Ferguson v. Ferguson Motor Co.
This text of 1988 OK 137 (Ferguson v. Ferguson Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The questions presented are: 1) Did the Workers’ Compensation Court have jurisdiction to vacate the award in suit after the time to seek appellate review had expired? If not, 2) Can the alleged error in the award under consideration be corrected by a nunc pro tunc order of the Workers’ Compensation Court? We answer both questions in the negative.
On November 18,1986 compensation was awarded Anna Mae Ferguson [claimant] *336 for the death of her husband, Donald Ray Ferguson [decedent]. The award, which was made against Ferguson Motor Company and United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company [respondents both here and in the Workers’ Compensation Court], set the weekly benefits due at $163.00. Copies of the order were sent to the parties on November 24, 1986. None sought appellate review and the award became final.
On May 7, 1987 respondents moved for an order nunc pro tunc to change the award’s weekly compensation rate from $163.00 to $60.00. They also asked for credit for “overpayments.” To support their request respondents argued that the decedent’s actual average weekly wage was $120.00, and, since the weekly death benefits under the statute are based on 50% of that amount, the error is “obvious” and hence correctable.
The trial judge vacated the award on February 11, 1988 and “returned [the parties] to their original positions as if no such order was ever entered.” 1 Claimant timely sought corrective relief on review. This court then directed the respondents to show cause why the order should not be summarily vacated as facially void, because the trial tribunal lacked the power to disturb its award after the maximum period for filing a petition for review had expired.
Respondents argue that 1) because the weekly benefit amount of $163.00 was incorrectly set, the award lacks evidentiary support and 2) the Workers’ Compensation Court has “inherent power” to correct all “computation” errors. We reject both arguments and hold that the award became final once the time to seek review had passed and the Workers’ Compensation Court subsequently lacked jurisdictional power either to vacate or to correct it except only for mathematical miscalculations apparent from the decision’s four comers.
I.
An award made by the Workers’ Compensation Court becomes “final and conclusive upon all questions” unless (a) within 20 days after a copy of the award has been sent to the parties, review is sought in the Supreme Court, or (b) appeal is made to a three-judge review panel of the Workers’ Compensation Court within 10 days after a copy of the award is sent or (c) within the same 20-day statutory period during which review of the original award could have been sought, an order vacating the award is made upon due notice to the parties and after an adversary hearing. 2
*337 The order now before us was issued over five months after copies of the award it vacated had been sent to the parties. Without doubt, the trial judge lacked power to extinguish the parties’ rights in that adjudicated liability. The vacation order under review is hence ineffective. A final award by the Workers’ Compensation Court can be vacated only (a) in a proceeding instituted in this court within the prescribed time interval or (b) in a district court action for relief from the award on grounds of its procurement by extrinsic fraud. 3
II.
Respondents call our attention to the claimant’s Form 3-a which indicates that the decedent’s average weekly wage was $120.00 and to the provisions of 85 O.S.Supp.1986 § 22(8)(a)(l) 4 that allow a surviving spouse to receive income benefits equal to 50% of the deceased’s average weekly wage. The respondents thus argue that the award setting the claimant’s weekly payments at $163.00 could be corrected nunc pro tunc and the Workers’ Compensation Court had the power to do so. We hold that because the mistake sought to be corrected is not apparent from the four corners of the decision as a clerical or mathematical error, the award is not correctable by the trial tribunal in a nunc pro tunc proceeding.
The Workers’ Compensation Court’s power to correct judgments and final orders nunc pro tunc extends only to clerical errors or miscalculations appearing on the face of the decision, not to erroneous judicial findings. Orders nunc pro tunc are not designed to accomplish what a court might or should have done, or what it may have intended to do; the function of the nunc pro tunc device is limited in the Workers’ Compensation Court to supplying inadvertent clerical omissions and correcting facial mistakes in recording judicial acts that were actually performed. 5
In making the original award the trial judge found:
“THAT the continuing benefits to [the claimant] ...as provided by the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act, shall be as follows, accrued from the date of death of the deceased:
TO: ANNA MAE FERGUSON, surviving spouse of the deceased, the sum of $163.00 per week, of which sixty-eight (68) weeks have accrued in the amount of $11,084.00 (as of October 29, 1986).
“THAT the continuing benefits provided for in this order are based on the wages of the deceased, which at the time of the injury were sufficient to allow the use of the compensation rate of $163 per week.” [Emphasis added.]
The trial judge’s award did not find that the decedent’s average weekly wage was $120.00. Had he done so, a miscalculation, *338 one clearly apparent from the four corners of the award, would have been facially present. Here, there is no facial and hence correctable miscalculation. 6 The trial judge expressly found that the wages “were sufficient to allow” a weekly compensation rate of $163.00. This judicial finding is an adjudication now conclusively binding on the parties as well as on the Workers’ Compensation Court; its accuracy no longer can be questioned. 7 The award is presumed both valid and responsive to the evidence adduced at the hearing that led to the award. 8
The power to adjudicate includes the power to do so wrongly, and an erroneous decision, until it is set aside or correct ed in a manner authorized by law, is as binding as a correct ruling. 9 The alleged mistake in setting the weekly benefits in the award was beyond the reach of the trial judge’s power to correct nunc pro tunc.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1988 OK 137, 766 P.2d 335, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 163, 1988 WL 130272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-ferguson-motor-co-okla-1988.