82 S.W.2d 747 | Tex. App. | 1935
This is a compensation suit wherein appellee, as plaintiff, was awarded compensation in a lump sum for total permanent disability at the rate of $20 per week. Tenaha Compress Warehouse Company was the employer and appellant, Traders' General Insurance Company, was the compensation insurance carrier.
This is the second appeal of this case. On the former appeal this court affirmed the judgment of the trial court awarding claimant compensation in a lump sum and discounting same at the rate of 6 per cent. Traders' General Insurance Co. v. Powell,
The controlling facts appear without dispute and are in every material respect the same as on the former appeal. Briefly stated, the facts are:
The employer, Tenaha Compress Warehouse Company, was engaged in the operation of a cotton compress and the storage of cotton in the town of Tenaha, Shelby county, Tex. A few days prior to June 30, 1930, appellee, Chester L. Powell, was employed by the compress company as a general laborer, and began work along with the other employees of the company in making repairs of the property. It appears from the evidence that the compressing season had closed and no cotton had been compressed for a month or more. But the plant was prepared to receive and store cotton, and some was then in storage. The employees were engaged in making needed repairs and putting the plant in condition for the fall business. For a day or two after Powell went to work he and the other employees worked at tearing up and replacing flooring in the plant. The manager, Mr. E. W. Muckleroy, then directed the employees to go to Center, Tex., about 10 miles distant, and dismantle a steel water tank and tower which had been purchased secondhand, remove it to Tenaha, and re-erect it on the premises of the compress. The old water tank then in use at the plant was inadequate to furnish a sufficient supply of water for the boilers, and was practically worn out. Also it did not afford sufficient water or water pressure for fire protection for the plant and the cotton in storage. This resulted in high insurance rates on the stored cotton. It seems that such insurance was paid by the owners of the cotton, and Mr. Muckleroy testified that the high insurance rates threatened serious curtailment of the business of the compress. The secondhand water tank and tower had been purchased with the view of supplying the plant with adequate water for all purposes. All employees of the company, from the manager on down, went to Center, as directed, and began the work of tearing down the water tower. After they had been working about four days, Powell fell from the tower to the ground, a distance of about 60 feet, and as a result was very seriously injured. It is not disputed that he is totally and permanently disabled. The trial was to a jury, and, all issues submitted being answered in favor of appellee, judgment was entered in his favor awarding him compensation on the basis of $20 per week for 401 weeks, which was ordered to be paid in a lump sum, with a discount of 3 per cent.; that being the rate of discount fixed by the jury.
By its first two propositions appellant contends that appellee, at the time of his injury, was not an employee of the compress company within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Law (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq.), and within the meaning of the policy of insurance, in that under the undisputed evidence he was engaged in special work for his employer of an unusual and extraordinary nature.
The same contention on the identical state of facts here presented was urged by appellant on the former appeal of this case. On the former appeal this court held that the assignments did not present error.
What we have said above applies with equal force to appellant's propositions complaining of the method employed for determining appellee's compensation rate. Appellant's proposition in this connection is to the effect that the weekly wage of $39, as determined by the jury, was based upon the daily wage of $6.50 per day, which, at the time of the injury, was being paid to appellee for a "temporary and unusual employment," and the trial court should not have permitted the jury to fix the weekly wage upon such temporary rate of pay. This very question was before us on the former appeal, and it was held by this court that the method used for determining the wage rate was correct.
Appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in submitting to the jury for finding the matter of reasonable rate of discount for a lump sum settlement; it being appellant's contention that the discount is fixed by statute at 6 per cent. This court so held on the former appeal, but it was upon that very point that the Supreme Court reversed our judgment and remanded the case. The trial court submitted the matter to the jury in accordance with the opinion of the Commission of Appeals. R. S. Sanders, a banker, and whose testimony is not disputed in any way, testified that 3 per cent. would be a reasonable discount rate on the deferred payments in case of a lump sum settlement. The jury fixed the rate accordingly.
On oral argument counsel for appellant conceded that on the former appeal its contention of no liability because appellee was engaged at the time of his injury in tearing down the water tank was urged in this court and in the Supreme Court, but it was nevertheless insisted that we should re-examine the question of liability, particularly in view of the subsequent action of the Supreme Court in granting the writ of error on the dissenting opinion of Justice Bond in Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. Wright (Tex. Civ. App.)
Finding no error, the judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.