Laichalk v. Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co.

13 N.W.2d 826, 308 Mich. 298
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1944
DocketDocket No. 6, Calendar No. 42,337.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 N.W.2d 826 (Laichalk v. Chicago Pneumatic Tool 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
Laichalk v. Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co., 13 N.W.2d 826, 308 Mich. 298 (Mich. 1944).

Opinions

North, C. J.

This is an appeal by defendants from an award of compensation to plaintiff, based upon his claim that while in the employ of the defendant, Chicago Pneumatic Tool Company, he suffered a compensable accident as a result of which .he is totally incapacitated by reason of traumatic psychoneurosis.

Except as otherwise indicated, we refer to Chicago Pneumatic Tool Company as the defendant. Prior to February 9, 1935, plaintiff had been in defendant’s employ for upwards of six years. On the mentioned date plaintiff sustained a compensable accident under circumstances which he describes in the record as follows: “I was pulling a pan of stock *300 with 247 chisel blanks of alloyed steel which would range from ‘400 to 600 pounds. I was pulling it backward because I wasn’t capable of pulling it forward.” Plaintiff testified that while pulling this pan of stock he slipped and at once “felt something tear” in his right side. Defendant filed a report of a compensable accident, and on an agreement between the parties approved by the department on March 15, 1935, compensation was to be paid for total disability at $18 per week beginning on the date of the accident and to continue during total disability. Payments were made to May 11, 1935. Defendant filed a petition to 'stop compensation dated May 20, 1935. "While this petition was pending before the deputy commissioner, plaintiff’s attorney filed a stipulation wherein he stated that, “being duly authorized so to do,” he “agrees that an award should be entered denying further compensation upon the ground that disability does not result from an accident.” An order stopping compensation, from which no appeal was taken, was accordingly entered on the 4th day of September, 1935. The following is embodied in the deputy commissioner’s award:

“Remarks: Inasmuch as plaintiff’s disability, if any, is not due to the accident, the defendant’s petition to stop compensation ought to be and the same is hereby granted. ’ ’

Plaintiff filed a petition for further compensation which was subscribed and sworn to April 28, 1936. Therein plaintiff set forth “that he is unable to do any kind of work and has been so disabled 'since the date of the accident and that his condition is worse than it was at the time compensation was stopped. ’ ’ Defendant’s answer to this petition denied plaintiff was entitled to further compensation. On Au *301 gust 20, 1936, the foregoing petition was disposed of by granting plaintiff’s motion to withdraw the same. Because plaintiff’s petition of April 28, 1936, was withdrawn, nothing was adjudicated in that proceeding, and it has no effect on plaintiff’s present petition.

Plaintiff instituted no subsequent proceeding until he filed his present petition for further compensation which was subscribed and sworn to February 10, 1941. Defendant.answered, denying plaintiff’s claim for further compensation, and among other defenses urged that the award of September 4, 1935, is res judicata of plaintiff’s present petition. Upon hearing before the deputy commissioner plaintiff’s petition was dismissed “for the reason that the unappealed award of September 4, 1935, adjudicated that the plaintiff’s then disability, which I now find to be the same disability, was not related to his accident.” On review by the department of labor and industry the deputy commissioner’s award was reversed and plaintiff awarded compensation for total disability at the rate of $18 per week from September 5,1935, until the further order of the department, with the exception of certain short intervals during which plaintiff was employed. The foregoing award was based on the department’s finding that plaintiff has suffered from traumatic neurosis since 1935 and that when plaintiff’s case was before the department on former occasions neither he nor his attorneys were aware of plaintiff’s neurotic condition; and further that plaintiff’s “mental derangement” was not placed in issue at any of the former hearings and therefore there could not be res judicata of that issue. In consequence thereof compensation was awarded plaintiff, notwithstanding defendant’s contention that the unappealed award of *302 September 4, 1935, was res judicata of tbe instant petition.

Under the record before us the above holding must be affirmed. As already noted plaintiff sustained a compensable injury February 9', 1935. Defendant through its insurer promptly agreed to an award of compensation for total disability which was paid until May, 1935. In the agreement filed with the department and upon which the award was based the sole injury set forth was “injured side.” May 20, 1935, defendant filed a petition to stop. Aside from writing a letter to the department wherein plaintiff stated he was still disabled from the accident, he made no answer to defendant’s petition to stop compensation, although plaintiff and a physician as his witness testified at the hearing. The order finally entered was based on the stipulation of plaintiff’s counsel that “disability does not result from an accident.” It is important to note that thus far in the proceedings between plaintiff and defendant the former had not asserted that he was entitled to compensation on, the ground that he was suffering from traumatic psychoneurosis. It necessarily follows that whether plaintiff was suffering from neurosis under circumstances entitling him to compensation was not adjudicated in the prior proceedings because that issue was not presented; especially in view of the fact that the department found in the instant proceedings plaintiff’s disability of that character was not then known to plaintiff or his counsel. In so holding we are not unmindful that it appears in the record plaintiff had been in the Ford Hospital where his condition was under observation and investigation, and that in hospital reports some reference was made to plaintiff’s neurotic condition. Nor are we unmindful that on the hearing of defendant’s petition to stop, Dr. Caldwell, upon being asked *303 whether plaintiff herein “was malingering at all,” testified:

“I do not believe so; but I beliéve he borders on the type of the individual who is aesthetic (asthenic). I believe he believes himself to have a disability which we cannot find an objective reason to substantiate. * * * In other words he believes himself to have a disability for which we can find no authentic objective reason.”

The fact still remains that in each of the proceedings prior to and including the order of September 4, 1935, stopping compensation, adjudication* so far as disclosed by the record, turned entirely upon whether plaintiff had physical injuries in consequence of which he was disabled. In this aspect Boyich v. J. A. Utley Co., 306 Mich. 625, upon which defendant relies, must be distinguished from the case now under consideration. In the Boyich Case prior to the proceedings before the department which were reviewed in this Court, there had been denial of the employee’s petition for further, compensation wherein he asserted neurotic disability, and it was adjudicated that there was no causal relation between Boyich’s accident and his claimed neurosis. Clearly this was an adjudication of the same issue presented in Boyich’s later petition.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 826, 308 Mich. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laichalk-v-chicago-pneumatic-tool-co-mich-1944.