OPINION
This is a worker’s compensation case in which appellant sought total and permanent incapacity due to an injury to her lower back.
On May 30, 1980, Maria de los Angeles Garay was injured while working in the course and scope of her employment as a seamstress for Levi Strauss & Company in Laredo, Texas. As reflected by the Agreement of Counsel and Order of Trial approved by the trial court, the undisputed facts and issues relevant tо this appeal are as follows: (No. 3) As a result of the injury of May 30, 1980, Maria de los Ange-les Garay sustained at least some period of total incapacity as that term is defined in the Texas Workers’ Compensation Aсt; (No. 4) As a result of the injury of May 30, 1980, the beginning date of at least the total temporary incapacity began on said date; (No. 9) Maria de los Angeles Garay is entitled to receive weekly compensation benеfits of $119.00 for any period of total incapacity which she may have sustained as a result of the injury in question. At trial the stipulations were “received, accepted, approved, and introduced.” The jury returned a vеrdict, leaving blank the answer to Special Issue No. 1, which requested the jury to find the duration of total incapacity. Appellant (Plaintiff) moved for a mistrial due to the jurors’ failure to answer Special Issue No. 1. Appellee suggested that the court accept the verdict. The court complied with appellee’s suggestion and rendered a take nothing judgment for appellant. We reverse and remand.
Appellant brings two рoints of error which we will consider together for purposes of this appeal. Appellant alleges that the trial court erred when it accepted the jury verdict, entered a take nothing judgment against aрpellant, and overruled appellant’s motion for mistrial because the jury’s failure to answer Special Issue No. 1 was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence so as to be mаnifestly unjust to appellant.
Appellee contends that the trial court’s judgment should be affirmed because appellant’s great weight and preponderance of the evidence points of error werе not proper objections to the jury’s failure to answer a special issue.
Special Issues Number 1 through 2C were submitted and answered as follows:
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 1
Find the duration of total incapacity. (By answering “permanent” or by stating the number of weeks).
*659 ANSWER: _____
If you have answered Special Issue Number 1 by stating number of weeks, then answer Special Issue Number 2; otherwise, do not answer Special Issue Number 2.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 2
Was the injury a producing cause of any partial incapacity?
(Answer “Yes” or “No”).
ANSWER: yez (sic)
If you have answered Special No. 2 “Yes”, then answer Sрecial Issue Numbers 2A, 2B, and 2C; otherwise, do not answer Special Issue Numbers 2A, 2B, and 2C.
SPECIAL ISSUE NUMBER 2A
Find the beginning date of partial incapacity. (By stating the month, date, and year).
ANSWER: May 30, 1980
SPECIAL ISSUE NUMBER 2B
Find the duration of partial incapacity. (By answering “permanеnt” or by stating the number of weeks).
ANSWER: permanent
SPECIAL ISSUE NUMBER 2C
Find Maria de los Angeles Garay’s average weekly earning capacity during partial incapacity. (By stating in dollars and cents).
ANSWER: 150.00 wkly (for 52 weeks)
A specific objection is one which enables the trial сourt to understand the precise question and to make an intelligent ruling, affording the offering party an opportunity to remedy the defect if possible.
University of Texas System v. Haywood,
This court cannot ignore the stipulations made in the trial court regarding appellant’s total incapacity. We agree that, as a general rule, the questiоn of the extent and duration of an injury is a question for the jury.
Texas Employers’ Insurance Association v. Scott,
Lewis,
In addition, Mr. Rodriguez, attorney for appellee, admitted in his closing argument that Garay had suffered some period of total incapacity and even suggested a finding to the jury:
“There was a period of total incapacity, we have agreed to that. Just exactly how much? I don’t know, ladies and gentlemen. You need to look at the — I *660 have a suggestion for you. There was a time period when this lady couldn’t work anywhere, no doubt about that. There were several, there was one between May and July of 1980, after the initial injury, there was a time period between January and April of 1981 before she wеnt to work at Casa Panchita. And, of course, there was the period after the operation. After Dr. Reyes operated on this lady. And that was back from January to May of 1982. Now, if you add those up, my recommendatiоn to you for total incapacity would be fifty-two weeks, one year.” (Emphasis added.)
Even the appellee’s argument, therefore, suggests that the jury finding or omission to find was so clearly against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.
Appellee cites several cases in its brief for the proposition that appellant failed to preserve her error. The eases cited, however, are distinguishable from the case at bar. In
Continental Casualty Co. v. Street,
The appellant’s motion for mistrial clearly outlined the problem with the verdict returned by the jury, and its conflict with the stipulations in the case and the instructions contained in the charge. It seems incredulous that appеllee asked the court to receive the jury’s verdict and then claims that appellant cannot bring his appeal because the verdict was received as appellee requested and while appellant was still asserting his motion which pointed out the defects in the jury’s answers.
In
Loughry v. Hodges,
Appellee cites
Stalder v. Bowen,
[I]n order to support the entry of a judgment based upon a partial verdict the answers made by the jury must be of such a nature that the winning party was entitled to judgment no matter what the jury may have said in response to the unanswered issues. Stalder at 827.
In thе case at bar, it did matter what the jury decided, for if they had answered Special Issue No. 1 “Permanent,” they would not have considered Special Issue No. 2 and *661 the judge would have been required to award permanent total incapacity payments of $119 weekly in accordance with the stipulations.
If the jury had answered anything other than permanent, i.e., a specified number of weeks as allowed by the charge, the appel-lee may not have gained the benefits from the remaining answers to the charge which resulted in the take nothing judgment. The findings are even more confusing and against the stipulations because the date filled in by the jury for the start of the partial incapacity was the stipulated date that was the start of the period of total incapacity, lending support to the appellant’s argument that the answer to issue one was impliedly “0.”
In accordance with appellee’s reply points and argument, the appellee would have this Court review this case only in light of appellant’s exact words used in her motion for mistrial. However, in passing on fаctual insufficiency points, the reviewing court must consider all of the evidence presented at the time of trial and set aside the verdict and remand for a new trial if it concludes that the verdict is so against the greаt weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust, regardless of whether the record contained some evidence of probative force in support of the verdict.
Board of Regents v. Yarbrough,
The judgment of the trial court is REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. It was stipulated at trial that appellant had received compensation of $119 per week for a 119 week period, a total of $14,161.
