Texas Employers' Ins. v. Morgan

SPEER, J.

Mildred Morgan, surviving wife of C. J. Morgan, deceased, for berself and tbe use and benefit of Blanche Morgan, tbeir minor child, prosecuted an appeal from the order of tbe Industrial Accident Board upon tbeir claim as beneficiaries under a policy issued by tbe Texas Employers’ Insurance Association, for the death of tbe deceased. Tbe controlling question in tbe case is presented by tbe defendant’s plea of compromise and settlement in full with C. J. Morgan during his lifetime, whereby, tbe association claims, any and all rights of tbe beneficiaries are forever barred. Tbe cause was tried before tbe court without a jury, and judgment rendered for tbe plaintiffs, and that judgment was affirmed upon appeal. (Tex. Civ. App.) 289 S. W. 75. It is admitted, and otherwise appears to be true, that tbe precise question of tbe effect of such a compromise and release by tbe employee upon tbe rights of tbe beneficiaries upon bis death from tbe injuries received in tbe course of bis employment has never been decided by our courts. And tbe decisions of other states involving statutes not shown to be like ours are of little aid to us. It is therefore a question of original consideration with us, and is necessarily one of construction of our Workmen’s Compensation Act (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. 1925, arts. 8306-8309). Plaintiff in error insists tbe question has been determined, in principle at least, by tbe' decision in Thompson v. Fort Worth & R. G. Ry. Co., 97 Tex. 590, 80 S. W. 991, 1 Ann. Cas. 231. That was a death action under our statute wherein tbe injured person bad executed a complete release, acknowledging full satisfaction of all injuries on account of tbe accident. Tbe Supreme Court held there was but one cause of action under tbe law for which there could be but one compensation, and that tbe settlement and release therefore left no right of action to tbe beneficiaries suing. Tbe decision turned, as it of course should, upon the intention of tbe Legislature in providing for such death actions. In construing that act, tbe court said :

"The language, ‘and the act, negligence or default is such as would if death bad not ensued have entitled the party injured to maintain an action for such injury,’ found in our first act, renders it practically certain that the purpose of the Legislature was to furnish a remedy for the .injury caused by the death to those dependent upon the deceased by giving to them an action in lieu of that which he might have maintained but did not assert; but not to pro-ride double compensation for one wrong.”

Now, of course, after the acceptance of a settlement and tbe execution of a full release, tbe injured man could not have maintained an action for such injury, and therefore, under tbe very terms of tbe statute, tbe beneficiaries bad no right of action. But there is no such limitation upon tbe rights of beneficiaries under our Workmen’s Compensation Act. This casp, however, is an outstanding authority upon tbe question before us to tbe extent that the test for decision is the intention of the Legislature. The Legislature, under certain well-known limitations, has tbe power to create, modify, or destroy causes of action, and its intention in this respect, when ascertained, is controlling. This necessitates an examination of the Workmen’s Compensation Law in that particular wherein it provides a cause of action for certain beneficiaries named in tbe act.

Section 8 of article 8306 of tbe Act declares :

“If death should result from the injury the association hereinafter created shall pay the legal beneficiaries of the deceased employee a weekly payment equal to 60% of his average weekly wages, but not more than $20.00 nor less than $7.00. per week, for a period of '360 weeks from the date of the injury.”'

And section 8b provides:

“In case death occurs as a result of the injury after a period of total or partial incapacity, for which compensation has been paid, the period of incapacity shall be deducted from tbe total period of compensation and the benefits paid thereunder from the maximum allowed for' the death.” ' '

While section 16 declares:

“In all cases of injury resulting in death, where such injury was sustained in the course of employment, cause of action shall survive.”

Now to our minds these provisions necessarily indicate that tbe Legislature intended that an injury to an employee in tbe course of bis employment by one operating under tbe act would give rise to one cause of action in favor, first, of tbe employee, and, second, in case of bis death therefrom, to bis relatives and dependents named as beneficiaries; that, in case of death, there should in no event be collected from tbe association an amount exceeding that naméd in section 8; that, notwithstanding an award by tbe board and payment by tbe association to tbe employer for a total or partial incapacity, there shall yet, in case of bis death, be paid to tbe beneficiaries the amount named in section 8, less tbe benefits paid to tbe employee.

