1 S.W.2d 1109 | Tex. App. | 1927
Appellee brought this suit in the district court of Liberty county to enforce an award rendered in its favor by the Industrial Accident Board on December 13, 1926, for hospital and nurses' charges in the sum of $1,338.50, rendered to J. B. Roberts, one of its employees, who had been injured while appellee was protected by an insurance policy issued by appellant.
The facts are that, on or about March 30, 1926, the Peer Oil Corporation was an employer of labor, and carried with appellant, Security Union Casualty Company, a policy of insurance covering its employees under the Workmen's Compensation Act (Rev.St. 1925, arts. 8306-8309). J. B. Roberts was an employee of said Peer Oil Corporation, and on said date, while in the course of his employment, received a serious injury, which necessitated his being placed in a hospital, and having, medical and surgical treatment and constant attention of trained nurses. Roberts' injury was caused by being crushed under an oil derrick blown down by a severe windstorm. Appellant denied any liability under its insurance policy, and refused to pay compensation or hospital, medical, and nurses' bills. July 2, 1926, the Industrial Accident Board, on claims duly filed and proper notice, made an award in favor of Roberts for compensation and in favor of appellee, Peer Oil Corporation, for $1,218.25, as reimbursements for payments it had made for hospital, medical, and nurses' bills for said Roberts. Appeal was taken by appellant from this award, together with the award in favor of Roberts to the district court of Liberty county, which court, on the cross-action of Roberts and appellee, on October 21, 1926, rendered judgment for the amounts awarded them. Appellant appealed this judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals, where said judgment was affirmed June 18, 1927.
While said suit was pending on appeal, and after the award of July 2, 1926, appellee paid other and further hospital and nurses' expenses in caring for Roberts, and filed its claim therefor before the Industrial Accident Board in the sum of $1,338.50. The board, on December 13, 1926, entered an award in appellee's favor for the amount claimed. No appeal was taken from this award, because, appellant says, the board was without authority to make the second award, for, in that it having made an award which was final, and from which an appeal had been taken, it had no authority to make any subsequent award. The instant suit was filed in the district court of Liberty county on January 19, 1927, to enforce said last award, with the prayer that it have judgment for the amount of the award, $1,338.50, together with 12 per cent. damages and $500 as an attorney's fee.
Appellant, defendant below, answered by (a) plea in bar, asserting that the matters and things involved in the claim and award of July 2, 1926, and final award made thereon and the appeal by appellant from said award to the district court of Liberty county, divested the board of all jurisdiction over any issues or matters in dispute then existing or thereafter to arise between any of the parties concerned in said award or related to said accident or injury, and that said appeal from said award vested in and conferred jurisdiction upon said Liberty county district court to hear and determine any, all, and every question or issue arising out of said accident and injury or any manner connected therewith; (b) plea to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the matter in controversy, which plea set out the same facts as the plea in bar, and asserted that the effect of the former appeal (from the award of July 2, 1926) being to divest the Industrial Accident Board of any jurisdiction to hear and determine any further questions, issues, or matters arising between the parties growing out of said accident and injury, the second award of the board made and entered on December 13, 1926, upon which this suit is based, was null and void, and could not be made the basis of a cause of action; and (c) general demurrer, general denial, and specially plead the matters pleaded in its pleas in bar and to the jurisdiction, and in effect a plea of res adjudicata, in that the award of the board on July 2, 1926, in favor of claimants, appellant's appeal from said award to the district court of Liberty county, the judgment of said district court in favor of claimants on their cross-action against appellant, the appeal of appellant from said judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals, and the affirmance of said judgment by said appellate court, were conclusive of all and every matter then in dispute between the parties arising, or thereafter to arise, out of the accident and injury to said Roberts.
The case was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of appellee for the amount of its claim, with interest from the date of the award to the date of the judgment, 12 per cent. damages on the amount of the award, and $500 as an attorney's fee, the whole sum adjudged to appellee being, $2,045.97. The case is before us on appeal.
Appellant's first proposition is:
"The Industrial Accident Board having made a final award allowing an employer reimbursement for the amount paid for hospital and medical treatment, for an employee, had no authority to make a subsequent award allowing additional amounts as reimbursement for hospital and medical treatments paid for by employer, when all of said claim of the employer had accrued at *1111 date first award was made, and from said first award an appeal had been properly perfected."
The claim of appellee was for hospital and nurses' expenses incurred for the care of the injured employee, Roberts, and which were paid by appellee after the first award of July 2, 1926. No part of this claim was included in the claim or the award first made by the board. We think the board had ample authority to pass upon the claim in question and to make the award. The jurisdiction of the board over all the issues arising in the course of the administration of the Workmen's Compensation Act is original and primary. Furthermore, the orders and decrees of the Industrial Accident Board are in the nature of judgments, and, when not appealed from, or have not been set aside in the manner provided in the Workmen's Compensation Act (article 8,307, §
What we have said disposes of appellant's third proposition.
Appellant's second proposition asserts:
"The trial upon an appeal from an award of the Industrial Accident Board being de novo, the entire claim and rights of the parties can be adjudicated, even though not passed upon by the board, and a failure to assert such rights is a complete bar to subsequent suit, as the doctrine of res adjudicata applies."
This contention cannot be sustained. The claim of appellee was not involved in the award of July 2, 1926. The sums awarded to appellee in the award of December 13, 1926, here in contest, were paid by appellee after the first award, and formed no part of its claim before the board acted upon July 2, 1926, from which appellant appealed to the district court of Liberty county, and therefore its right to them could not have been adjudicated in that suit. When appellant appealed from the award of July 2, 1926, appellee, by cross-action, asked for judgment for the amount awarded to it in the first award, and obtained such judgment October 11, 1926. The award here involved was not made by the board until December 13, 1926. Article
Appellant's fourth proposition is that a subscriber cannot recover from the insurer attorney's fees or penalty by reason of the failure of the insurer to appeal from an award of the board.
This proposition is not based upon any sufficient assignment of error. It is based upon assignment of error No. 6, which reads:
"The trial court erred in granting judgment for plaintiff, Peer Oil Corporation, in any amount, for the reason that same is not authorized under the Employers' Liability or Workmen's Compensation Act of the state of Texas."
This assignment is too general; merely asserts that the judgment is contrary to the law; in no wise points out wherein the judgment is not authorized by the law. Central Lumber Co. v. Fall (Tex.Civ.App.)
No error being shown, the judgment should be affirmed.