Bunch v. Scanlon

172 N.E.2d 188, 85 Ohio Law. Abs. 378, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 97, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 260
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1959
DocketNo. 685184
StatusPublished

This text of 172 N.E.2d 188 (Bunch v. Scanlon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunch v. Scanlon, 172 N.E.2d 188, 85 Ohio Law. Abs. 378, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 97, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 260 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion By

Chaiiles W. White, J.

The Court. Now gentlemen of Counsel, the Court has before it a motion by the defendant Administrator to dismiss the notice of appeal and the petition on the ground that the requirements of Section 4123.51.9, Revised Code, have not been met.

The motion to dismiss was originally filed June 6, 1957, withdrawn February 11, 1959 and was refiled with a supplemental or additional brief and affidavit on February 13, 1959, so that the Court is confronted, inevitably confronted, with a decision on this question before this trial can continue to go forward.

By reference to the notice of appeal, it is stated therein that Michael Bunch, the employee, takes an appeal “from the order of the Industrial Commission entered May 22, 1956,” and it states that the order of the Commission is appealable under Section 4123.51.9, Revised Code.

The petition filed on the same date (that is, June 19, 1956), as the notice of appeal, referred, in turn, to no order of the Industrial Commission, except perhaps that of May 17, 1956, which notes that the claim came on for hearing under Sections 4123.51.9 and 4123.51.6, Revised Code, and was “held for decision.”

It is further alleged, following the allegations set forth, that the Order or Decision of May 22, 1956, was in terms as follows:

“Thereafter, on May 22, 1956, the following order was made:
“ ‘On further hearing, the Board of Review, after fully considering the proof of record, orders that claim for disability due to rheumatoid arthritis be disallowed on appeal; that the order of the District Board of Claims, made on October 22,1954, disallowing claim for such disability be affirmed.’ ”

This being an appeal pending on September 7, 1957, when House Bill 795, passed by the 102nd General Assembly became effective as an amendment to Section 4123.51.9, Revised Code (as originally enacted in 1955, and effective October 5, 1955), the 1957 Act provides, without equivacation or ambiguity:

[380]*380“Any action pending in Common Pleas Court on the effective date of this Act under Section 4123.519, Revised Code, shall be governed by the terms of this Act.”

The Court has no choice but to apply the terms of the 1957 Act so far as the technical aspects of this appeal are concerned.

Section 4123.51.9, Revised Code, as amended in 1957, and effective September 7, 1957, begins as follows, in the very first sentence, omitting parts not pertinent:

“The claimant may appeal a decision of the Industrial Commission in any injury case other than a decision as to the extent of disability, to the Court of Common Pleas of the County in which the injury was inflicted or in which the contract of employment was made if the injury occurred outside the State.”

Here we have a claimant who has undertaken to appeal from what is designated in his notice of appeal and, by inference, in his petition, a decision of the Industrial Commission, in an injury case which has nothing to do with the extent of disability. Such an appeal is permitted by the provision just read.

But the Legislature went further and provided that: “Like appeal may be taken from a decision of a Regional Board from which the Commission has refused to permit an appeal to the Commission.”

Now if, by those two corollary provisions, the Legislature intended to authorize an appeal in only one situation, instead of two distinct situations, one has to believe that the Legislature was not mindful of what it was doing. This Court cannot come to that conclusion.

If we have here an appeal from a decision of the Industrial Commission, this Plaintiff is properly in Court. If, on the other hand, we have a like appeal from the decision of the Regional Board, from which the Commission has not, as of June 19, 1956, refused to permit an appeal to the Commission, this plaintiff is not properly in court, as much as I regret to say so.

Prom a careful study of both the 1955 Act, which was in force when this cáse was first instituted in June, 1956, and an equally careful consideration of the 1957 Act, which tells each Common Pleas Court that it is governing in appeals of this [381]*381¡haracter — and incidentally, it particularly mentions there are wo types of cases which may be appealed, or two types of situations from which an appeal may be prosecuted to this 3ourt — they are identical. The Acts are identical. There is ao difference.

Now what have we here!

The plaintiff contends that the Board of Review, upon its ¡onsideration of this matter, in May, 1956, was acting as the Industrial Commission. Defendant, on the other hand, says that is not so, that the Board of Review was clothed with authority to hear and determine the matter in the first instance by virtue of an assignment by the Industrial Commission, such assignment being authorized by the third paragraph of Section 1123.51.6, Revised Code, as the same was in May of 1956, and as it still is under the 1957 Act.

Now gentlemen, the Court is unable to escape from the reality that upon a decision being handed down by the Regional Board of Review, whether upon assignment of the Industrial Commission or otherwise, the statute contemplates a refusal by the Commission to permit a further appeal to the Commission as a condition precedent to an appeal to the court from a decision by the Board of Review.

Within one week after the Regional Board decision, the plaintiff filed his “Application for Reconsideration” with the Industrial Commission, which indicates to this Court that the plaintiff may well have had in mind the provision that “like appeal” may be taken from the decision of the Regional Board from which the Commission has refused to permit an appeal ;o the Commission.

If an appeal to the Commission under those circumstances, from the decision of the Regional Board, is a useless thing, one wonders in vain why the Legislature so provided.

Now while that Application for Reconsideration was pending, and without withdrawing the same, notice of appeal was filed in this case twenty-eight days after the decision now complained of. Even after notice of appeal was filed in this ease, the Application for Reconsideration, then pending, was not withdrawn. And the Commission, within a week after notice of appeal was filed, according to the evidence before the Court [382]*382on tbis motion, proceeded to decide the Application for Recon sideration, and denied an appeal, or a farther appeal, from the Board of Review’s decision to itself.

Even after the plaintiff had notice of that decision of Jane 26, 1957, it is most regrettable that nothing was done to take cognizance of what had actaally happened, for there was still time to dismiss the present appeal withoat prejadice, and in-stílate a brand new appeal from the order of the Commission, refasing to allow an appeal, handed down Jane 26, 1957. That was not done.

Instead, plaintiff, withoat having been refased a farther appeal by the Commission, elected to treat the order of the Board of Review as an appealable order withoat reference to whether the Commission woald or woald not thereafter allow a farther appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.E.2d 188, 85 Ohio Law. Abs. 378, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 97, 1959 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunch-v-scanlon-ohctcomplcuyaho-1959.