Liddell v. State Industrial Commission

1927 OK 274, 259 P. 265, 126 Okla. 235, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 13, 1927
Docket17013
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1927 OK 274 (Liddell v. State Industrial Commission) 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.

Bluebook
Liddell v. State Industrial Commission, 1927 OK 274, 259 P. 265, 126 Okla. 235, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 125 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

FOSTER, C.

This cause is to review the action of the State Industrial Commission refusing the petitioner an award under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of the state of Oklahoma.

The material facts as shown by the record are, substantially, as follows:

On January 3, 1925,- Jack Liddell, petitioner, while employed by the Superior Smokeless Coal & Mining Company, according to his own testimony, received an injury while driving a mule in one of the mines of said company at Tahoma, Okla.; that the accident occurred about three o’clock *236 in the afternoon on said date, as a result of mud and water which was thrown into his eye when the mule he was driving stepped into a hole of water in the mine containing certain mineral substance; that when he left the mine about four o’clock he told Mr. Hurbert, the foreman, of the mine that, ‘T pretty near got my eye put out.” This was on Saturday, January 3rd, and petitioner did not appear for work the following Monday. On January 6th he called Dr Miner, a local physician, who examined him and pronounced his trouble as what is known, as conjunctivitis (which apparently, from, the record, is a trouble caused by a foreign substance getting into the eye). After a day or so Dr. Miner advised him to go to a specialist at Fort Smith, Ark., which h« did. Dr. Dórente, a specialist at Fort Smith, treated him for some time and his eye continued to get worse until on February 14, 1925, he entirely lost the vision ill his left eye. I-Ie filed a claim with the Industrial Commission about March 1, 1925.

There was testimony of. other witnesses Introduced by respondent to the effect that Liddell, on January 4th and 5th, complained of a swelling" in his face and an aching in his chest and of not being able to work, but said nothing about the trouble with his eye. It was admitted that he applied liniment to his face a day or two after the injury, and that he sat before a fire until his face became very irritated. There is also testimony that claimant had erysipelas.

. Both the local doctor and the specialist testified that, they treated Liddell, and the substance .of their testimony is to the effect that liis trouble could have been caused by the' splashing of the mud into his eye and that it could have been caused from other sources. Dr. Dórente, specialist at Fort Smith, was first of the opinion that it was caused from erysipelas, but later concluded that he did not know the cause. However, he testified when Liddell came to him that his trouble was entirely masked.

There was also some testimony introduced by petitioner corroborating his statement that he informed the foreman of the company on the evening of January 3, 1925, that he had almost lost his eye, and also some testimony about sending word about his eye trouble on Monday or Tuesday following the alleged accident.

The foreman of the company, however, denies positively that Liddell ever notified him on January 3rd about getting a substance in his eye, or that he had any other notice until Liddell returned from Fort Smith. The superintendent of the company also testified that he had no notice of the alleged injury until about the first of March.

These facts were presented to the Commission at a hearing conducted by H. C. Myers at Poteau, and also by depositions submitted. After receiving all the reports and testimony, the Commission, on October 6, 1925 (some six months after the hearing held at Poteau), entered an order which is, in substance, as follows:

That on and prior to January 3, 1925, respondent was engaged in operating a hazardous industry covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Law; that the claimant was employed by respondent and that on said day claimant sustained an accidental injury arising out of. and in the course of, his employment, and as a result thereof lost the total and permanent use of his left eye; (hat the claimant notified the foreman of the respondent orally on the day of the injury, to wit, January 3, 1925; that the claimant was treated by several doctors with the knowledge and acquiescence of the respondent, and that by reason of the aforesaid facts the claimant is entitled to compensation for one-hundred weeks at $18 per week.

The respondents filed a motion with the Commission on October 17th to vacate said order, alleging in substance that there was not sufficient evidence to support said order and there was no proper notice given to, the company concerning, the injury.

On October 31st, the Industrial Commission set aside its order of October 6th and entered an order, in substance, as follows:

That the Commission is of the opinion that the evidence does not support the finding that the loss of the claimant’s eye was due to an accidental injury, and the Commission is of the further opinion that no-evidence was offered by claimant that notice was given of the alleged injury as required by statute, and affirmative proof was not offered by claimant that employer was not prejudiced by his failure to give said notice or that he was unable to give the same, therefore vacated the order of October 6, 1925.

The petitioner within 30 days filed hie petition in this court to review the order of October 31st. and in said petition ue presents six assignments of error:

The first four assignments have to do with the power of the State Industrial Commission to set aside and vacate its own-orders and awards.

The assignments o’f error mainly rtlied *237 upon by the petitioner, both in his brief and oral argument, are as follows:

Fifth Assignment of Error: “That even if said Commission had ihe inherent power of setting aside said order of October 6, 1925, wliieh is not admitted, but expressly denied, and the said Commission had the right of making its second order of October 31, 1925, denying compensation to the petitioner herein, said last named order is erroneous and illegal, because It is not supported by the evidence, because it is against the uncontradicted evidence, and because it is wholly unsupported by competent evidence.”

Sixth Assignment of Error: “Because said order datecl October 31, 1925, is in violation of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and of no legal effect.”

There are but three questions presented for determination in this case;

(1) Did the Industrial Commission have jurisdiction to set aside its .order of October 6, 1925, and enter its order of October 31, 1925?

(2) Is there sufficient competent evidence in the record to support the finding of the Commission as set out in its order of October 31, 1925, that the loss of the claimant’s eye was not due to an accidental injury?

(3) Did the employer receive such notice of the injury as is required by law?

It appears that the order of October 31, 1925, was made upon the application of an interested party without any change in condition, and in this order the Commission uses the following language:

“The Commission, in reports on file and ■being well and sufficiently advised in the premises, is of the opinion that the evidence does not support the finding that the loss of the claimant’s eye was due to an accidental injury.”

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 274, 259 P. 265, 126 Okla. 235, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liddell-v-state-industrial-commission-okla-1927.