Conners' Case

115 A. 520, 121 Me. 37, 1921 Me. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 20, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 115 A. 520 (Conners' Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conners' Case, 115 A. 520, 121 Me. 37, 1921 Me. LEXIS 128 (Me. 1921).

Opinion

Cornish, C. J.

The claimant received an injury on October 19, 19Í8. On March 14, 1919, he filed with the Industrial Accident Commission a notice and application for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Answer was filed on the same day. The claimant was still in the hospital at Bath, where he had been since receiving his injuries. The chairman of the commission was present. The claimant had no attorney. The record and decree pertaining to the hearing read in part: "Under a mutual agreement to proceed with the hearing before the Chairman the parties entered into the following stipulation upon the record: Tt is understood and agreed by and between the parties to this hearing that the petition' for adjustment of claim of the injured employee filed this day and [39]*39the answer of L. P. Soule & Son Co. and the Contractors Mutual Liability Ins. Co. shall be the foundation for all proceedings in this hearing as if regularly filed and notice thereof ordered, and the answer filed in accordance with the provisions of the statute and that all formalities are waived.’

“After full hearing of the. parties and their witnesses the Chairman makes the following finding of facts. First, that the injured employee Frank M. Conners, on or about the 19th day of October, 1918, or at any other time while in the employ of L. P. Soule & Sons Co. did not receive a personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. Dated March 15, 1919.”

This decree was signed by the then Chairman of the Commission. No appeal from this decision was taken.

On September 13, 1920, the claimant filed with the Chairman the petition now under consideration, asking for a rehearing on the ground of newly discovered evidence. This petition recites the facts connected with the first hearing and decree and then alleges that since the signing of that decree the petitioner has discovered new and important evidence and witnesses, that this evidence was not presented at the previous hearing and could not have been discovered by the petitioner owing to his mental, physical and financial condition. The petitioner then proceeds to state the names of the witnessés and the facts to which each would testify. In short the same general form is adopted as in cases of a motion for new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence after verdict and before judgment in an ordinary action at law in a common Law Court.

The defendant filed answer denying the power of the commission to grant this petition, but the petition was granted and a new hearing ordered from which order an appeal to this court was duly perfected.

The important question for decision is whether after a final decree has been signed and the time for taking an appeal has expired, the Commissioner has power to grant and hold a rehearing on the merits of the case upon motion presented therefor on the ground of newly discovered evidence. We are unable to discover that such power is inherent in the commission or has been conferred upon it by statute.

The Industrial Accident Commission is not a court of general nor even of limited common law jurisdiction, but an administrative tribunal specially created by the Legislature to administer the Workmen’s Compensation Act (adopted in this State in 1915) with the [40]*40aid of the Supreme Judicial Court. Public Laws, 1915, Chap. 295, R. S., 1916, Chap. 50 as amended by Public Laws, 1919, Chap. 238. As such administrative arm of the Legislature it possesses only such jurisdiction, powers and authority as are conferred upon it by express legislative grant or such as arise therefrom by implication as necessary and incidental to the full and complete exercise of the powers granted. Levangie’s Case, 228 Mass., 213; Sterling’s Case, 233 Mass., 485. It has a procedure all its own and it borrows nothing by implication from the courts of common law.

No power of reopening or rehearing a case upon its merits, in which a decree has been entered, and of determining anew the liability or non-liability of the employer is granted by the statute. That decree, in the absence of fraud, is declared to be final upon all questions of fact. Section 34.

In two instances, and in only two, is the right given to review or modify the decision of the Commission. The first is by appeal to a single Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court and thence to the Law Court as provided in Section 34. But in such appeal questions of fact are not involved. It concerns itself simply with questions of law. The time allowed for talcing such appeal was ten days under the original statute of 1915, and is now twenty days under the amended statute of 1919. That appeal was not attempted here. The second method is by way of review under the following provision: “At any time before the expiration of two years from the date of the approval of an agreement by the Commission or the entry of a decree fixing compensation, but not afterwards, and before the expiration of the period for which compensation has been fixed by such agreement or decree, but not afterwards, any agreement, award, findings or decree may be from time to time reviewed by the Chairman of said Commission upon the application of either party, after due notice to the other party, upon the ground that the incapacity of the injured employee has subsequently ended, increased or diminished. Upon such review the said Chairman may increase, diminish or discontinue the compensation from the date of application for review in accordance with the facts, or make such other order as the justice of the case may require, but shall order no change of the status existing prior to the application for review.” Section 36.

This provision as to review is expressly limited to cases where by the original decree a compensatory award has been made, and where [41]*41the petitioner asks to have such award increased, diminished or ended because of conditions that have arisen since its making. Therefore it has no application to the pending controversy and none is contended for by the petitioner.

Further, in this reviewing provision it is declared that the chairman of the commission “shall order no change of the status existing prior to the application for review.” This court has very recently defined the term “status” as here used to mean “the relation in which an injured person stands toward him who was his employer at the time of the accident. It goes to his right to recover compensation.” Fennessey’s Case, 120 Maine, 251. Evidently the Legislature did not intend that the original determination as to liability should be overturned by any subsequent evidence except in cases of fraud which vitiates all j udgments.

We see therefore that two proceedings subsequent to the original decree are authorized, the one on appeal in matters of law, and the other in modification of damages because of subsequent facts and conditions, and the authorization of these two impliedly excludes all others according to the general rule for the interpretation of statutes.

But the petitioner claims that without such statutory authority the commission has the inherent power to grant a new trial on ground of newly discovered evidence where justice would seem to require it.

To this we cannot give assent. In the first place, were there such inherent power it is wrongly invoked in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A. 520, 121 Me. 37, 1921 Me. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conners-case-me-1921.