OPINION
This is an appeal from a jury’s finding that Appellant was not entitled to lifetime benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act and was not incurably insane. We reverse and remand.
SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE
Francisco Morua worked at Economy Laundry in El Paso, Texas. On April 15, 1985, Morua suffered head and back injuries while in the course and scope of his employment at Economy Laundry in El Paso. While placing a pair of pants on a presser, Appellant accidentally activated the presser at the wrong time and was struck in the forehead. He was not knocked unconscious and went immediately to the office manager to report the injury. Appellant then drove himself to two different doctors immediately after the accident. Appellant returned to work for approximately two weeks following the accident on April 15.
On July 10, 1985, Appellant went to see Dr. Kaim, an El Paso psychiatrist. Appellant complained of throbbing headaches, blurred vision, vertigo and dizziness. Dr. Kaim continued to treat Mr. Morua off and on for ten years; although at trial, he admitted that most medical testing showed there was nothing wrong with Appellant, as he had a normal CAT scan of the head, a normal MRI, and a normal EEG.
Appellant’s primary initial complaint of injury involved his back and was treated extensively for that problem by undergoing a lumbar laminectomy. Following his back surgery, Appellant was disabled from returning to work. He was able to drive a ear, took his children to school and baseball practice, and also drove himself to Juarez, Mexico, and back. He would also walk his children home from school and watch his son practice baseball. He kept track of his own doctor appointments and drove to them. He bought his own clothes, and borrowed and paid back money from a finance company. Virginia Morua, Appellant’s ex-wife, testified that in 1993, she was going to have herself removed as Appellant’s guardian because he could manage for himself. Appellant never appeared in court at any time during trial, and the only evidence presented was from his deposition.
In Appellant’s original petition, he alleges that Appellant, as a consequence of this accident, sustained injury to his skull, resulting in incurable insanity and imbecility and was, therefore, entitled to lifetime benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act. The case was submitted to the jury only on the issue of incurable insanity which the jury answered “no”. Appellant now brings this appeal.
DISCUSSION
Appellant attacks the judgment of the trial court in six points of error. Point of Error No. Five avers that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of Jeffrey C. Siegel because State Farm failed to verify its supplemental answers to interrogatories in which State Farm identified Siegel as a testifying expert. 1 We agree.
Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 168(5) requires that answers to interrogatories be signed and verified by the person making them. Tex.R.Civ.P. 168(5);
Ramirez v. Ramirez,
This Court has addressed the issue of whether supplemental responses to interrogatories need to be verified by the party in two previous cases. As we noted in
Ramirez,
there are several cases which state that supplemental response to interrogatories need not be verified:
Circle Y of Yoakum v. Blevins,
As stated in Varner:
At the risk of appearing hypertechnical, we would mildly disagree for several reasons with the holdings of Jones, Soefje, Kramer, Circle Y and Munday that verification of supplemental answers is not necessary. If the formalities of Rule 168 are mandatory (though waivable), then it logically follows that a supplementation to the answers previously given should observe the same formalities. Otherwise, a clever party or his attorney, without appearing to give evasive or incomplete answers, could hold back on material information and then provide it in an unsworn supplement just before the cutoff date.
In
Ramirez,
We find Ramirez to be indistinguishable from the instant case. In the instant case, Appellee sent an unverified response to Appellant’s interrogatory identifying Jeffrey C. Siegel as a testifying expert witness. Ramirez and Varner are dispositive on the issue and we hold that the supplemental responses to interrogatories must be verified to have a consistent application of Rule 168 to both original and supplemental answers.
The most recent case deciding that supplemental responses must be verified is
Dawson-Austin v. Austin,
The
Austin
court found that in one line of cases, starting with
Jones v. Kinder,
The Austin court then stated:
We agree with the Varner line of cases instead of the Jones line. Jones and its progeny base their argument on the fact that rule 166b(6) regarding supplementation does not contain a verification requirement. Rule 166b(6) applies to supplementation of all forms of discovery. Although some forms of discovery require that the evidence be sworn, such as answers to interrogatories and answers to depositions, other forms of discovery responses, such as responses to requests for admission and responses to requests for production, do not have to be sworn. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 167(1), 168(5), 169(1), 204(2), 208(5). Because different forms of discovery have different verification requirements, including no verification requirement for some forms, it makes sense that the rule requiring supplementation of all forms of discovery would not dictate the form of supplemental responses. Thus, the fact that rule 166b(6) does not contain a verification requirement does not support the proposition espoused in Jones and its progeny that supplemental answers to interrogatories do not have to be verified. As the Varner court noted, the formalities necessary to respond originally to a request for discovery should apply to a supplemental response. Rule 168(5) requires that answers to interrogatories be sworn; accordingly, supplemental answers to interrogatories must also be sworn. [Emphasis added].
Austin,
In the case before us, having found that supplemental answers to interrogatories need to be verified, we find that the trial court erred in allowing Appellee’s expert to testify to the issue of incurable insanity. Appellant’s Point of Error No. Five is sustained.
Having sustained Appellant’s Point of Error No. Five, we need not reach Appellant’s remaining points. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the ease for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Jeffrey Siegel was the only expert to testify that Appellant was not "incurably insane” as the word was used in the jury charge.
. As we noted in
Ramirez,
"Although the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the Fort Worth Court of Appeals, Chief Justice Phillips, writing for the majority, left open the question of whether Rule 166b.6. requires supplemental answers to be verified, holding that '[ejven if Rule 166b(6) does in fact require additional verification, the Kramers waived whatever complaint they might have had concerning the manner in which the supplemental answers were verified[,]’ primarily by not objecting to the verification deficiency for the first time until after they had themselves called the same two expert witnesses to whom they were objecting by introducing portions of the witnesses’ depositions.
Kramer,
