Biederzycki v. Farrel Foundry & MacHine Co.

131 A. 739, 103 Conn. 701, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 131 A. 739 (Biederzycki v. Farrel Foundry & MacHine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biederzycki v. Farrel Foundry & MacHine Co., 131 A. 739, 103 Conn. 701, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 51 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The various grounds of appeal resolve themselves into three. The first arises out of the denial of the defendants’ motion that the finding embody (1) the fact of the death of the defendant company’s employee, Biederzycki, and the name, residence, and age of his widow, and the names and ages of the minor children; (2) the date of the accident, the habits of the employee, and the period of time he worked after October 31st, 1923, when the finding of June 19th, 1923, recites he collapsed, and the physical condition of the employee at this time; or that a hearing de novo upon these issues be accorded. Defendants’ motion rests upon their claim that the case of the widow is separate and distinct from that of her husband, the employee of defendant Farrel Company, and therefore they are entitled at their ‘option to retry de novo, in whole or in part, the facts as found in the case of the employee. Defendants’ purpose is to retry the issues of fact determined in the finding made in the case of the employee, in order to prove that the conclusion there reached, that deceased received a compensable injury, was erroneous. The commissioner’s power to modify or reopen an award is governed by General Statutes, § 5355, that, any award or voluntary agreement for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act shall be subject to modification, upon the request of either party, “whenever it shall *704 appear to the compensation commissioner that the incapacity of an injured employee has increased, decreased or ceased, or that the measure of dependence, on account of which the compensation is paid, has changed, or that changed conditions of fact have arisen which necessitate a change of such agreement or award in order properly to carry out the spirit of this chapter. The commissioner shall also have the same power to open and modify an award as any court of the State has to open and modify a judgment of such court.” Our construction of this statute in Hayden v. Wallace & Sons Mfg. Co., 100 Conn. 180, 123 Atl. 9, determines the point now raised by the defendants adversely to them. The defendants in that case moved to reopen the award for the reason that, although defendants had voluntarily agreed to pay compensation to the claimants, nevertheless they had discovered, more than a year after making the agreement, that the plaintiffs were not employees of the defendant manufacturing company but were employees of an independent contractor. Defendants ignore the effect of this? decision, and read Jackson v. Berlin Construction Co., 93 Conn. 155, 105 Atl. 326, as holding that the claim of the deceased employee and the claim of his dependent are separate and distinct, and as a consequence the dependent,must be required to prove her claim without reference to the facts found in an adjudication of the employee’s claim. The opinion does not countenance this claim. It holds that the classes of compensation awarded the employee and his dependents are separate and independent of each other. But each arises out of the same compensable injury. If the employee is awarded compensation for an injury, and in consequence of it, subsequently dies, the injury preceding the death and the death arose out of the one injury, compensation for the latter is payable to and belongs *705 to the dependent, while the compensation awarded to the living employee is payable to and belongs to him. Upon the death of the employee within the two-year statutory period, the dependent is entitled to compensation under the statute. The facts found in the finding and award in favor of the employee, must be accepted as facts finally found in the claim for compensation by the dependent on account of the death of the employee. All that the dependent must prove are, the employee’s death, the dependence, and the causal connection between the injury for which the employee was awarded, or was entitled to have been awarded, compensation, and the death. No consideration advanced by the defendants in this case has made it necessary to modify or restate the construction placed upon General Statutes, § 5355, in Hayden v. Wallace & Sons Mfg. Co., supra.

The second ground of appeal is the alleged error of the commissioner in refusing to apportion the claim of the widow on account of the death of her husband in accordance with the provision of General Statutes, § 5341, as amended by the Public Acts of 1919, Chapter 142, § 1, as amended by the Public Acts of 1921, Chapter 306, § 1, which reads as follows: “In any case of aggravation of a disease existing prior to such injury, compensation shall be allowed only for such proportion of the disability due to the aggravation of such prior disease as may reasonably be attributed to the injury.” Defendants argue that as the compensation for this employee’s incapacity resulting from the injury was by this statute apportioned, it is inequitable not to apportion in the same manner the compensation as to the beneficiary on account of the death of the employee in the same manner. And further, that this and other sections of the Workmen’s Compensation Act make it reasonably clear that when this amendment to § 5341 *706 provides that in case of aggravation of a disease existing prior to the injury, compensation shall be apportioned for such proportion of the disability as may reasonably be attributed to the injury, it used the word disability as applicable to the incapacity prior to the death, as well as to the death resulting from the injury. We are unable to agree in this construction. The true construction seems to us so plain that we do not purpose a comprehensive analysis of the terms of this Act in order to meet this argument. When the amendment uses the term disability, it manifestly uses it in the sense of incapacity, a use which prevails through the Act. If we are right in this, it would follow that the amendment we quote refers to the living, and not to the case of death. Neither in this section nor in the entire Act is disability used in the sense of death. And everywhere the Act uses incapacity, total or partial, in the sense of disability. This section makes the distinction when it provides, “the employer shall not be liable to any action for damages on account of personal injury sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of his employment or on account of death resulting from injury so sustained.” Construction was placed by the commissioner of the second district, in 1921, upon the use of the word incapacity as synonymous with disability, and the Superior Court sustained the holding. This construction has been accepted and followed until this case arose. Death is a fixed fact which cannot be apportioned in the manner provided in the amendment to this section of the General Statutes.

The point which the defendants argue last underlies each of the other procedural points which they present, and, if sound, would make unnecessary their determination, for it would demonstrate that there had been no compensable injury suffered by this em *707 ployee. The contention is that the principle announced in Miller v. American Steel & Wire Co., 90 Conn. 349, 97 Atl. 345, and in Linnane v. Aetna Brewing Co., 91 Conn. 158, 99 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
131 A. 739, 103 Conn. 701, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biederzycki-v-farrel-foundry-machine-co-conn-1926.