Bendelari v. Kinslow

1943 OK 137, 136 P.2d 918, 192 Okla. 390, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 13, 1943
DocketNo. 30611.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1943 OK 137 (Bendelari v. Kinslow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bendelari v. Kinslow, 1943 OK 137, 136 P.2d 918, 192 Okla. 390, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 177 (Okla. 1943).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court brought by A. E. Bendelari, agent, and Eagle-Picher Mining & Smelting company, hereinafter referred to as petitioners, to obtain a review of an award which was made on September 29, 1941, by the State Industrial Commission in favor of William Kinslow, hereinafter referred to as respondent.

On August 22, 1925, the respondent sustained an accidental personal injury which resulted in serious damage to his eyes, face, and neck and permanent disfigurement. The petitioners furnished necessary medical attention and hospital care and paid compensation for resulting temporary total disability for a period of 95 weeks. The respondent filed a claim with the Industrial Commission based on this injury. The parties, on June 24, 1927, stipulated that temporary disability had terminated as of that date, and attempted by joint petition to settle for the sum of $500 for permanent disability which had resulted from the accidental injury. The State Industrial Commission, however, did not assume jurisdiction over the joint petition for the reason that the parties did not comply with its requirement that they either appear or else furnish evidence by deposition upon which said tribunal could act upon the joint petition, and on account of failure of parties to comply with such requirement made no further order in the matter. The petitioners, however, paid and the respondent accepted the sum of $500 which had been agreed upon in the joint petition. The respondent then returned to the employment of the petitioners as a watchman at a weekly wage of $28. Respondent continued in this latter employment until January 4, 1931, when he sustained another accidental personal injury which resulted in the loss of a finger and systemic blood infection which required medical care and hospitalization for a period of approximately 75 weeks.

Upon the occurrence of this latter injury the petitioners began paying respondent compensation at the rate of $13.46 per week and continued to pay him at such rate for a period of 500 weeks. The respondent filed a claim for compensation based upon this injury.

Thereafter, on February 18, 1941, the respondent filed with the State Industrial Commission a motion to obtain a de *392 termination of the degree of permanent disability which he had sustained as a result of his injury on August 22, 1925, and an award of compensation for such disability and the permanent disfigurement which he had also sustained as the result of such injury. The petitioners contested liability on the ground that they had fully discharged their liability to the respondent by making payments which they had made for temporary total disability and $500 in connection with the first injury and the subsequent payment of 500 weeks for permanent total disability.

As a result of hearings had, the trial commissioner made the order now under review; the pertinent findings and portions thereof read as follows:

“1. That heretofore, on the 14th day of September, 1926, an order was issued herein finding that on the 22nd day of August, 1925, the claimant was in the employment of the respondent, and on said date sustained a compensable injury; that claimant’s average wage at the time of his injury was $5 per day, and that as a result of said accident claimant had been temporarily totally disabled from the date of said injury and at the time said order was issued claimant was temporarily totally disabled from the performance of ordinary manual labor and whether or not claimant sustained any permanent loss of vision and other permanent injuries and the extent thereof was undeterminable at that time and the commission ordered the respondent to pay claimant compensation at the rate of $18 per week computed from August 27, 1925, until the termination of disability or until otherwise ordered.
“2. That the accidental personal injury sustained by claimant consisted of injury to both eyes and disfigurement to his face and neck.
“3. That claimant’s temporary total disability ceased .as of June 27, 1927, in accordance with stipulation and for which period of time claimant has heretofore been paid compensation.
“4. That as a result of said accidental injury claimant sustained a 91.8% loss of vision to his right eye and 25% loss of vision to his left eye.
“5. That as a further result of. said accidental injury claimant sustained serious and permanent disfigurement on his face and neck.
“Upon consideration of the foregoing facts, the trial commissioner is of the opinion that claimant is entitled to the sum of $5,256, as compensation for 91.8% loss of vision in his right eye and 25% loss of vision in his left eye, the same being based upon the relationship that said disability bears to a permanent total award of 500 weeks or 58.4% of a permanent total award of 500 weeks, being a total of 292 weeks compensation at $18 per week; and that claimant is entitled to the sum of $500 as compensation for his serious and permanent disfigurement resulting from said accidental injury of August 22, 1925.
“It is therefore ordered by the trial commissioner, that within twenty days from the filing of this order the respondent pay to the claimant herein the sum of $5,262 in a lump sum (less the sum of $500 paid claimant on June 24, 1927, for which the respondent should be given credit, and less the amount hereinafter set out as attorney fee), the same being compensation for 91.8% loss of vision to claimant’s right eye and 25% loss of visión on his left eye, the same being based upon the relationship that said disability bears to a permanent total award of 500 weeks, or 58.4% of a permanent total award of 500 weeks, and being 292 weeks at $18 per week; and respondent pay claimant the sum of $500 in a lump sum, as compensation for his serious and permanent disfigurement resulting from said accident injury of August 22, 1925.”

The petitioner urges two propositions, which read as follows:

“1. Claimant has been paid for 500 consecutive weeks for disability following the injury upon which the award appealed from is based. That it paid such compensation because of the then complete inability of claimant to work due to injuries sustained while in the employ of respondent previous to payment and that it matters not whether disability is the result of the first injury or the second injury, or a combination of both. That claimant cannot recover in any event more than 500 weeks’ compensation for existing disability resulting from injury sustained previous to *393 such payment regardless of the nature of the injury, the number of injuries, or the time of occurrence, if same occurred prior to such payment.
“2. If we are wrong in the above contention, the record shows in this case that the second injury consisted of loss of the fourth finger of left hand, for which claimant would be entitled to 15 weeks’ compensation for specific loss, at the rate of $13.46 per week. The record further shows that temporary total disability for this injury was 75 weeks, so claimant at most for this second injury would have been entitled to only 90 weeks’ compensation at the above rate, or the sum of $1,211.40.”

85 O. S. 1941 § 22 provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1943 OK 137, 136 P.2d 918, 192 Okla. 390, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bendelari-v-kinslow-okla-1943.