Continental Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission

260 P. 279, 70 Utah 354, 1927 Utah LEXIS 45
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1927
DocketNo. 4553.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 260 P. 279 (Continental Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission, 260 P. 279, 70 Utah 354, 1927 Utah LEXIS 45 (Utah 1927).

Opinions

*357 THURMAN, C. J.

Certiorari to review an award of the Industrial Commission of Utah.

Dan Vukovich, an employee of the plaintiff mining company, was injured in the course of his employment for said company on March 13, 1924. The plaintiff Continental Casualty Company carried the insurance and assumed liability for payment of compensation at the rate of $16 per week during the period of temporary disability. On June 9, 1925, Vukovich, through his attorney, made application for compensation. A hearing was had thereon, and on October 5, 1925, defendant commission made an award awarding applicant “$16 per week for a period of 20 weeks, to be paid in a lump sum, without discount.” The aggrieved party was given 20 days within which to apply for a rehearing. No application was made. On September 11, 1926, applicant filed another petition for further compensation. The commission treated this petition as an application under Comp. Laws Utah, 1917, § 3144, which provides;

“The powers and jurisdiction of the commission over each case shall be continuing, and it may from time to time make such modifi *358 cation or change with respect to former findings or orders with respect thereto as in its 'opinion may be justified.”

Several hearings were had on the last petition, and finally an award was made thereon on January 18, 1927. The findings and conclusions of the commission, in part, are as follows:

“Findings.
“In accordance with the evidence submitted, we find the following to be facts:
“Under date of October 5, 1925, the Industrial Commission of Utah ordered the Keystone Mining Company or the Continental Casualty Company to pay to Dan Vukovich compensation at the rate of $16 per week for a period of 20 weeks. Mr. Vukovich, on March 13, 1924, sustained a fracture of the right third transverse process of the lumbar vertebrae. In order to correct this condition the applicant submitted to what is commonly known as the Hibbs operation. The object of the Hibbs operation is to solidify certain portions of the spine adjacent to the injured vertebrae. In order to do that, the spinus processes are broken down and bridged across and in addition to that the joints between the articular facets are denuded of their cartilage by means of a curretting instrument, so that the bones forming the joints will grow together, thereby obliterating the joints. In order to determine whether that process has been accomplished, in reviewing the X-ray plates, we have tried to attempt to see whether or not that process has been successful and if these joints have been obliterated.
“The evidence shows, as testified to by Dr. Holbrook, an orthopedic surgeon, that it takes a good long time to determine whether or not the proper result has been obtained by reason of the Hibbs operation. The X-ray pictures taken in August, 1926, indicate that it has not yet solidified by reason of this operation.
“The commission based its former decision on the theory that applicant’s condition was fixed and that the vertebrae between the second and third process would ankylose, unite, and solidify. However, the pictures taken in August, 1926, convinced the commission that there is no hope of securing an ankylosis of the second and third joints of the back.
“We find that, when the decision was rendered on October 5, 1925, applicant’s condition was not fixed, and that his condition since that time has changed, and the medical testimony presented on the petition for rehearing and to reopen applicant’s case indicates very clearly that there is a changed condition. The commission had no *359 means of determining on October 5, 1925, whether or not the condition was fixed, and it was not until August, 1926, when X-ray pictures were taken, that we were convinced, after reviewing the evidence submitted on applicant’s petition for rehearing, that there was no hope of solidifying the joints between the second and third vertebrae, and therefore the commission now finds that the applicant is entitled to additional compensation by reason of the failure of these joints to unite.
“Conclusions.
“In view of the foregoing findings, the commission concludes that the Keystone Mining Company or the Continental Casualty should pay to Dan Vukovich 50 weeks’ compensation, at the rate of $16 per week, in addition to that heretofore paid; that a reasonable attorney’s fee be paid to Mr. Huntsman, who appeared before the commission at all three hearings, would be the sum of $75. This fee is fixed pursuant to section 3148, subsec. E, of the state Industrial Act, and, in our judgment, represents a reasonable fee under the circumstances.
“Wherefore it is ordered that the decision rendered by the Industrial Commission of Utah on October 5, 1925, be, and the same is hereby modified to read: ‘That, in addition to the compensation heretofore paid to the applicant, Dan Vukovich, the Keystone Mining Company or the Continental Casualty Company be, and they are hereby, ordered to pay to Dan Vukovich compensation in the sum of $16 per week, for a period of 50 weeks, in a lump sum without discount.’
“It is further ordered that the Keystone Mining Company or the Continental Casualty Company pay .to attorney W. R. Huntsman, the sum of $75, representing attorney’s fee. Said fee is fixed by the Industrial Commission of Utah pursuant to section 3148, subsec. E, of the State Industrial Act, and is to be paid direct to the said attorney and deducted from the compensation herein awarded to the applicant.
“It is further ordered that, in case any party hereto is disatisfied with the decision herein rendered and desires to appeal from the same, application for rehearing must be filed with the commission within 20 days from the date hereof.
“This commission does hereby retain jurisdiction of this claim until the same is finally and fully paid according to law.”

No application was made for a rehearing before the commission by plaintiffs before the filing of their application *360 for writ of review. The application for the writ was filed February 16,1927.

Defendants have filed a notice and motion to vacate, quash, set aside, and dismiss the writ. The contention of defendants is that it does not appear in the application for the writ that plaintiffs applied to the commission for a rehearing of the cause before applying to this court for the writ of review; that therefore this court is without jurisdiction.

Plaintiffs’ contention is that the last hearing before the commission was merely a rehearing of the proceeding which resulted in the award of October 5, 1925, and that the commission was without jurisdiction to grant 'such rehearing.

If plaintiffs’ contention be true that the last hearing before the commission was in fact only a rehearing, as that term is used in the Industrial Act, then we are of opinion that plaintiffs’ contention is unanswearable.

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260 P. 279, 70 Utah 354, 1927 Utah LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-industrial-commission-utah-1927.