. Gardner dressed the wound on appellee’s face and eye. About June 5, 1936, appellee again went to Dr. Gardner and complained of his eye giving him trouble. Dr. Gardner examined his eye and told him that he did not think the blow by the falling pipe was the cause of the trouble, but sent appellee to Dr. Lyons, an eye specialist. Dr. Lyons, also employed by the oil company, carefully examined and tested appellee’s eye on June 5th, 6th, and 10th, and told him that the blow was not the cause of his eye trouble. This was within less than three weeks after the accident. He said 'that after the accident the vision of his eye seemed “just kind of foggy”; that the doctors told him the blow did not cause the injury to his eye, and he had hoped it would clear up. He testified that his eye continued to give him trouble and seemed to grow worse, and that he still thought that the blow was the cause of the trouble to his eye. That about six months after he had seen Dr. Gardner and Dr. Lyons the last time, his eye was still getting worse and he went to see Dr. Vaughn of Port Arthur, who was also an eye specialist, and had him to examine his eye. That Dr. Vaughn gave his eyé a careful examination and said it was too late to do anything for it because it was too far gone; that the blow was not the cause of the eye trouble, but that his teeth were — “He said my teeth had put my eye out.” That he did not doubt Dr. Vaughn’s statement for a while, but he got to “figuring around and figured that it might be his teeth” causing the trouble, and so some eight or nine months after the accident he went to see Dr. Hall, a dentist, and had him to examine his teeth; that he went to see Dr. Hall twice, the last time some six months before the case was tried, and that Dr. Hall told him that his teeth had nothing to do with his eye trouble. He further testified that some six or eight weeks before the trial of thé case, still believing that the blow of the iron pipe over his eye was the cause of the loss of vision in the eye, and that he was entitled to compensation for the injury to and the loss of vision in the eye, he employed counsel to represent him in the matter, and was told by his counsel that he would have to file a claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board, which he had not known before, and that his claim for compensation was immediately prepared and filed. He further testified that from the time of the injury until he was laid off, some two years, or more, he never lost a day, nor a day’s pay, and was paid the same for every day as he received before the injury. Still he said that all the time he believed that the injury to his eye was caused by the blow of the falling pipe, and that he was entitled to compensation. The gist of his claim of good cause for not filing his claim within six months after the accident was that the doctors told him that the blow did not cause his eye trouble, and that while he had confidence in what they said, all the time he believed the blow was the cause of his eye trouble, and he was waiting to file the claim when he could prove it. When he employed counsel he was advised to consult Dr. Hendry of Beaumont, an eye specialist, and he did so and was told by Dr. Hendry that, in his opinion, the blow caused the injury to the eye.

The question of good cause was submitted to the jury in a special issue, and was answered in favor of appellee. We think that he has shown good cause for not filing his claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board within six months after the accident by which he was injured on May 20, 1936. The doctors, three of them, Dr. Gardner, a general practitioner, and Dr.

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135 S.W.2d 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zurich-general-accident-liability-ins-co-v-lee-texapp-1939.