Continental Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission

11 P.2d 329, 79 Utah 532, 1932 Utah LEXIS 123
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1932
DocketNo. 5261.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 329 (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, 11 P.2d 329, 79 Utah 532, 1932 Utah LEXIS 123 (Utah 1932).

Opinions

WOLFE, District Judge.

Corwin R. Graves, while an employee of the Yellow Cab Company, a corporation engaged in business in Salt Lake City, Utah, on May 13, 1928, fell and broke his leg near the hip. The Continental Casualty Company was insurance carrier for the Yellow Cab Company. The commission awarded Graves temporary total compensation for this accident, which award was upheld by this court. See Continental Casualty Co. v. Ind. Comm., 75 Utah 220, 284 P. 313. The Continental Casualty Company paid compensation to Graves from the date of his accident to January 13, 1929. On that same day Graves secured employment with the Yellow Cab & Transfer Company of Ogden, Utah, an entirely different corporation from the Yellow Cab Company doing business in Salt Lake City. Graves’ wage while employed 'by the Yellow Cab Company of Salt Lake City was $20.80' per week. His wage while employed by the Yellow Cab & Transfer Company was $27.50 per week. On January 19, 1930, a little more than a year after he went to work with the Ogden company, he met with another accident. He did not resume his employment with the Ogden company until *535 some time in May, 1931, when he claimed he met with another accident. The state insurance fund was the insurance carrier of the Yellow Cab & Transfer Company. By the terms of the original award made in 1928, the Continental Casualty Company was directed to pay Graves compensation for temporary total disability at the rate of $10.73 per week from May 17, 1928, until such time as the applicant was discharged by the attending physician as being surgically healed. At the same time the order of the commission provided “that in the event that the applicant suffers any permanent partial disability as a result of the injuries sustained by him compensation shall be paid as provided by law.” Graves was discharged from the hospital by his attending physician on August 17, 1928. For the injury of January 19, 1930, he was paid temporary total disability compensation by the state insurance fund to November 25, 1930. For his accident on May 28, 1931, he was paid temporary total disability compensation for four weeks and two days. There is nothing in the record to show the character of the injury suffered on January 19, 1930, nor is there any evidence in the record respecting the injury suffered in May, 1931. The commission held a hearing on October 7, 1931, at which it determined that the permanent partial disability suffered by Graves by reason of the three accidents was 80 per cent of the total loss of use of the left leg, and assessed the Yellow Cab Company and its insurance carrier, the Continental Casualty Comany, with 25 per cent of this 80 per cent. The commission at this hearing on October 7th permitted to be introduced a report of the medical advisory board made on January 16, 1931, in which the advisory board concluded that the disability of the left leg would be permanent and was 80 per cent of the entire loss of use. The plaintiffs had no notice of any hearing, nor is it shown that there were any hearings on the matter of the injuries of January 19, 1930, and May 28, 1931. Plaintiffs had no notice of the conclusions of the medical advisory board until the hearing of October 7th. A number *536 of exhibits were introduced, such as reports from Dr. Dumke of Ogden regarding the injury of January 19, 1930, employer’s reports of injuries of January 19, 1930, and May 28, 1931, and a number of letters written by the applicant to the commission, from the commission to the applicant, from the commission to the Continental Casualty Company, from the Continental Casualty Company to the commission, from the commission to the state insurance fund, and from the state fund to the commission, etc. Much of this correspondence dealt with the matter of arranging conferences between the Continental Casualty Company and the state fund for the purpose of determining whether an agreement could be arrived at as to the amount of permanent partial disability with which the casualty company should be charged. But the casualty company maintained throughout that it had nothing to do with the permanent partial disability, maintaining that it had fully discharged its obligation when it paid the temporary total up to January 13, 1929. Plaintiffs asked for a rehearing after the award of October 31, 1931, upon its hearing of October 7, 1931. This was denied by the commission, and a writ of review sued out to this court and by this court granted. As a basis for the prayer for the annulment of the award of October 31st,. plaintiffs complain that the award was unlawful for the following reasons: (1)> That the commission was without jurisdiction of the subject matter of the alleged hearing at Salt Lake City on October 7, 1931, and erred in assuming such jurisdiction; (2) that on said date no application was pending for compensation; (3) that the hearing on the second injury of January 19, 1930, was had without notice to petitioners and without their being parties thereto, and therefore is not binding upon them; (4) that the finding of the commission that the applicant received injury on May 28, 1931, and was entitled to compensation is not binding on the plaintiffs; (5) that the commission erred in its finding that the applicant was temporarily totally disabled from May 13, 1928, to January 13, 1929; (6) that the *537 commission erred in finding (a) that the permanent partial disability from the three accidents was 80 per cent loss of use, and (b) that 25 per cent of said total loss of use was caused by the accident of May 13, 1928; (7) that the commission erred in finding the applicant 80 per cent disabled by reason of the said three injuries, because there is no competent evidence of any causal connection between the first injury and the latter two, and for the further reason expressed in grounds (3) and (4), and further that the state insurance fund assumed the sole liability for the results of the said two last injuries; (8) that the commission erred in finding that the applicant suffered a permanent partial disability of 20 per cent (25 per cent of 80 per cent) by reason of his injury of May 13, 1928, for the reason that there is no competent evidence to sustain said finding; and (9) that the commission erred in admitting the report of the medical advisory board made on January 16, 1931, because (a) said report is based on applicant’s alleged condition after he had received the second injury, which it is claimed had no connection with the first injury and because (b) the petitioners had no knowledge of said report or hearing upon which its is based, and therefore (c) the commission erred in admitting said report because it is not competent evidence.

The first question which confronts us, and the one which will be decisive of a number of the questions raised by the assignment of errors set out above and contained in the application for a writ of review, may be stated as follows: Did the hearing held on October 7, 1931, endeavor to determine (a) the extent of two separate permanent partial disabilities, each independent of the other, or (b) the question of whether the first fracture was a causative factor in a single final permanent partial disability, and, if so, the extent to which it contributed? Stated in another way: Did the commission endeavor to determine (a) the extent of the permanent partial disability which had become fixed after the injuries due to the first accident were surgically healed *538

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 329, 79 Utah 532, 1932 Utah LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-industrial-commission-utah-1932.