Dunseath v. Nevada Industrial Commission

282 P. 879, 52 Nev. 104, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 45
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1929
Docket2872
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 282 P. 879 (Dunseath v. Nevada Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunseath v. Nevada Industrial Commission, 282 P. 879, 52 Nev. 104, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 45 (Neb. 1929).

Opinions

Does public policy require and the Nevada industrial insurance act by specific provision provide that no claimant for compensation shall contract with an attorney to represent the former in an action at law for the recovery of compensation after a claim has been finally rejected by the Nevada industrial commission? We think the answer is no, for the following reasons:

When once the Nevada industrial commission has rejected a claim, finally and in toto, the claimant has concluded so far as the Nevada industrial commission is concerned. State v. Nevada Industrial Commission, 40 Nev. 220. This case settles two points. First, that a rejected claim concludes the claimant before the commission, and, second, that the Nevada industrial commission will undoubtedly be called upon to make rejections. It also settles the point that there is no appeal from the final decision of the Nevada industrial commission, and, further, the act itself offers the claimant no recourse to the courts. He cannot ascertain from the act what course to pursue. Throughout the whole law, section 38 makes the one and only mention of recourse to the courts. This section authorizes only the Nevada industrial commission to prosecute and *Page 106 defend. No procedure is provided for and a claimant's rights are not mentioned. Hence, in the first case that arose under the act, our supreme court, in the case of State v. Nevada Industrial Commission, 40 Nev. 225, laid down the method of procedure for a dissatisfied claimant. This settles the further point that the claimant may have recourse to the courts. His only problem, then, is to obtain counsel to represent him. If he is without funds, as injured workmen usually are, he will probably try to enlist the services of an attorney upon a contingent basis and, if successful, enter into an agreement with the attorney; and the case being presented to the courts is finally adjudicated. If a judgment is obtained and the claimant refuses to keep his agreement with the attorney, as in the case at bar, the attorney, finding the law silent on this point, there being no mention whatever of legal procedure in such a case in the Nevada industrial insurance act, also takes refuge in the general law and, relying upon section 5376, Rev. Laws, files a lien upon the judgment and pursues the proceeds in the hands of the judgment debtor, the Nevada industrial commission. Before the passage of the Nevada industrial insurance act no one would have questioned the validity of a contract such as the one under consideration.

The writer fails to find an instance where in other states the lien has been denied in a workman's compensation case where the attorney was entitled to a fee. A digest of such cases may be found in 3d Dec. Digest, vol. 19, Master and Servant, pages 1248 et seq., Key No. 420.

It will be noted that by the repeal of sec. 37 in 1917, the Nevada industrial commission was, in effect, subrogated to all the rights and responsibilities of every employer coming under the act, where an injury to a workman is concerned. Does the law imply that an employer, by placing himself under the provisions of the act, ipso facto, bars an injured workman from making a contract with an attorney to represent him in an action to recover for an injury; that by this simple *Page 107 expedient the workman may not sue the employer, for the latter is now exempt, nor may the workman make a valid contract with an attorney to represent him in an action against the one to whom the responsibility has been transferred? Section 28 of the Nevada industrial insurance act, if thus construed, is a violation of section 15, article 1 of the Constitution of Nevada and of sec. 10, article 1 of the United States Constitution, in that it impairs the obligation of contracts. 12 C.J. 1056. We submit that the contention of appellant is fallacious for the reason that the Supreme Court of Nevada in the case of State v. Nevada Industrial Commission, 40 Nev., at p. 226, in speaking of the judgment of the court in a case of this character, stated: "If a claim is finally rejected in toto, that is the end of it so far as the commission is concerned unless a judgment is obtained against the commission * * * in which event the judgment will have the force of an allowed claim."

There can be no question but that under section 28 of the Nevada industrial insurance act all assignments of compensation are prohibited, and further that the right to collect compensation shall not pass to any other person by operation of law. In enacting section 28 the legislature was exercising its prerogative under the police power of the state, to the end that the amount of compensation due should remain as a fund for the exclusive use of claimant in order that such claimant may not become a public charge. As to the reasons which prompted the legislatures of the several states to enact this law, see Cunningham v. Northwestern Improvement Company (Mont.),119 P. 559; Schneider's Workman's Compensation Laws, vol. 1, sec. 3, p. 5.

We submit that section 28 of the act is constitutional. A similar provision in the act of Michigan was held by the court in the case of Mackin v. Detroit-Timkin Axle Company, 153 N.W. at p. 55, to be constitutional.

The Supreme Court of California in the case of Pacific Electric Railway Company v. Commonwealth Bonding *Page 108 and Casualty Insurance Company, 204 P. 262, held that an assignment by claimant of compensation payable under the law was invalid as being contrary to public policy.

Appellant insists that Nevada is the only state where the legislature has failed to provide for an attorney's lien. This argument is, we believe, sufficiently answered by the opinion of the lower court where it held that this argument of appellant furnishes conclusive proof that under the Nevada law no attorney's lien is authorized. Under the existing law claimant had a perfect right to enter into a contract and thereby becomes obligated to pay appellant attorney fees, but he could not, under the law, use the compensation money for this purpose.

The Supreme Court of the United States in several cases has held, even where a statute is enacted after the contract is executed and such statute affects the obligations of the parties, that it cannot be construed as impairing the obligations of the contract. Capital Trust Company v. Calhoun, 250 U.S. 208; Calhoun v. Massee, 253 U.S. 170; Nutt v. Knut, 200 U.S. 12; Powell v. Jennings, 48 N.C. 547. See, also, Yeiser v. Dysart, 69 L.Ed. 775.

In the case of Brearley School v. Ward, 94 N.E. 1001, the court held, concerning the statement to impair the obligations of contract, that "to impair is in some way to weaken or diminish the power which the courts had when the contract was made to enforce it." We submit, therefore, that under the facts no obligation of contract is impaired, but on the contrary the contract, at the time it was entered into, was invalid because its provisions were in direct violation of section 28.

OPINION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 P. 879, 52 Nev. 104, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunseath-v-nevada-industrial-commission-nev-1929.