Lucero v. White Auto Stores, Inc.

291 P.2d 308, 60 N.M. 266
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1955
Docket5978
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 291 P.2d 308 (Lucero v. White Auto Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucero v. White Auto Stores, Inc., 291 P.2d 308, 60 N.M. 266 (N.M. 1955).

Opinion

McGHEE, Justice.

This is an action by the widow and surviving children of Joe Lucero under the Workmen’s Compensation Act 1953 Comp. § 59-10-1 et seq., for benefits because of his death on May 15, 1953, as a result of fatal burns received in a butane gas explosion on May 11, 1953. Suit was not filed until August 31, 1954, and two of the defenses are here urged by the defendants, appellants, as grounds for reversal of a judgment in favor of the' claimants following trial to a jury: first, delay in filing the claim, and second, that the injury did not arise out of and-in the course of decedent’s employment.

Joe Lucero was manager of the appliance department in the defendant employer’s store in Las Cruces, New Mexico. One Juan Reyes purchased a used stove at said store, the transaction being with Lucero. The stove was delivered to Reyes at the Stahmann Farms, where Reyes was a tenant and worker. He made no arrangements with a plumber for installation of the stove. Reyes left his home after his noon meal and during his absence Lucero came to the house. He told Mrs. Reyes he had come by order of his store to install the stove. In the process of Lucero’s attempting to install and light the stove, a butane gas explosion occurred. The four Reyes children and Lucero were fatally burned, and Mrs. Reyes sustained severe burns. A damage suit was brought by Reyes and his wife in the United States District Court at Santa Fe, New' Mexico, against White Auto Stores, Inc. In the consideration of the instant case, the circumstance and the time of trial of this federal case become important, as will be noted hereafter.

We will first consider the argument of the defendants that the present claim is barred by the one-year statute of limitations, § 59-10-17, N.M.S.A., 1953 Compilation, which provides:

“In event any injury from accident arising out of and in the course of the employment of a workman should result in and be the proximate cause of his death and he should leave surviving him any dependents, as herein defined, entitled to compensation under the terms hereof, payment thereof may be received or claim therefor filed by such person as the court may authorize or permit, on behalf of the beneficiaries entitled thereto, and such claim shall be filed and answer made thereto and other procedure had as in cases filed by the injured workman. Provided, that no claim shall be filed or suit brought to recover such compensation unless claim therefor be filed within one ’(1) year after the date of such death.”

Following our decision in Taylor v. American Employers’ Ins. Co. of Boston, Mass., 1931, 35 N.M. 544, 3 P.2d 76, that the right to compensation was wholly statutory and the time fixed for filing claims was a limitation on the right of action, not a mere limitation on the remedy, that the limitation was absolute and unconditional and not subject to pleas of waiver and estoppel, § 59-10-14, N.M.S.A., 1953 Compilation, was enacted, providing:

“The failure of any person entitled to compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of the state of New Mexico, * * * to give notice of injury, file claim, or bring suit within the time fixed by said act shall not deprive such person or persons of the right to such compensation where such failure was caused in whole or in part by the conduct of the employer or insurer which would reasonably lead the person or persons entitled to compensation to believe the compensation would be paid.”

It is seen that the only modification of the statute covering the time for filing claims, § 59-10-17, supra, was to excuse delay where the failure to file claim had been caused in whole or in part by the conduct of the employer or insurer, which would reasonably lead the person or persons entitled to compensation benefits to believe they would be paid.

In the claim filed in this case, the limitation provision was sought to be avoided by pleading that Mrs. Lucero’s attorney, J. Benson Newell, of Las Cruces, had been negotiating with attorneys for the defend-' ants in an attempt to make a lump-sum settlement, that the negotiations had been' pending for several months and had caused delay in filing the claim as defendants refused to make an offer of compromise which Mrs. Lucero felt warranted her acceptance. It was alleged that Mrs. Lucero was advised by one of the representatives of the defendant, White Auto Stores, Inc., when she was a witness for it in the trial of the damage suit brought by Reyes and his wife in federal court, that she (Mrs. Lucero) and the children would be taken care of under the compensation laws.

As an additional reason for delay in filing claim it was alleged that just before the expiration of the year from the date of Lucero’s death, Mrs. Lucero’s sister-in-law, Mrs. Dimatteo, contacted Mrs. Lucero’s attorney, Mr. Newell, re-' questing information about the status of Mrs. Lucero’s claim and was assured by Mr. Newell that even though the year would elapse before they would or could bring the case to conclusion by compromise or otherwise, that he had been assured by Mr. Forest Sanders of Las Cruces, one of the attorneys for defendants, that should it become necessary for Mrs. Lucero to file suit he would not interpose the objection that the statute of limitation had run; that with this assurance Mrs. Lucero agreed to let the claim stand until the trial of the damage suit by Reyes and his wife against White Auto Stores, Inc., in federal court.

Finally it was alleged that all negotiations for compromise settlement were terminated August 30, 1954, by written communication from defendants’ attorneys denying liability.

Just prior to the trial of this case, claimants were permitted to make the following-amendment to the claim:

“That plaintiffs’ failure to file this suit within one year after date of death of Joe Lucero, was in whole or in part caused by' conduct upon the part of the defendants, or one of them, which reasonably led the plaintiffs to believe that compensation would be paid.”

- The trial court submitted the question to the jury whether the conduct of the employer or insurer was .such as to bring the case within the exception noted above, thus tolling the time for filing claim, and, also, the question whether the insurer had waived the one-year limitation.

Defendants seasonably moved for judgment in their favor on these and other points at the close of claimant’s case-in-chief, and at the close of all of the testimony. Likewise, suitable objections to the submission of the question of the tolling of the statute'and of waiver were made. The motions and. objections were overruled.

The evidence on the tolling of the statute and waiver is, in substance, as follows:

While decedent was in a hospital an official of the defendant employer told Mrs. Lucero she need not worry about medical and hospital expenses as they were covered by workmen’s compensation; apparently the employer or insurer paid such bills. Shortly after the death of decedent, an insurance adjuster from El Paso, Texas, talked to Mrs. Lucero about the accident and said he would take up the matter of compensation with the company.

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Bluebook (online)
291 P.2d 308, 60 N.M. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucero-v-white-auto-stores-inc-nm-1955.