Horvath v. Sheridan-Wyoming Coal Co.

131 P.2d 315, 58 Wyo. 211, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 22
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1942
Docket2221
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 315 (Horvath v. Sheridan-Wyoming Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horvath v. Sheridan-Wyoming Coal Co., 131 P.2d 315, 58 Wyo. 211, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 22 (Wyo. 1942).

Opinion

*216 Riner, Chief Justice.

The question to be disposed of by our decision in this litigation is whether there shall be upheld an order of the district court of Crook County granting a new trial in an action upon an alleged contract which it is claimed was made in connection with a Workmen’s Compensation proceeding. The appellate procedure is that permissible under one of the provisions of the direct appeal law of this state, viz., Section 89-4910, W. R. S. 1931.

The plaintiff and appellant, Louis Horvath, will be usually subsequently referred to herein as the “plaintiff”, the “employee” or by his surname. The defendant and respondent Sheridan-Wyoming Coal Company, a corporation, may be appropriately mentioned hereinafter as the “Company”, the “employer” or as the “corporate defendant”. The defendant and respondent Kessinger may properly be designated as the “manager” or by his own surname.

The facts material to be considered as we read the *217 record may fairly be stated to be substantially as follows:

Louis Horvath was injured on December 4, 1937, while in the employ of the Company at Acme, Wyoming. Injury suffered and the manner in which it was incurred are very well outlined in the final order of award made in the compensation case phase of this litigation by the district court of Sheridan County as follows:

“While operating cutting machine in coal mine a slab of coal slipped off face of pillar, causing laceration of scalp, fracture of right fibula, and injury to muscles of right shoulder. Has been compensated for temporary total disability to and including March 10, 1938, at which time he endeavored to work, but the injury to his shoulder prevented him from so doing. Is entitled to compensation for temporary total disability March 28th to June 1st, both inclusive, 66 Days at $60.00 month.”

The employee resumed work June 2, 1938, at first as a watchman at the Acme mine of the Company. Thereafter, when that mine closed down April 1, 1940, he was placed at work by his employer in aiding in the dismantling of this mine. It appears that he was injured also on April 14, 1940, due to his falling off a bench while engaged in taking down some wires. For this injury he received an award under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, amounting to $41.02. He was employed thereafter in this dismantling work, at digging up mine track and at other jobs connected with that task, this type of employment ceasing about October 22, 1940.

There were about one hundred fifty men employed at the Acme mine by the Company when it closed down and nearly one hundred were transferred to the Monarch mine owned by the same employer. These men were selected within their several classifications at a conference had between the Company and the Miners’ *218 Union officials. The remainder, or about fifty men, were left at Acme for the purpose of continuing the dismantling work. When that task was finally concluded these workmen, of whom Horvath was one, were left without employment.

May 1, 1939, Horvath made application to the Wyoming Unemployment Compensation Commission, and stated in his application that he was “unemployed, able to work, available for work”, and that he had “been registered for work”.

The plaintiff asserts that he was permanently injured on account of the accident experienced by him on December 4, 1937, and the theory upon which the plaintiff’s side of the cause below was tried appears to be that he was reemployed by the Company on June 2 or 3, 1938, under an oral contract made between himself and the defendant Kessinger, on behalf of the Company, whereby the latter agreed to give him (Horvath) steady employment during the remainder of his life at such light work as he might be able to perform and at living wages.

The consideration for this agreement was asserted to be that due to the promises thus claimed to have been made on behalf of the Company to Horvath, the latter agreed to and did “forego and abandon his right to Workmen’s Compensation allowances arising from the injuries received by him while employed by the Company in its Acme mine on December 4,1937,” more specifically that Horvath was induced by these promises made on behalf of the Company to allow the two years period to elapse during which a modification of the amount of the award on account of the asserted increase of incapacity due to the injury suffered by the employee December 4, 1937, could be had, as provided by the concluding part of Section 124-113 W. R. S., *219 1931, as amended by Section 4 of Chapter 128, Laws of Wyoming, 1937, which reads:

“Where an award of compensation has been made in favor of an injured employe, an application may be made to the court by either party any time within two years from the date of the award, or at any time during which monthly payments under an award are being made, for a modification of the amount of the award on the ground of increase or decrease of incapacity due solely to the injury, or upon the ground of mistake or fraud.”

Horvath asserts in his petition filed in the cause that this contract was made on behalf of the Company by its general manager Kessinger and general superintendent C. M. Shott. However, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case and before the defendants had introduced any evidence plaintiff dismissed his alleged claim against Superintendent Shott on the ground that the evidence which the employee had presented to the court wholly failed “to warrant the inclusion of” Shott as a defendant in the case. Shott who was originally made a party defendant named in plaintiff’s petition became, therefore, no longer connected with the litigation.

Both the Company and Kessinger in their pleadings denied that any such contract had ever been made. The testimony of the parties as to this alleged agreement was: that of Horvath to the effect that Kessinger came in his car on June 2 or 3, 1938, to see the employee and “he promised me an easy job, lifetime, and to forget the compensation”; that Horvath then told Kessinger he would go and see Dr. Anton, the physician employed by the Miners’ Union to care for its members when ill or injured; that Dr. Anton called up the pit boss, Welsh, and Welsh hired Horvath as a watchman, as above stated; the testimony of Mrs. Horvath that she heard this conversation between her husband and Kessinger that “Mr. Kessinger says ‘Louis, you ain’t going to get no more treatments and no more compensation, you *220 better go to work. The company promises you an easy job as long as you live at good living wages. Just go to work and forget about the compensation.’ ”; and that after seeing Dr. Anton Horvath went to work.

J. T. Kessinger testified for the defendants that he was the secretary of the Company by election and he was general manager of the Company in title only; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 315, 58 Wyo. 211, 1942 Wyo. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horvath-v-sheridan-wyoming-coal-co-wyo-1942.