Chisholm v. Vocational School for Girls

64 P.2d 838, 103 Mont. 503, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 137
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1936
DocketNo. 7,631.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 838 (Chisholm v. Vocational School for Girls) 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
Chisholm v. Vocational School for Girls, 64 P.2d 838, 103 Mont. 503, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 137 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the Industrial Accident Board and the Vocational School for Girls from a judgment of the district court of Lewis and Clark county, awarding Mary Chisholm compensation for injuries sustained by her as the result of an industrial accident. The matter was submitted to the district court upon an agreed statement of facts, to which is appended, as a part thereof, the record and proceedings of *505 the defendant board with reference to Mrs. Chisholm’s claim for compensation, from which the undisputed facts appear as follows:

On November 30, 1930, Mrs. Chisholm was the night matron at the State Industrial School for Girls, located in Lewis and Clark county, and qualified under Plan 3 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. On the evening of that day, while engaged in her employer’s business and when driving her automobile out of a filling station in the city of Helena, Mrs. Chisholm was seriously injured as the result of a collision with a delivery truck belonging to “Nagle’s, Inc.,” the accident being caused by the negligent operation of the truck. Mrs. Chisholm’s injuries were due to an industrial accident arising out of and in the course of her employment, and her injuries were compensable under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Ten days after the accident a detailed report thereof was made by the employer to the board, and, on December 29, 1930, there was filed with the board, by the claimant or on her behalf, a written claim sufficient in all particulars to entitle her to compensation, except that it was not “under oath.” On receipt of the claim it was duly stamped as received by the board but was then returned to the claimant with the following letter of explanation: “We are returning herewith your claim for compensation, for the reason that you failed to sign the same and have the same acknowledged before a notary public. This is necessary before any compensation can be paid.”

Thereafter the claimant signed and swore to the claim as originally presented, and returned it to the board on May 20, 1931. On April 20, 1932, the board “denied and dismissed” Mrs. Chisholm’s claim on the ground that “the only claim presented * * * was filed with the board on May 30 (20) 1931, thirteen days after the expiration of the statutory period within which claims may be filed.” Thereafter, on July 7, 1933, the claimant filed her “petition to determine claim of compensation,” and it was stipulated and agreed that *506 the board would take jurisdiction, hear and determine the controversy, and, if it denied her compensation and an appeal was taken and the decision and order of the board reversed and she was awarded compensation by the court, “that then and thereupon, immediately following a final court decision, * * * plaintiff would be entitled to compensation as a total disability case for a period of three hundred and seventy-five weeks at the rate of $9.80 per week, plus the allowance of $500 for the physician’s and hospital fees * * * as of the date of her injury.”

On May 3, 1933, the board promulgated its “order and decision” again denying the claimant compensation on the ground that she did not file a claim “under oath within the time allowed by law.” This order recites the fact, set up in the agreed statement of facts, that during the period from the return to her of her unsworn claim and its filing on May 20, 1931, she was negotiating, through attorneys employed for that purpose, with the insurance company which carried the liability for Nagle’s, Inc., for a settlement of a claim for damages and “withheld the filing of the ‘claim for compensation’ until after she had received from Nagle’s, Inc., the gross sum of $4,650 for the injury she received in said collision and accident and that of this sum she paid in hospital fees, medical expenses and attorney’s fees the sum of $1,925.25.”

Motion for a rehearing was duly made and denied and the claimant appealed to the district court, which appeal was submitted on the agreed statement of facts, the statement containing the agreement that a controversy existed between the claimant and the board as to whether the board acquired jurisdiction to allow the claim, and as to whether the settlement. with Nagle’s, Inc., constituted a bar to an award of compensation by the board.

Briefs were filed and thereafter the district court determined that “upon the whole record submitted” the claimant should have been awarded compensation, and accordingly “vacated, *507 annulled and set aside” the order and decision of the board and, pursuant to the stipulation of the parties, awarded compensation as agreed upon above.

By appropriate specifications of error the correctness of the court’s determination of each of the questions presented is challenged.

The answer to the first question in controversy depends upon whether or not the claimant brought herself within the mandatory provisions of section 2899, Revised Codes, which declares that “all claims shall be forever barred unless presented in writing under oath * * * within six months from the happening of the accident.” This section was amended to extend the limitation to twelve months by Chapter 34, Laws of 1935, but claimant’s ease must be decided on the law as it existed at the time she was required to file her claim.

We are commanded to give a liberal construction to every part and section of the Compensation Act (sec. 2964, Rev. Codes), but when the terms of a statute are plain, unambiguous, direct and certain, the statute speaks for itself and “there is naught for the court to construe”; it follows that no excuse can be accepted for a failure to comply with the mandatory requirement of the statute. (Chmielewska v. Butte & Superior Min. Co., 81 Mont. 36, 261 Pac. 616.) In the Chmielewska Case no claim was filed within the six-months period, and counsel for the claimant sought to excuse the failure and extend the time within which the claim must be filed. Here the claim was filed within the six-months period, but it was defective in that it was not “under oath.” True, the law requires that the claim be presented “under oath,” but the law likewise requires the pleadings in a civil action to be made under oath, in that it requires that “all complaints, answers and replies must be verified” (sec. 9163, Rev. Codes) ; yet, as to this latter requirement, it is held that the verification of the pleadings is not necessary to vest jurisdiction in courts (Commercial Bank & Trust Co. v. Jordan, 85 Mont. *508 375, 278 Pac. 832, 65 A. L. R. 968) and, as the verification is no part of the pleading, its absence is waived by failure to object to the defect, and, on objection, the defect may be cured by amendment of the pleading on file. (State ex rel. Jensen v. District Court, ante, p. 461.)

It is declared in Bancroft’s Code Pleading, section 500, that “adding a, verification to.

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Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 838, 103 Mont. 503, 1936 Mont. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chisholm-v-vocational-school-for-girls-mont-1936.