This is a workmen’s compensation case. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, upon a verdict of the jury, for total and permanent compensation, payable in a lump sum. The insurance carrier has appealed, asserting three points of error.
Under its first point of error, the insurance carrier urges that the trial court should have instructed a verdict in its favor, upon the ground that the employee was performing labor on Sunday when he was injured, and that his contract of еmployment was therefore null and void.
Appellant’s pleadings in no way whatever raise the issue of Sunday employment. What we said in Reid v. Associated Em
The evidence here is that plaintiff was employed during the day of Saturday, November 29, 1941, to work as a helper on a truck which was used to haul oil field equipment. He was injured on Sunday, the day following, while helping to move a drilling rig. His testimony is that he was employed to work "7 days a week, if necessary, but never to work more than 40 hours a week”. The insurance carrier made no request to submit any issue to the jury relating to this defense. Its only complaint here is that an instructed verdict should have been ordered. The evidence before us does not show as a matter of law that the work was not one of necessity, or that the employment contract was illegal. Without repeating what is said in them, we refer to the following decisions for support of our views. Texas Employers’ Insurance Ass’n v. Tabor, Tex.Com.App.,
Under its second point appellant chargеs error in entering judgment for a lump sum on the ground that there is neither pleading nor evidence to authorize such.
Plaintiff’s pleadings relating to lump sum are as follows: “Plaintiff further alleges that the defendant has paid to the plaintiff compensation for a period of seven weeks, but has refused to pay him any additional compensation аs hereinbefore set out, and that by reason thereof he has been without funds to support himself and family, and that he owes debts for food, clothing and the necessities оf life, and is in need of additional medical treatment; that he has no property from which he can derive an income to support himself and family, and that this is therefore a special case, and one in which manifest hardship and injustice will result to him unless his compensation be paid in a lump sum.”
The only evidence to support thе claim for lump sum is the testimony of the plaintiff himself, which is in substance that he is a married man, has a wife and three children, whose ages are respectively two, five and еight years, owns no property, is dependent upon his wages for support of himself and family, has no money, and owes debts in the amount of $350; that if he is awarded a lump sum he will first recover his health if he can do so, so he can work, and figures that he could buy a place with the money where his wife and children could make a living with what little he cоuld do until he could get well, and that he could not do that on $12.60 per week.
In support of its point, appellant cites Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Ray, Tex.Civ.App.,
The facts proven in the case before us are somewhat similar to those in Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Blancett, Tex.Civ.App.,
Appellant’s third point of error complains of the fact that when the jury first brought in its verdict, the court еxamined it, found certain conflicts in it, and sent the jury back for further deliberation. When the jury again brought in its verdict, the court examined it again, still found conflicts in the answers, and for а second time sent the jury back for further deliberations.
On the first occasion mentioned, the court gave the jury a written charge, calling attention to the conflicts, using lаnguage like that employed by the trial court in Traders & General Ins. Co. v. Carlile,
When the jury brought in its verdict the second time, the court gave to the jury an oral instruction, which according to the record before us, was as follows:
“Gentlemen of the jury, your answers to Speciаl Issues 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 have remained the same, as when I read them to you before, but Special Issue now reads, Answer, ‘No.’ 13, December 2, 1941, 13-B 100 percent. 14. permanent. 15 for life. 17, 18 and 19 are the same and 20 and 21 are the same.
“Gentlemen, based upon the additional charge which I have given you, there still seems to be a conflict in your answers. Yоu will retire to the jury room and deliberate further on your answers.”
Appellant made no objection in the trial court to the fact that the last instruction was oral rather than written, and makes no complaint in this court of the fact that the instruction was oral rather than written.
Although appellant insists that its objections to the procedurе followed by the trial court were more complete, and embraced matters not included in the objections made in the Carlile case, we are of oрinion that the decision in the Carlile case is controlling here.
On the day the appeal was submitted in this court, appellant filed an instrument styled “Motion of Appellаnt to Present Additional Evidence”. In it appellant seeks permission to bring up and include in the record, for consideration by us, certain additional evidence. The mоtion recites in effect that after the judgment was rendered in the court below the employee threw aside all pretense of being disabled and went to work for а construction company. Attached to the motion are affidavits of certain persons who purportedly observed the employee in such employment, including the affidavit of one person who states that he took moving pictures of the employee at work. The prayer of the motion is as follows: “Wherefore, premises considered, said appellant moves and prays this Honorable Court to permit it to supplement and bring forward into this record herein the matters above set forth, including the affidavits attached hereto, and further requests permission of the Court to run and show to the members of this Honorable Court the moving pictures of this so-сalled totally and permanently disabled appellee doing and performing heavy labor, at such time and under such circumstances as may be convenient tо the Court, and for such other and further relief, at law and in equity, to which it may seem justly entitled.”
Our jurisdiction in this case is appellate only. It is not within our authority to consider the tendered affidavits, or to view the tendered moving pictures. Nor can we consider the matters in question under the statute which permits the Industrial Accident Board to reopen cases in certain instances. Art. 8306, Sect. 12d, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes. Federal Surety Co. v. Cook,
All points of error are overruled, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, and the motion to present additional evidence is denied.
