DocketNumber: No. 12669.
Judges: Looney
Filed Date: 6/18/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an appeal from an award by the Industrial Accident Board, hence arose under the Workmen's Compensation Law, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq. The parties will be referred to as in the court below. Earnest Washington, employee of Southern Lead Company, subscriber, in the course of employment, accidentally stepped into a vat of molten lead, severely burning his right foot, especially near the ankle, and more or less severely above the ankle but below the knee. The National Indemnity Underwriters of America, defendant, was the insurance carrier.
The case was submitted to the jury on the theory that, plaintiff's right leg, in its entirety, was involved. The jury found that he suffered 28 weeks of total disability (at $10.90 per week); also suffered 33 1/3 percent loss of the use of his leg for 208 weeks (reduced by remittitur to 172 weeks) at $3.63 per week, making a total of $930.12, for which judgment was rendered, resulting in this appeal by writ of error.
The main contention of the defendant is, that the theory on which the case was submitted — that is, as involving injury to plaintiff's right leg, as distinguished from injury to his foot — was not authorized by *Page 1072 either the pleadings or evidence. After a careful examination of the pleadings and the evidence bearing upon this issue, we have reached the conclusion that both the pleadings and evidence justified the submission. In view of the record, we cannot say that it reveals no evidence authorizing the submission or justifying the findings of the jury.
Another contention is that, in several respects the court's charge was upon the weight of the evidence. We do not think so. By apt phraseology the court seems to have been meticulous in efforts to avoid commission of the error assigned.
Defendant contends further that the court committed fatal error in failing to submit the case on the theory of a foot injury alone. Defendant laid the basis of this contention by simply objecting to the court's charge, on the ground that both the pleadings and evidence confined plaintiff's injury to his right foot, and, in this connection, requested the court to prepare and submit to the jury, in lieu of the issue presented in the charge, a proper issue inquiring as to a partial loss of the use of plaintiff's right foot. But, defendant failed to accompany this request with a correctly prepared issue, in such form as that the court could have indorsed thereon either "given" or "refused".
Objections to a charge are designed to reach errors of commission in the charge as prepared; errors of omission should be taken advantage of by requested issues correctly prepared. The following authorities sustain this doctrine: Gulf, C. S. F. Ry. Co. v. Conley,
Judgment of the court below is affirmed.
In its motion for rehearing, defendant contends that our holding is in conflict with the following cases: Morrison v. Antwine, Tex. Civ. App.
Recognizing, but notwithstanding the conflict, we followed the rule announced by the Supreme Court in Gulf, C. S. F. Ry. Co. v. Conley, supra, in which, after referring to the statutes involved and quoting from former Art. 1971 (now Art. 2185), the Court said: "The article further makes it the duty of the trial court to decide on and instruct the jury as to the law arising on the facts, and to submit all controverted questions of fact to the decision of the jury. Article 1985 [now Art. 2190], relating to the submission of cases on special issues, requires the court to submit all the isses made by the pleadings, and provides that the failure to submit any issue shall not be deemed a ground for a reversal of the judgment unless its submission was requested in writing by the complaining party. These two statutes were enacted to accomplish the same purpose, and we think a failure to submit any particular issue under either statute can be reviewed on appeal only where the record shows a special charge was tendered on that issue."
The doctrine announced by the Supreme Court was subsequently followed by the Eastland Court of Civil Appeals, in Harris v. Thornton's Department Store,
The Supreme Court, in a per curiam opinion (see Harris v. Leslie,
Objections to charges given need not be followed by the tender of special charges on the issue involved, but not so as to omissions; in the latter instance, the wisdom of requiring a litigant to tender a special charge supplying a deficiency is in order that a full disclosure of the alleged omission may be made, otherwise, the court, in the hurried discharge of duties, would be required to interpret objections, often ambiguous and equivocal in meaning.
We therefore overrule defendant's motion for rehearing.
Harris v. Thornton's Department Store ( 1936 )
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Conley ( 1924 )
Southern Underwriters v. Sanders ( 1937 )
F. C. Pennington Produce Co. v. Browning ( 1927 )
Kansas City, M. & O. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Foster ( 1932 )
City of Brownwood v. Anderson ( 1936 )
Aetna Life Insurance v. Gallagher ( 1936 )