Chanticleer Skyline Room, Inc. v. Greer

319 A.2d 802, 271 Md. 693, 1974 Md. LEXIS 1072
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 29, 1974
Docket[No. 246, September Term, 1973.]
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 319 A.2d 802 (Chanticleer Skyline Room, Inc. v. Greer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chanticleer Skyline Room, Inc. v. Greer, 319 A.2d 802, 271 Md. 693, 1974 Md. LEXIS 1072 (Md. 1974).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This litigation, which reaches us by writ of certiorari addressed to the Court of Special Appeals, has a history that is both protracted and involved. The issue presented for our determination, on the other hand, is both narrow and, as it develops, rather simple. We are asked to determine whether an application filed by the claimant, Bertha Lee Greer, the respondent here, seeking additional compensation from her former employer, Chanticleer Skyline Room, Inc., and its insurer, Maryland Indemnity & Fire Insurance Exchange, the petitioners, was submitted within the time limitations delineated in the Maryland Workmen’s Compensation Act. 1 *695 In an effort to place this issue in its proper perspective, we shall first relate a brief chronology of the undisputed events which have preceded this Court’s present and its initial involvement with the litigation.

In the autumn of 1960, Mrs. Greer unfortunately sustained a back injury when she accidentally fell during the course of her employment as a waitress at the Chanticleer, a restaurant located in Baltimore City. As a consequence of this, on. January 24,1961, she was awarded compensation for her temporary total disability by the Workmen’s Compensation Commission. Later that year, on April 13, the Commission ordered a supplemental award based on its finding that Mrs. Greer’s temporary total disability ended on November 22, 1960, but that she had suffered a permanent partial disability of 10% which entitled her to an appropriate award of compensation under the “other cases” provisions of the Act. Maryland Code (1957) Art. 101, § 36 (4), as amended. In the summer of 1963, as a result of her suffering from persistent back problems, Mrs. Greer underwent a lumbar disc fusion operation. On October 17 of that same year, the Commission, following a hearing, found that this operation was necessitated by the injury sustained in the 1960 accident, and again awarded her temporary total disability compensation, this time computed from May 22, 1963. An appeal from this finding was noted by the petitioners to the Superior Court of Baltimore City which affirmed the Commission’s order. Yet another hearing was held on February 15, 1966, and the Commission subsequently passed a further order on the twenty-third of that same month which terminated the October 17, 1963 temporary total disability payments as of March 1,1965, and awarded Mrs. Greer compensation that was based on a 30% permanent partial disability. Once more the petitioners appealed. While the case was pending on this second appeal to the Superior Court of Baltimore City, the Commission passed an additional order on March 24 which directed that the respondent’s attorney be allowed a $500 counsel fee 2 to *696 be paid “from the closing weeks of compensation due the claimant” but not until the outcome of the appeal from its February order had been determined.

Our attention now shifts to the Superior Court of Baltimore City where the case remained quiescent and neglected until it was dismissed by that court for want of prosecution on November 9, 1969. Spurred into action by this, the petitioners made a motion which was granted that reinstated the case on the trial docket. Then, for an unstated reason, they executed an about-face and voluntarily dismissed the appeal on March 24, 1970. Their dismissal brought this phase of the litigation to a close, and the counsel fee, which had been approved in 1966, was paid by the insurer to the attorney on June 15, 1970 from the final portion of the compensation awarded the claimant.

Alleging additional problems with her back and further medical expenses, in December of 1971, Mrs. Greer, by an application made in proper person, brought this case again before the Commission seeking an additional award. One more hearing was held in June of 1972, at which time the Commission by its order, although awarding Mrs. Greer reimbursement for some additional medical expenses, ruled that her request for further compensation was barred because it was not timely filed. On appeal by the claimant from that order, Judge Dorf, in granting her motion for summary judgment, ruled that the petition indeed had been filed on time. This judgment of the trial court was affirmed by the Court of Special Appeals in Chanticleer Skyline Room v. Greer, 19 Md. App. 100, 309 A. 2d 638 (1973), and we granted certiorari to consider the propriety of these rulings.

The claimant, throughout this phase of the litigation, has advanced three reasons to support her contention that the petition was seasonably filed; the acceptance of any one of which, she alleges, would compel the reversal of the Commission’s June 1972 decision.

*697 Because these reasons are so inextricably associated with § 40 (c), that portion of the Act which controls the reopening of workmen’s compensation claims, it is expeditious for us to first set out its provisions before we detail her position. Code (1957, 1964 Repl. Vol., 1973 Cum. Supp.) Art. 101, § 40 (c) reads:

“Modifications or changes. — The powers and jurisdiction of the Commission over each case shall be continuing, and it may, from time to time, make such modifications or changes with respect to former findings or orders with respect thereto as in its opinion may be justified; provided, however, that no modification or change of any award of compensation shall be made by the Commission unless application therefor shall be made to the Commission within five years next following the last payment of compensation.” (emphasis added).

With this section of the Act in mind, the claimant’s three reasons are more readily articulated. First, she argues that since the period of limitations under § 40 (c) begins to run with the last payment of compensation, and since the payment of a counsel fee is in reality the payment of compensation, and as the fee ordered in March of 1966 was not paid until June of 1970, therefore, limitations did not begin running until that latter date. Second, Mrs. Greer urges that since the payment for medical expenses also is compensation to the claimant within the contemplation of the Act, the petitioners’ reimbursement to her in October 1971 for the cost of a back brace places the application well within the statutory limit set out in § 40 (c). Finally, she suggests that her application could not properly have been filed with the Commission until the appeal of the petitioners, which was noted on March 21, 1966, was resolved. In connection with this, the claimant reasons that the running of the statute of limitations was tolled from 1966 until 1970 because the Commission lacked subject matter jurisdiction to entertain such an application up until March 24, 1970, the date the 1966 appeal was dismissed. As *698 we agree with the Court of Special Appeals’ acceptance of the respondent’s initial reason for her contention that limitations have not run, we shall affirm the judgment of that court on this basis and leave a consideration of the other two for another case.

We begin our discussion by looking to the Act itself for assistance. “Compensation” is defined in the Code (1957, 1964 Repl.

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Bluebook (online)
319 A.2d 802, 271 Md. 693, 1974 Md. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chanticleer-skyline-room-inc-v-greer-md-1974.