Curtis v. Slater Construction Co.

168 N.W. 958, 202 Mich. 673, 1918 Mich. LEXIS 544
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1918
DocketDocket No. 36
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 168 N.W. 958 (Curtis v. Slater Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis v. Slater Construction Co., 168 N.W. 958, 202 Mich. 673, 1918 Mich. LEXIS 544 (Mich. 1918).

Opinion

Steere, J.

On November 20, 1913, John N. Curtis, husband of plaintiff, sustained an accidental injury while in defendant’s employ by which he was incapacitated for the work in which he was engaged until December 10, 1913, when he returned and continued in defendant’s service until some time in January, 1914, quitting, as defendant claimed, because most of its employees were laid off at that time owing to weather conditions and there was no further work for him to do. How steadily he worked after returning is a matter in dispute. When he returned to work on December 10, 1913, an agreement was entered into between him and defendant in regard to compensation for his injuries under provision of the employers’ liability act, measured by one-half his average weekly wages during the period he was absent and incapacitated for work by reason of the accident. The agreement, signed by the respective parties, stated the nature of the accident and his injuries as follows:

“A ditch caved in and bruised said John Curtis about the lower limbs and strained one knee.”

This settlement was approved by the industrial accident board and the stipulated compensation paid. A year later, on December 6, 1914, Curtis made application to the industrial accident board to reopen the case, claiming he was misled into signing the settlement agreement and receipt for payment as specified, requesting a hearing and further allowance of compen[675]*675sation. The board entertained this petition and proceeded to take testimony under it, including that of Curtis himself, who died on February 11, 1915, while the matter was yet pending. Notice of his death was filed in the case and mailed to defendant, after which an administrator of his estate was appointed, on April 19, 1915. On September 23, 1915, -the industrial accident board made an award granting to decedent’s estate, or its legal representative, compensation at the rate of one-half his weekly wages from the time of the last payment until the date of his death, or for 54 weeks in addition to that previously paid under the approved agreement. Defendant thereupon removed the case to this court for review by certiorari and the award was affirmed on December 22, 1916 (Curtis v. Slater Construction Co., 194 Mich. 259).

On February 2, 1917, plaintiff filed with the industrial accident board and served on defendant a claim for compensation because of the accidental death of said John N. Curtis while in defendant’s employ, made as dependent widow of deceased according to the form adopted by the accident board for that purpose.

Defendant denied liability, filing and serving its grounds of contest and an arbitration hearing was thereafter had before Fred A. Zierleyn, a deputy commissioner of the board authorized to act in the matter as chairman, at which hearing representation of the committee of arbitration was waived by stipulation of the parties. The proofs and allegations of the parties having been heard and submitted by consent to said deputy commissioner acting as a committee of arbitration, a decision was thereafter rendered in favor of defendant, and claim for review before the full board was then filed by plaintiff. Upon such review, without taking further testimony, the board by a majority opinion reversed the arbitration decision and made an award to plaintiff of one-half deceased’s [676]*676weekly wages for 300 weeks, less that already paid, or awarded, to his' estate. A dissenting opinion was filed by the chairman of the industrial accident board, based chiefly on the ground that plaintiff had not made claim for compensation within six months of the death of her husband, at which time her right of claim first arose distinct from that made by him in his lifetime. This view seems to find support and precedent in a former ruling of the board reported in its Michigan Workmen’s Compensation Cases (of 1916),, page 430, where it is held that in case of death of the injured employee after approval of an agreement with him in regard to compensation, no right of claim existed to his widow or other dependents until his death, out of which it arose as a “new right of action, * * * in no way affected by any agreement or action of the deceased,” and

“In disputed cases where it is contended that the death was not the result of the injury, or where other defenses are interposed, the widow or the dependents are entitled to make application for arbitration, as the case is an original one not affected by the agreement in regard to compensation made by the deceased before his death.”

It is undisputed that the case of John Curtis against defendant came under jurisdiction of the industrial accident board in the first instance only by virtue of the agreement with him in regard to a settlement, which it approved, and but for jurisdiction thus acquired the board could not have entertained his belated application made nearly a year later for additional compensation.

Defendant’s various contentions center upon the two propositions that there is no evidence in the record to support the board’s finding that deceased’s death resulted from an accidental injury; and no claim for [677]*677compensation was made by plaintiff within six months after his death as required by section 15, part 2, of the act (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 5445).

Curtis was about 64 years of age at the time of his decease. The medical certificate of his death, dated February 13, 1915, gave the cause of death as follows: “Bright’s disease, contributory (secondary) partial paralysis of lower extremities.” His physician, who signed this certificate, had been called to attend him about a year after his accident and testified that he found him afflicted with a partial paralysis of his lower limbs which subsequently resulted in his death; that from the history of the case as he learned it, together with deceased’s condition as he diagnosed it, he was of the opinion that the partial paralysis he found resulted from the accident of over a year before, upon which deceased’s and, later, plaintiff’s claims were based. This opinion was controverted by a physician who visited deceased shortly after the accident and by other expert testimony. Much of the testimony in both cases was devoted to this issue of fact and runs along similar lines, being there directed to the cause of deceased’s then condition, in relation to which he testified, and here to the cause of his death. The point is stressed for plaintiff that in the case of John Curtis against defendant, both the industrial accident board and this court found that he was “totally disabled as a result of accident,” and “rightly paid compensation up to the time of his death,” which apparently is assumed as the starting point for inquiry into plaintiff’s rights. This court did not pass upon, and could not decide, any issues of fact, as to which the finding of the board is made conclusive by statute when supported by any competent testimony. It was there found that the testimony of Curtis and his physician gave support to the finding of the board and the award was affirmed, since, as said in Redfield v. Insurance Co., 183 Mich. [678]*678633, “unless there was no proof to support the finding of fact, this court has no power to interfere.”

The question of whether there is any proof to support the finding that deceased’s death resulted from the accident, which is elaborately argued in the briefs of counsel seems, however, on this record secondary to the more direct and serious question of an intervening statute of limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
168 N.W. 958, 202 Mich. 673, 1918 Mich. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-slater-construction-co-mich-1918.