Home Life & Accident Co. v. Corsey

Decision Date05 December 1918
Docket Number(No. 7633.)
Citation216 S.W. 464
CourtTexas Court of Appeals
PartiesHOME LIFE & ACCIDENT CO. v. CORSEY.

Appeal from Harris County Court; W. E. Monteith, Judge.

Suit by P. J. Corsey against the Home Life & Accident Company. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Reformed and affirmed.

Andrews, Streetman, Burns & Logue, of Houston, for appellant.

A. B. Wilson, of Houston, for appellee.

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellee to recover the sum of $1,000 alleged to be compensation due him by appellant under the Workmen's Compensation Act of this state (Acts 1913, c. 179 [Vernon's Sayles' Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246zzzz]).

The petition alleges in substance that plaintiff was injured on April 29, 1916, while working for the Kirby Lumber Company at a weekly wage of $10.50; that defendant was the insurer of said lumber company under the Texas Workmen's Compensation Act; that the Industrial Accident Board had investigated his claim for compensation, and had decided that he was entitled to compensation at the rate of $5 per week, beginning May 7, 1916; that plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled by reason of his said injuries, and was entitled, under the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act, to receive compensation from defendant at the rate of $5 per week for a total of 300 weeks. The prayer was for recovery of $1,000.

The cause was submitted to a jury in the court below upon special issues, and upon the verdict returned judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $479.70.

The jury found, in response to the issues presented to them by the charge of the court, that as a result of injuries received by him while engaged in performing the duties of his employment by the Kirby Lumber Company on April 29, 1916, plaintiff was incapacitated for work for a period of 537 days, and that for 504 of said days plaintiff's incapacity was total, and for the remaining 33 days was only partial. Under appropriate assignments of error each of these findings is assailed on the ground that it is without any evidence to support it.

Plaintiff, in substance, testified that on April 29, 1916, while he and other employés of the Kirby Lumber Company were engaged in moving and stacking lumber, one of his coemployés let a piece of lumber he was lifting slip and fall from the lumber hook with which he was lifting it, and such piece of lumber, which was about 14 inches wide, 2 inches thick, and about 18 or 20 feet long, struck plaintiff on the foot, and so injured him as to prevent his securing any permanent work since said injury was received.

Two other witnesses for plaintiff testified that they were present and saw the lumber fall and strike plaintiff's foot, and both testified that this injury to plaintiff caused him to stop work, and that his foot was swollen for some time thereafter.

On cross-examination plaintiff testified that in the latter part of July, 1916, he went from Silsbee, where he was then living, to Beaumont, and obtained employment with the creosote works for one day, or 10 or 12 hours. He quit this job, and went to work for the Beaumont Lumber Company handling lumber on trimmers. His work for this company only lasted 2 days. In August, 1916, he went to Houston, and there obtained employment with Horton & Horton, who were constructing a sewer for the city. He worked for these contractors about 2 weeks. The first day of his work there he cut dirt down in the sewer. He was then told by his employer that he was not good enough for that work, and, to use his language, he was then given "a little job, piddling around keeping wood in the furnaces." On December 16, 1916, he obtained employment from the Armour Fertilizer Company, for whom he worked one day. While working for this company he was again injured by a pile of cotton seed cake falling on him, and he has done no work since.

A witness for the defendant testified, and the testimony is uncontradicted, that plaintiff worked for the Westheimer Transfer Company at Houston for about two or three weeks in November, 1916, and was paid a wage of $1.50 per day.

The injury received by plaintiff at the Armour Company consisted of a broken hip bone. For this injury he made claim for compensation against the insurer of the Armour Company, and was allowed compensation at the rate of $5.77 per week. He testified that this compensation was paid him from December, 1916, to April, 1917, at which time he made a lump sum settlement with the insurance company. He said he did not remember what amount he received in this settlement, and that he did not "think it had anything to do with this case." The 537 days that the jury found the plaintiff was incapacitated covers the period from the 8th day after the accident, when his right to receive compensation began under the Workmen's Compensation Act, up to the date of the trial in the court below.

We think this evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding that plaintiff received injuries as claimed by him on April 29, 1916, and as a result of such injuries he was partially incapacitated for 33 days, and probably totally incapacitated for some days, but the evidence is wholly insufficient to sustain the finding that as a result of such injuries he was totally incapacitated for 504 days. The period of partial incapacity found by the jury was evidently the 33 days which the evidence shows plaintiff had worked subsequent to his injury. Plaintiff testified that he only received $35 for this 33 days' work, and that because of his inability to properly perform the work he could not keep his job. We think this testimony would authorize a recovery by plaintiff for compensation for partial incapacity for the 33 days, and probably for the whole period from the 8th day after his injury up to the 16th day of December, 1918. But as before stated, we find no evidence to sustain the finding that he was totally incapacitated for 504 days, or for any number of days. All that the evidence shows is that his injured foot has caused, and still causes, him pain, lessens his capacity to work, and prevents him from securing permanent or continuous employment. He described his condition as follows:

"I worked for the Beaumont Lumber Company two days, I think it was, and he told me he could give me a permanent job if I did the work. He looked at me and asked me what ailed me, and I told him about that little accident at Kirby's, and he told me if I could stand up and do the work he would give me a steady job. The reason I can't work is that that leg and foot simply fail me, and the misery has gone all up in that leg and rib, and it pains at times, just pains; most of the pain is in the instep; the whole foot swells up and it pains me all over.

"I have not earned more than $35 since May 7, 1916. Yes; no more than $35 actually paid me for work. The reason I haven't is on the condition I haven't been able to hold a job since that time. I have been putting forth my efforts trying to work, but have not been able to secure a job long enough to show I was able to do the work. I am unable to stand up and do the work that I could demand before. It affects my foot when I stand on it. It pains and sometimes swells up on me."

The witness Jones testified:

"He (Corsey) worked there (Westheimer Transfer Company) in the year 1916, in November. He worked from about the 25th or 26th of November is the first day he went to work. He quit between that time and before the first of the year. He was gone before Christmas; was there about three weeks. We paid him 15 cents an hour; we paid him $1.50 for the work all day; that is, when he was working on the wagon he made on an average of $1.50 per day; he was on the wagon only about two weeks; he stayed around the office to help. He did this and that, whenever he could work, and by that he did not make enough to justify him staying there, I don't suppose, and he disappeared and didn't come back. That week we paid him by the hour—15 cents. If he worked only one hour a day he would be paid 15 cents. If he worked 10 hours he would be paid $1.50, etc. He seemed to be a willing worker. We never had any trouble as to his being courteous or anything like that; of course, he was not in a position to do otherwise. Yes; he was obedient. Under his condition he was not a desirable employé. He couldn't do the work on the wagon. He could hardly get on the wagon when he was on the ground. No; he couldn't make enough to feed himself after he went to work in the office, around the place, at little off jobs," etc.

As before shown, he did work for 33 days bringing the period of time from July, 1916, to December 16, 1916, and received some compensation therefor. These 33 days covered periods from 1 to 15 days' duration, with intervals of several weeks or months intervening, and there is nothing in the evidence to show that...

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