Hoenig v. Lemaster's Committee

103 S.W.2d 708, 268 Ky. 44, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 26, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 S.W.2d 708 (Hoenig v. Lemaster's Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoenig v. Lemaster's Committee, 103 S.W.2d 708, 268 Ky. 44, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 420 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

*45 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

W. 0. Lemaster, on March 8, 1930, was in the employ of appellant and defendant below, A. Y. Hoenig,. as a servant in a crew engaged in drilling oil and gas-wells. He was some forty odd years of age and during the day referred to he received a lick on the head, from 'the swinging of a large iron tong which with its-companion tong was used in lifting heavy material. The tong weighed something like 500 pounds and was-being adjusted by a fellow servant attempting to swing it when Lemaster inadvertently got in front of it and it struck him in the fore part of the head, producing a wound from which there was considerable bleeding and caused him to lay off from work for the remainder of the day; but he resumed work the next morning and. continued at the same employment, fulfilling his duties-in every respect, for a period of eight months thereafter. The reason for his ceasing to work at the end of that period is not made 'to appear. Whether it was-because the employer discontinued his business, or finished his work at that job, or in that neighborhood, or for any other reason is not shown.

A short time before April 6, 1934, C. P. Lemaster — the father of W. 0. Lemaster, the servant, in some kind of court proceedings (the exact nature of which is not shown) — was appointed committee for his-son, W. O. Lemaster, and on the day last indicated he-filed application before the Workmen’s Compensation. Board for an award to his son, the injured servant, upon the ground that the injury he received in the-manner stated had permanently injured him by impairing his mind and mental faculties to the extent of depriving him of earning capacity of the kind and character of labor he was fitted to perform.

At a hearing before a referee for the board, the-application was dismissed and an award denied upon, the grounds of (1) that the necessary procedure to obtain it, as is pointed out in thé case of Scott Tobacco Co. v. Cooper, 258 Ky. 795, 81 S. W. (2d) 588, were not taken, and (2) that the impaired condition of the servant’s mind complained of was not shown to have been produced or resulted from the proven accident. An appeal to the full board resulted in an affirmance of the conclusions of the referee. The applicant. *46 then filed his petition in the Magoffin circuit court for a review, which was heard on the record made by the board, and upon submission it reversed the order of the board and set it aside and then added, ‘ ‘ and this case is remaned back to said Workmen’s Compensation Board, with directions to enter judgment in favor of plaintiff in conformity with section 3897 (4897) of the Statute.” Prom that judgment, the employer and the board prosecute this appeal.

The two- grounds supra forming the basis of the board’s action in dismissing the application were the only defenses interposed and they are, of course, the only ones argued on this appeal. The question presented in ground (1) may be considered as a mixed one of both law and fact, the fact involved in it being (a) whether the servant, W. 0. Lemaster, at any time before the expiration of one year from receiving his injuries, lost his mind to such an extent as to render him non sui juris so as to discontinue- the running of the statute against the period (one year) within which he should make demand of his employer for compensation, as is prescribed in section 4914 of our present statutes which is a part of our compensation act. The legal phase of that ground is (b) whether the loss of the .servant’s mental faculties within that prescribed time would or nor arrest the period within which such demand should be. made after it had started, and had partially expired, and during which the servant was .in full possession of his mental faculties.

There was abundant evidence before the board, -and also before the Magoffin circuit court, to show that there was no impairment of the servant’s mental faculties at any time following the accident, and, of course, that testimony also supported the conclusion that there was no such impairment for the first twelve months following the accident, although as will be seen the application to the board for an award was not made until the expiration of four years -and twenty-eight days from the date of the accident. The board necessarily found, as there was. no evidence to the contrary, that no demand for compensation was ever made to the employer within twelve months following the accident, as is expressly prescribed by section 4914 of the Statute, supra, if the servant -was sui juris during that time, or if there existed a proper legal representative who had authority to act in his stead, and which the Scott *47 Tobacco Case, supra, expressly beld to be mandatory; That opinion also beld that if the parties did_ not-agree within that period, or if they disagreed within less than that period after the demand. was made, it-would then become the duty of the servant, or the one representing him to make application to the board, within twelve months after such disagreement and. unless done within that time by a servant who was sui juris, or by the one legally authorized to act in his-stead, the claim would become barred under the statute. The conclusions reached in the cited case have been followed since then in a number of others and. they are now the controling rules of interpretation and practice in compensation cases.

No date is shown when the court proceeding under and by virtue of which C. P. Lemaster was appointed committee for his son; nor does it appear what was the nature of that proceeding, i. e., whether' it was grounded on physical or mental disability or on both. But, assuming that it was because of mental disability, it still does not appear when such condition arose or when it assumed such proportions as to render W. 0. Lemaster, .the servant, legally disabled SO' as to place him in the mentally deficient class, and to' thereby render him incapable of exercising his legal rights. His committee testified that he ■ did not notice' any impairment of his ward’s mind until after he quit work, or more than eight months following the accident sustained by him; but whether the observations of the' witness, as so testified to by him, was within twelve' months from the date of the accident does not clearly appear, and the same may be said with reference t<> every witness who testified in support of the claim. Other witnesses who appeared in the case for the employer stated that.they had at no time since the accident observed any impairment of the mental faculties of W. O. Lemaster, and it was in such condition of the proof that the board must have' found that there was-no impairment of mind, as a result of the accident, or otherwise, for at least a period of more than twelve' months following the accident, and 'that, since there was no proven demand of the employer for compensation within that time, the claim was necessarily barred. The testimony was in the same contradictory condition with reference to the impairment of the servant’s mind during the three years and twenty-eight' *48

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.2d 708, 268 Ky. 44, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoenig-v-lemasters-committee-kyctapphigh-1937.