Albuquerque & Cerrillos Coal Co. v. Lermuseaux

187 P. 560, 25 N.M. 686
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1920
DocketNo. 2372
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 187 P. 560 (Albuquerque & Cerrillos Coal Co. v. Lermuseaux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albuquerque & Cerrillos Coal Co. v. Lermuseaux, 187 P. 560, 25 N.M. 686 (N.M. 1920).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

PARKEE, C. J.

This case is brought here by writ of error to the district court for Bernalillo county to review a judgment rendered against the Albuquerque & Cerrillos Coal Company, defendant, and the Interstate Casualty Company, insurer, and in favor of the widow and son of Lewis Lermuseaux.

The claims of the defendants in error, hereinafter called the plaintiffs, alleged their relationship to and dependency upon the deceased; that the deceased was killed on July 31, 1918, “at or near Madrid or Waldo, N. M.,” while engaged in the employment of the defendant; and specified the manner and cause of death, and the average weekly wage of the deceased as $75. The defendant and the insurer answered, admitting the death of the deceased, the infliction of the injury in the manner specified in the claims, and the employment of the deceased, but denied all other matters set out in the claims. The claims of the plaintiffs were consolidated, and judgments were rendered in favor of each plaintiff against the defendant and the insurer.

For the first time in this court the proposition is raised as to what court has original jurisdiction of claims under the Workmen’s Compensation Act (chapter 83, Laws 1917). The defendant and the insurer contend that, as the' injury to the deceased, resulting in his death, occurred in Santa Fe county, the venue of the proceeding is in the district court of Santa Fe county, and not in the district court of Bernalillo county. The parties have stipulated that the plaintiffs are residents of Sandoval county, and were such residents at the time of the filing of said claims; that the principal office of the defendant and insurer are in Bernalillo county, and that “Madrid and Waldo” are in Santa Fe county.

The failure of the Legislature to specify with any degree of exactness the venue of such suits under the said act is the occasion for the contention of the defendant and the insurer that the district court of Bernalillo county was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the said claims. An examination of the act discloses that the Legislature in at least one particular instance made use of language negativing the idea that the claimant might file his claim in any district court of his own choosing, for by the second paragraph of section 24 it is provided that “the district court in which the right to compensation provided herein is enforceable shall at all times have the right and power to authorize, direct or approve” settlements and compromises.

The Legislature evidently did not intend that jurisdiction of all claims was conferred upon all the district courts but did intend that the right of each particular district court to hear and determine a given claim was dependent upon certain jurisdictional facts and circumstances. What those facts and circumstances are is a troublesome question, for its solution must be obtained from a construction of various loosely drawn sections of the act. Section 2, among other things, provides that any employer, not engaged in an extrahazardous occupation, may become bound by the act by written agreement “filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of the county in which such occupation or pursuit is carried on. ’ ’ Section 3 provides for the filing of insurance or security by the employer in the office of the clerk of the district court for the county in which the employer ’s workmen are' employed, or the county wherein the employer anticipates, that such workmen will be employed. Where the employer is a public utility corporation doing business generally throughout the state, the insurance or security may be filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of the county wherein the principal place of business of the corporation is situated.

Section 16 has to do with the filing of claims by dependents of deceased workmen, and refers to section 13 for the procedure governing the same, Section 13 requires injured workmen claiming compensation under the act to file his “claim therefor in the manner and within the time hereinafter provided.” The only reference to the court in which the claim is to be filed in this section is “in the office of the clerk of the district court.” The claim is then docketed in such court, and 20 days is allowed to the employer and the insurer to answer. Upon request under certain limitations, the hearing may be held “ at a time and place to be fixed by order of court in the county where the injury occurred, or upon agreement of the parties at some other place in the district court. ’ ’

,The sections thus far considered leave room for speculation as to the proper venue for claims for compensation, although the inference is strong that not the residence of the parties governs, but the place where the employment is carried on. Everything the employer is required to do under the act must be done in the county where the “occupation or pursuit is carried on,” except in certain instances, and such place may or may not be the same as the place where the employer resides, or where its principal place of business is located. Section 14, however, resolves all doubts as to the legislative intent on the. subject. That section is as follows:

“In the event an employer has failed or neglected to file in the office of the clerk of the district court the bond or other undertaking, * * * such claim may be filed in the office of the clerk of any county where the injury occurred or where claimant or such employer resides, as the claimant may elect.

The words ‘ ‘ in the office of the clerk of any county, ’ ’ it is patent, mean in the office of the clerk of the district court of any county. The inference heretofore mentioned as to the legislative intent gathered from sections other than section 14 is thus fortified, and we are no longer confronted by an inference, but may proceed upon a clear legislative declaration.

[1] Section 14 would be entirely superfluous, had the Legislature intended that the claimant might, at his option, file his claim in any district court of his own choosing, or that the venue of claims was dependent upon the .residence of the parties. The legislature intended by the use of such language to lay the venue of all claims, other than those affected by the circumstances specified in section 14, in the district court of the county wherein the occupation or pursuit is carried on in which the workman is employed when injured.

[2] But must the judgment herein be reversed because the claimant filed his claim in the wrong county, and his right to compensation was there adjudicated without objection? The proceeding for compensation, under the act in question, it is true, is a special proceeding, unknown to the common law and nonexistent at the time the Constitution was adopted. Jurisdiction, under the act, is conferred upon the district courts of the state, and all the district courts have jurisdiction of the subject, or the general class of such actions. It majr be that the district court of Bernalillo county would not have jurisdiction of a claim for compensation, where the workman was employed in another county and the injury incurred there, but that would be simply lack of jurisdiction of the subject-matter in a particular case, which we shall show could be and was waived by a failure to object timely on that ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 P. 560, 25 N.M. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albuquerque-cerrillos-coal-co-v-lermuseaux-nm-1920.