Of course, as insisted by plaintiff in error, tbe award of tbe board, unless in some way legally set aside, has the force of a judgment, and is binding.on all parties. And likewise we think an agreement and settlement by *590.the payment pf -a reasonable sum; when approved by the board, has the. same force and effect, and, in either event, .if the sum paid equals' the maximum allowed' to' the benficia-fies in the case, there could bé no recovery by them, perforce of the statute itbelf, for such payments, whether by award ’of the' board origindlly or by voluntary agreement with the approval off the board. Williams v. Vauxhall, 97 L. T. (N. S.) 559, 1907 (2 K. B. 433), cited in note Ann. Cas. 19Í5B,' 831. But the acceptance by the employee of an agreed sum in settlement and the execution of a full release even though approved by the board, can have no greater effect upon the rights of the beneficiaries in the case, than the primary award of the board can have. Necessarily,' the award of the board or the order approving an agreement and settlement contemplates and embraces the full existing liability of the association, and the same is the maximum amount of recovery to which the employee is entitled for the injury. But .such an award 'or order also embraces necessarily the expressed terms of the law to the effect that, in casé death occurs as a result of the injufy, the legal beneficiaries of the deceased shall be entitled to receive the amount named In section 8 with the deduction stipulated in section 8b.

It is not so much a matter of separate causes of action — the one in favor of employees and tl:e other in favor of beneficiaries —as it ié thedntention of the Legislature there should be one cause of action, with one satisfaction, but payable to the person or persons named in the manner, to the extent and upon the contingencies stipulated in the act itself. The provision under section 16 that, in all cases of injury resulting in death where such injury was sustained in the course of employment, cause of action shall survive, indicates^ not that there arose at death a new- cause of action to the beneficiarles, but rather that the sole cause of action for the injury should survive to the beneficiary in the manner provided. It clearly was not contemplated that every award or order of the.board during the life Of the employee, although of course it covered the full compensation to the employee, should exhaust the right of recovery by the beneficiaries in case of death, and for precisely the same reason a settlement and release .by the employee could not have that effect. The provision for. redemption of liability by the association contained in' section 15, and the provision for'readjusting the amount of compensation contained in section 15a, evidence no intention contrary to that we have indicated. Whether the com- | pensation to- the employee be determined by the usual award, an order of. redemption, or an approval of an agreed settlement, - ¿11 the existing liability .of the association is .exhausted,, but neither méthod necessarily, affects the contingent rights of beneficiaries, yet either method may extinguish those rights as well. It all depends upon the amount paid for incapacity. If' that amount, any event should equal or exceed the recovery by the beneficiaries, then under the plain requirement for" a deduction the beneficiaries can have no recovery. Clearly, an agreement of compromise and settlement between the employee and the association can be no more comprehensive than the award of the board, and it is equally clear the award does not affect the beneficiaries, except as to the extent’ of deductions for payments made thereunder. So, here, the like effect has been properly given to the settlement by a deduction of the full amount paid. The trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals have correctly interpreted the statute.

The only remaining question is presented by the second assignment of error complaining that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that plaintiff in error did not by assignment or otherwise challenge the judgment of the trial court, in concluding that the death- of C. J. Morgan was proximately due to the injuries suffered by him. But this assignment is not supported by the statement which follows it. It is not shown that the Court of Civil Appeals made any such holding. On the contrary, that court held:

“We have examined the evidence, and, without undertaking to- set out the evidence, will say we think the above finding of the trial court to the effect that the death of C. J. Morgan resulted from the injury received by him on September 5, .1923, is amply supported by the evidence.”

Wé recommend that the judgments of the trial court and of the Court of Civil Appeals be affirmed.

CURETON, C. J.

Judgments of the district court and Court of Civil Appeals affirmed, as recommended by the Commission of Appeals.