Best v. London Guarantee & Accident Co.

47 P.2d 456, 100 Mont. 332, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 92
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1935
DocketNo. 7,424.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 P.2d 456 (Best v. London Guarantee & Accident Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Best v. London Guarantee & Accident Co., 47 P.2d 456, 100 Mont. 332, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 92 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

On June 20, 1933, Walter A. Best was employed as a cement finisher on certain improvements being made by the Great Western Sugar Company at its sugar factory in Billings. While in the performance of his duties, he sustained injuries as the result of an industrial accident, which was reported to his employer. The injured man filed a timely claim for compensation which, after hearing had, was denied by the Industrial Accident Board. A formal motion for a rehearing, unsupported by affidavits, was denied and the claimant appealed to the district court of Yellowstone county, where a trial was had on the record presented by the board and additional testimony. The “additional testi *336 mony” covered the entire line of inquiry concerning the accident, the condition.of, the claimant prior to and immediately succeeding the injury, and the nature and extent of the injury, as well as new matter,' and his condition subsequent to the hearing and decision of the board, a portion of which was presented by depositions. The court reversed the board and entered judgment in favor of the claimant and against the defendant London Guarantee & Accident Company, the insurance carrier for the sugar company, operating under “plan 2” of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Bev. Codes 1921, secs. 2978 et seq.). This judgment awards the claimant $18 per week for a period of 300 weeks, beginning with the date of the accident, and orders that the amount due to the date of the judgment be paid in a lump sum, with costs and disbursements. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.

The defendants make fourteen specifications of error which, in their .entirety, but present the questions hereinafter considered.

The first specification is that, since the petition for rehearing did not set forth specifically, and in full detail, the evidence sought to be introduced on a rehearing or appeal, and did not show why, with due diligence, the evidence could not have been produced at the hearing, the court erred in considering anything other than the record made before the board.

Section 2955, Bevised Codes of 1921, prescribes the grounds on which the rehearing may be asked, and section 2957 declares that “the application for rehearing shall set forth specifically and in full detail the grounds upon which the applicant considers said order, decision, * * * or regulation to be unjust, or unlawful, and shall in other respects conform to such rules and regulations as.the board may prescribe.” This latter section then authorizes the board to make rules to govern the procedure on rehearing.

Under a statute similar to our section 2957, above, and an additional section which finds no counterpart in our Act (sec. 77, Workmen’s Compensation Act of Colorado [Laws 1915, p. 556]), which provides that “no action * * ® to set aside” *337 any finding, order, or award of the commission “shall be brought unless the plaintiff shall have first applied to the commission for a hearing thereon,” the supreme court of Colorado has held that the commission must be given an opportunity to review its own findings before resort may be had to the courts (Passini v. Industrial Commission, 64 Colo. 349, 171 Pac. 369), and that error and objections not specified in the petition for a rehearing cannot be considered by the courts, as the petition for review by the commission defines the limits of the inquiry in subsequent proceedings (London Guarantee & Accident Co. v. Sauer, 92 Colo. 565, 22 Pac. (2d) 624). Whether, without such a provision as Colorado’s section 77, we would hold, in a proper case, as did the Colorado court, on our declarations respecting appeals in civil or criminal cases in which no motion for a new trial is made, we need not now determine.

The record here discloses that the claimant was not present at the original hearing on his claim, he being then confined in a hospital, and that he was not there represented by counsel. It further appears that his petition for a rehearing was drafted by the chairman of the board and submitted for his signature only. The claimant was not advised that he must supplement the petition drafted by the-chairman by any further statement of his grounds for a rehearing, but was advised that he need not employ an attorney until after the board disposed of his petition for a rehearing, and, in effect, that all that was required of him at that time was the signing of the petition presented to him, the chairman stating in his letter transmitting the petition to a friend of the claimant, “in other words, his signing the- inclosed petition for a rehearing will save him the necessity of an attorney for the present.”

The claimant having done all that was required of him by the board, cannot now be said to have lost his rights on appeal to the district court, under the rule of liberal construction, without regard to technicalities, which must be, and always has been, applied to proceedings of this nature by this court. In fairness to the chairman of the board, it should be noted that it is not *338 the board but an insurance carrier urging the adoption of the technical rule.

The petition here states all the grounds for a rehearing permitted by the statute, except fraud, in the language of the chairman, and was sufficient to raise all questions which may be raised in the courts after a petition for a rehearing and was so intended by the chairman.

It is next asserted that there was no timely or sufficient showing of “good cause” to permit the trial court to admit “additional testimony” at the trial, under the provisions of the Act (see. 2960, Rev. Codes 1921). Claimant’s application for leave to introduce additional testimony was made at the opening of the trial, in the presence of opposing counsel who had advance notice that such an application would be made, inasmuch as, long prior to the trial, counsel had been given notice of the taking of depositions to be used on the trial and had been present and cross-examined deponents. The application was timely. As this court has heretofore said: “In the absence of some statutory requirement as to the manner in which the discretion of the court shall be invoked, the informal presentation of persuasive reasons why additional testimony should be taken, made in the presence of opposing counsel who thus has an opportunity to be heard on the subject, is a sufficient showing of ‘good cause.’ ” (Sykes v. Republic Coal Co., 94 Mont. 239, 22 Pac. (2d) 157, 159.)

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Bluebook (online)
47 P.2d 456, 100 Mont. 332, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/best-v-london-guarantee-accident-co-mont-1935.