Coker-Mitchell Company v. State Industrial Court

1969 OK 30, 450 P.2d 894, 1969 Okla. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1969
Docket42731
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1969 OK 30 (Coker-Mitchell Company v. State Industrial Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coker-Mitchell Company v. State Industrial Court, 1969 OK 30, 450 P.2d 894, 1969 Okla. LEXIS 303 (Okla. 1969).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

The respondent, Arthur O. Gay, hereinafter referred to as “claimant”, was employed by the petitioner, Coker-Mitchell Company, a Pontiac automobile dealer, when he suffered back injuries from the collision, of an automobile driven by one Louie P. Eden, with the Pontiac claimant was driving into his said employer’s business building on May 7, 1965.

After claimant’s first two periods of hospitalization, he obtained the sum of $4500.00 from Eden’s insurer, State Farm Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to merely as “State Farm”) on June 16, 1965, in settlement, of Eden’s claimed tort liability to him.

When claimant thereafter filed his Form No. 3 in the State Industrial Court against Coker-Mitchell Company, as respondent, and naming its insurer, Automobile Dealers Mutual Insurance Company, as “Insurance Carrier”, and the latter two had filed an answer, in effect, denying liability, the Industrial Court conducted a hearing on April 5, 1966, to determine if it had jurisdiction in the matter, in view of the claimant’s aforementioned settlement of his tort claim against Eden.

After a period of more than six months had elapsed, in which claimant underwent further hospitalization and surgery, the State Industrial Court entered an order in January, 1967, determining that claimant was not precluded by the settlement of his third-party tort claim, from proceeding in said court against his afore-named employer and its insurance carrier, hereinafter referred to as “C-M”, and “Dealers Insurance”, or collectively as “respondents.” During the next month, this order was affirmed on appeal to said court sitting en banc.

Thereafter, one of said court’s judges proceeded to try claimant’s claim against respondents on its merits. This trial resulted in an award to claimant based upon a finding, among others, that claimant’s back injury had resulted in an osteomyelitis condition, that claimant was temporarily totally disabled until February 24, 1967, and had sustained a 60 percent permanent partial disability to his body as a whole.

Respondents filed the present original proceeding in this Court for a review of both the award, and the previous aforementioned order of January, 1967. Claimant takes the position that a review of the January, 1967 order, is precluded by respondents’ failure to seek an earlier review of it in this court. There is no merit to this argument, because that order left the claim pending, with its merits to be determined in subsequent proceedings of the State Industrial Court. Said order was merely intermediate, or interlocutory, and constituted no final adjudication of the claim for compensation involved. See *896 Dawson v. Ferguson, Okl., 398 P.2d 820 and the cases therein cited.

Under “PROPOSITION ONE” of the initial brief filed by respondents, they assert that the State Industrial Court had no jurisdiction over the subject claim because of claimant’s afore-mentioned previous settlement of his tort claim against Eden. To support their position, they quote Tit. 85 O.S.1961, § 44(a) and the State Industrial Court’s Rule 21, contemplating an election, by an employee injured by the tort of “one not in the same employ”, between taking compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and pursuing his remedy against said tort feasor. The Statute specifically provides, among other things, that the employee’s settlement of his tort claim against the tort feasor for any amount less than the amount of compensation to which he is entitled under said Act “shall be made only with the written approval of the Commission (now State Industrial Court), and otherwise with the written approval of the person or insurance carrier liable to pay the same.” Rule 21 provides, among other things, that, if the employee elects to pursue his remedy against the third party tort feasor, he shall notify that Court and the Workmen’s Compensation insurance carrier in writing, that no particular form of notice is required, and that, if the claimant fails to effect “such notification”, the (Industrial) Court will make no award against the insurance carrier for a deficiency if he recovers and collects less than his compensation would have been under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.

The question submitted to the trial court, by stipulation, at the beginning of its April, 1966, hearing as to its jurisdiction of the subject claim was: “Did the settlement of claimant’s rights with the third party tort feasor, without written notice to the respondents and insurance carriers, abrogate his rights to recover under the Workmen’s Compensation Law?” (Insofar as concerns the issues in this appeal, the “written approval” referred to in § 44, supra, is the equivalent of the written “notice” referred to in Rule 21, supra.)

Claimant’s first two periods of hospitalization for his injuries were from May 11th to May 22nd, and from May 29th to June 8th, all in 1965. During these periods, he had no attorney, and was contacted both by one Rudy Greer, an independent insurance adjuster representing the respondent, Dealers Insurance, and by one Bob Teele, an adjuster for Eden’s insurer, State Farm. Both Greer and Teele took written statements from claimant; and it was stipulated that if Greer had been called as a witness, he would have testified:

“ * * * that he advised the claimant that he had a choice of remedies, namely that he could recover temporary compensation at $37.50 per week plus his medical expenses, plus any permanent disability he might have as a result of the accident from his employer or its insurance carrier in which case the employer would be subrogated for their payments against the third-party defendant, Louie P. Eden and State Farm Insurance Company * * * ” , that “He also advised the claimant that since no bills had been paid by the employer at that time, that the claimant could pursue his claim against the third party directly and on his own and recover his own medical expenses as well (as) disability and pain and suffering. * * * ”

As a witness on his own behalf, claimant testified that he told Greer that, on Teele’s second trip to his hospital room, he (Teele) wanted to settle with claimant; that Teele knew that claimant was covered by a Workmen’s Compensation policy, but that Teele told him his company “would pay me off on thier part of it and then if they didn’t cover it why the State would take up the rest of it”; that he talked to Greer about Teele’s proposal of settlement; that Greer told claimant that accepting said proposal would get him more money out of it “and more at one time”; that, in this connection, Greer also stated “Well, I don’t know * * * but * * * I think that would be *897

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Bluebook (online)
1969 OK 30, 450 P.2d 894, 1969 Okla. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-mitchell-company-v-state-industrial-court-okla-1969.