119 S.W.2d 386 | Tex. App. | 1938
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, appellee, as plaintiff, brought this suit in the District Court of Dallas County against Joseph W. Jasper, Dr. Andrew Small, and the Methodist Hospital of Dallas, to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board in favor of said defendants. By the terms of the award appellee had been ordered to pay appellant Jasper $16.64 per week for twenty-six consecutive weeks from the date on which he underwent an operation for hernia, and to pay Dr. Small $100 and the Methodist Hospital of Dallas $129.10 for medical and surgical and hospital services, together with other amounts for ambulance and nurses services. Defendant Small answered on December 23, 1936, by general demurrer, general denial and cross-action for $100 for services. Defendant Jasper answered by general demurrer, general denial and cross-action in which he prayed for judgment for the sum of $16.64 for the period of twenty-six weeks, as well as for the other amounts that had been awarded to him by the Industrial Accident Board. The amounts for which he prayed judgment were exactly those allowed by the award. In the alternative he prayed that if he were not entitled to compensation for hernia, then he had received an injury which incapacitated him from discharging the duties under his employment and required the surgical and hospital services alleged, and destroyed his capacity to labor for a period of thirty weeks; that the claim had been presented to the Industrial Accident Board; that the Board had made an award and determination, "from which an appeal was prosecuted to the District Court." His prayer was that he recover from the plaintiff the amounts allowed for hernia, or, in the alternative, compensation for the injury and the hospital and doctor's expenses, with interest.
January 6, 1937, appellee filed its answer to appellant's cross-action. On June 6, 1937, on motion of appellee the court dismissed appellee's appeal from the action of the Industrial Accident Board, whereupon defendant filed and urged a motion praying the court to enter judgment confirming the award of the Board. This motion was overruled and appellant duly excepted.
The cause went to trial before a jury, which, in response to special issues, found that appellant, on or about April 1, 1936, while an employee of D. M. Supperstein, received in the course of his employment personal injuries which resulted in a hernia, but that it was not definitely proved to the jury's satisfaction that the hernia *387 occurred suddenly and immediately following the injury. The jury did find that the hernia did not exist in any degree prior to the injury; that the injury was accompanied by pain; that it incapacitated appellant for labor for a period of six weeks. Other jurisdictional facts were found in favor of appellant. Appellant and appellee each filed a motion to enter judgment. Judgment was entered in favor of appellee, and it is from this judgment that appellant appeals.
Appellant further assigns as error the refusal of the court to enter judgment in his favor for six weeks upon the findings of the jury, despite the fact that it found that the rupture was not sudden. He insists that since it was an injury that incapacitated him for a certain length of time he should receive compensation for that time. His whole case was predicated upon the theory that his injury produced a hernia. Such were the pleadings, and the evidence was introduced upon the same theory. This contention is not sound. Appellant has not made a case in which the result of the hernia has produced a physical condition different from that which is the common and recognized result accompanying and following a hernia. Therefore, his injury was specific and his rights are controlled by the statutory provisions respecting the specific injury of hernia. Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306, subd. 12b. Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Lemons, Tex. Civ. App.
All of the propositions of appellant and all of his assignments of error have been fully considered and are overruled.
Judgment is affirmed.