Asp v. McPherson County Highway Department

388 P.2d 652, 192 Kan. 444, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1964
DocketNo. 43,635
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 388 P.2d 652 (Asp v. McPherson County Highway Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asp v. McPherson County Highway Department, 388 P.2d 652, 192 Kan. 444, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 260 (kan 1964).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

This is an appeal by the claimant in a workmen s compensation case. An award of compensation entered for claimant by the examiner against the respondent and its insurance carrier was reversed by the director and an appeal taken to the district court. This appeal is from the judgment of the district court affirming the order of the director denying the award to claimant as well as from all other findings, rulings, and orders of the court.

Claimant was injured on August 12, 1960, while working with his foreman, Clifton Stout, on a bridge construction job for the McPherson County Highway Department. Claimant and Stout were carrying a water pump weighing about 175 pounds when claimant slipped and fell. He told Stout he had hurt his back. Several days later the two men discussed the condition of claimants back and claimant told Stout that Doctor Dyck, his regular family doctor, thought it was not an injury but an illness. Together the two men decided no accident report should be filed. Claimant [445]*445had understood from his own reading of respondent’s work rules that report of the accident had to be made to respondent, the county highway department, within seven days. Claimant tried to work from time to time but on September 10, 1960, he had to quit his work entirely because of pain in his back. He went to Doctor Rombold in Wichita in April, 1961. He was unable to work because of a pinched nerve in his back which caused pain across his back and down his leg. He wanted to have surgery on his back to correct his difficulty.

No report of the accident was made until February 5,1962, when claimant, at the suggestion of his attorney, requested Stout, his foreman, to sign an accident report and also that he, claimant, be allowed to file the report.

The parties stipulated that on August 12, 1960, claimant had sustained personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment, that the accident report was mailed by claimant and was filed with the director on February 7, 1962, and that written claim was made on April 3,1962.

In making his award in favor of claimant, the examiner summarized the testimony of the witnesses in pertinent part as follows:

Clifton Stout, a witness for claimant, testified he was employed by the respondent as a foreman. On August 12, 1960, he and claimant were working on a bridge and while they were carrying a pump, claimant slipped and fell. He noticed thereafter that claimant did not work as he had before, he did not walk erect and moved around differently. The reason he had not filed an accident report after the occurrence on August 12, 1960, was that claimant had told him Doctor Dyck had said his illness was not caused by an accident. He had not known claimant had been “doctoring” with Doctor Dyck because of a back difficulty prior to August 12, 1960. The two men agreed no accident report would be filed. After the first of the year in 1962 claimant and his attorney brought an accident report already made out and asked Stout to read it and see if he thought it was correct. He knew this was not the regular procedure because he did not actually prepare accident reports himself. The procedure was that Stout turned the accident in to the shop foreman, or shop clerk, and that person filled out the accident report. However, Stout thought the report was in order and he signed it. He did not mail the report but assumed claimant was going to do so.

[446]*446Francis Rankin testified lie had been county engineer for respondent since February 1, 1962, and that the procedure of his office concerning compensation reports had been the same as long as he had been in the office. The foreman reported the accident to the shop clerk, who made out a rough draft which was turned in to the county engineer’s office, typed, and then signed by him. He was the only one with authority to file accident reports. The first he knew of claimant’s injury was a letter he received from the compensation director after the accident report had been filed. The accident report had not been cleared through him nor had he given any foreman authority to sign and file reports.

Ruth Raker, a stenographer and bookkeeper for the county engineer, stated she had been so employed on August 12, 1960, but that she had known nothing of claimant’s alleged accident until after the first of the year in 1962. Her testimony on the procedure for filing accident reports was substantially the same as that of the county engineer, as was also the testimony of several other witnesses called by the respondent.

The examiner allowed an award to claimant for temporary total disability, the details of which are not here material. In his findings the examiner stated the chief question was whether the written claim had been made within the statutory period. He held that the provision of G. S. 1961 Supp., 44-557, requiring that where a report of accident has not been filed with the director, claimant must commence his action within one year, applied only when an accident report had never been filed, and he further held that 44-557, requiring the filing of a claim and commencing of an action, was tolled as to claimant until the accident report of February 7, 1962, was filed, and, therefore, his written claim filed on April 3, 1962, was within the statutory period of 180 days.

On review the compensation director on November 20, 1962, found that the accident report was properly filed but that it was filed after the time during which the statute requires the report to be filed. As to the effect of the late filing of the report, the director in his opinion in pertinent part stated:

“The statutes applicable appear to be G. S. 1961 Supp., 44-520a and 44-557. Among other things, said Section 44-520a provides that a claim for compensation must be served upon the employer within 180 days after the accident, or in cases where compensation payments have been suspended, within 180 days after the date of the last payment of compensation. The provisions of 44-520a are modified somewhat by the provisions of 44-557 particularly the [447]*447last proviso which states that any proceedings for compensation where a report of accident has not been filed, must be commenced before the Director within one year from the date of the accident, suspension of payment of compensation or death of the workman. The Director is of the opinion that the longest period of time during which a claimant may file a claim for compensation is one year following the date of accident or one year following the last payment of compensation, and that this is possible only in those cases where the employer fails to file an accident report as required by said Section 44-557. In making this decision, the Director is not unmindful of the arguments of the Examiner and counsel for claimant, wherein they point out a proviso in said Section 44-557 which states that no limitation of time in this Act provided shall begin to run unless a report of the accident as therein provided has been filed at the office of the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation Director if the injured workman shall have given his notice of injury as provided by Section 44-520.
“In the instant case, the facts clearly show that approximately 18 months had elapsed after the accident before an accident report was filed and approximately the same amount of time had elapsed since the last payment of compensation in the form of medical treatment had been made to the claimant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
388 P.2d 652, 192 Kan. 444, 1964 Kan. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asp-v-mcpherson-county-highway-department-kan-1964.