Buffington v. Continental Casualty Company

367 P.2d 539, 69 N.M. 365
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1961
Docket6844
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 367 P.2d 539 (Buffington v. Continental Casualty Company) 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
Buffington v. Continental Casualty Company, 367 P.2d 539, 69 N.M. 365 (N.M. 1961).

Opinion

CHAVEZ, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment against a workmen’s compensation claimant, dismissing his claim against one of two insurers, the Continental Casualty Company, as set forth in the first count of his amended complaint, filed November 18, 1959.

Appellant’s amended complaint under count 1 alleged that in the course of his employment he suffered an accidental injury on or about November 15, 1957, while lifting a heavy wooden beam, but continued to work for his employer, doing the same work and receiving his regular wages averaging $132.50 per week, until July 22, 1959, when he became disabled by reason of the injury of November 15, 1957, which then became apparent and compensable, and which was diagnosed on July 23, 1959, as a ruptured intervertebral disc.

In the second count, appellant’s claim against appellee, Traders & General Insurance Company, alleged that in the course of his employment with appellee, Will Noaclc, and being subject to the physical condition mentioned in count 1, to-wit, the ruptured intervertebral disc, the stress and strain of his work of laying floor tile aggravated said existing condition, and as a natural and direct result, appellant became disabled on July 22, 1959.

In both counts, appellant alleged that appellees had actual knowledge and notice of the accident and the compensable injury, and alleged further that appellee, Continental Casualty Company, was the insurance -carrier for the employer from prior to November 15, 1957, to August 15, 1958, and that from August 15, 1958, to the date of the amended complaint, the insurance carrier was Traders & General Insurance Company.

On October 29, 1959, appellant filed his jury demand.

On November 23, 1959, appellees Noack and Continental Casualty Company, filed a separate answer denying generally the material allegations of the amended complaint, but admitted the employment, salary, insurance coverage, and failure to pay compensation. They also affirmatively alleged that they had no notice or knowledge of an accidental injury and further, since appellant had failed to file his claim within the period provided by law, that the action was barred.

A separate answer was also filed by appellees, Noack and Traders & General Insurance Company, but Traders & General Insurance Company, not being an appellee herein, the substance thereof is not material to this appeal.

Our attention is directed to the fact that between the date of the first accident, November 15, 1957, and the date of the second accident, July 22, 1959, a new Workmen’s Compensation Act was adopted. Laws 1959, Ch. 67.

On April 21, I960, the deposition of 'appellant taken on March 14, 1960, was filed.

A pretrial conference was held and on May 2, 1960, the trial court entered an order reciting that at the pretrial conference no admissions or stipulations were obtained by counsel, but that the trial court, after considering appellant’s deposition, concluded from said deposition:

“1. That no action can be maintained because of the alleged injury of November, 1957, -because of lack of knowledge and failure to give notice within the time provided by law; that the alleged injury of November, 1957, was not latent, but was apparent to claimant at all times. That the claim as to this alleged injury of November, 1957, should be dismissed as to defendant, Continental Casualty Company, and the matter removed from the jury docket.
“2. -That this cause is at issue as to the second alleged injury of July, 1959, there being disputed questions of fact, not resolved by the deposition, as to notice of injury and awareness of the extent of the disability resulting from the first alleged injury.”

The trial court ordered that the case be dismissed with prejudice as to appellee, Continental . Casualty Company, to which appellant excepted.

' Appellant relies upon three points for reversal:

I. In dismissing plaintiff’s complaint as to defendant, Continental Casualty Company, after the pretrial conference, the trial court determined certain factual issues and thus committed error by exceeding the scope of the pretrial conference.

II. Plaintiff’s deposition, on which the trial court’s order was based, does not admit nor show that the defendant-employer, Noack, did not have actual knowledge of the occurrence of the injury of November, 1957.

III. That if written notice was required, the time for same did not begin to run until the plaintiff was chargeable with notice that he had sustained a compensable injury, and the deposition shows written notice was given within such required time.

Appellees set up the following counterpoint to sustain the judgment:

The court’s action in entering judgment for the defendants, Noack and Continental Casualty Company, on the first cause of action as the result of the pretrial hearing was proper, as under the statements and admissions of plaintiff the action could not he maintained because filed more than one year after the failure or refusal to pay compensation.

An examination of appellant’s deposition taken March 14, 1960, discloses the following: On the morning of the 1957 accident, finally fixed as November 6, 1957, appellant, a carpenter, age 31, and another carpenter, Ted Townsend, were carrying a heavy beam, intended to be used as a window header, consisting of double two-by-twelves, spiked together and approximately sixteen feet long. As they bent over to lay it down, appellant felt “like he had pulled something, something had jerked, or something snapped in his lower back.” Also present was the employer’s son, J. C. Noack, who, according to the deposition, had no supervisory authority. The employer, Will Noack, was absent the day of the accident, but appellant informed him of it the next day. The deposition does not indicate the nature and extent of this notice except that it was verbal. Appellant took that afternoon off, was examined by Dr. Pitts, who took no X-rays, gave appellant a heat and vibrator treatment, and informed him that he supposed it was a pulled muscle. Appellant went to work the next day and, according to his testimony, missed no time because of the accident until the tile-laying incident in July, 1959.

Appellant had been a carpenter for about twenty years and, until the date of the accident, had suffered no trouble with his back. From that time on the pain would come and go, but it never prevented him from working, although he would have to favor his back and use a heating pad about once every two weeks. Once in awhile, he would complain to Mr. Noack that he was stiff or that his back hurt and Mr. Noack would assure him that he had insurance and that he could see a doctor whenever he was ready to do so. At no time did appellant demand compensation prior to the 1959 incident. Appellant indicated that he had no idea of the seriousness of the injury, assuming that his stiffness was caused by the fact that “in the carpenter trade, you are continuously lifting or something of that sort.” It was not until some time early in 1959, probably March, that he went to see Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
367 P.2d 539, 69 N.M. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffington-v-continental-casualty-company-nm-1961.