Luketich v. Krey Packing Company

413 S.W.2d 29, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 756
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1967
Docket32491
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 413 S.W.2d 29 (Luketich v. Krey Packing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luketich v. Krey Packing Company, 413 S.W.2d 29, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 756 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*31 BRADY, Commissioner.

This appeal arises out of a claim for workmen’s compensation. The circuit court affirmed the decision of the Industrial Commission and the self-insured employer appeals. The parties will be referred to as “the employee” and “the employer”. We will refer to the Industrial Commission by that title and sometimes as “the Commission”.

We are first confronted with two attacks upon the jurisdiction of this court which must be disposed of. The first of these arises from the employee’s contention the employer failed to file a timely application for review from the award of the referee. The filing of an application for review of a referee’s award in a Workmen’s Compensation case within the time prescribed by the statute provided for such a review is jurisdictional. Tabb v. McGinley, Mo.App., 313 S.W.2d 745. Of course, if the Commission had no jurisdiction to review the referee’s award then neither the circuit court nor this court has jurisdiction to consider the appeal from the award of the Commission. In Tabb v. McGinley, supra, this court (construing the ten-day provision then contained in § 287.480, RS Mo 1949, V.A.M.S.) held that an application for review is made on the date it is received by the Commission rather than when it is deposited in the mail. In the instant case the referee’s award was not made until March 22, 1965. The employee’s application for review was received by the Industrial Commission on April 8th of that year. The employer’s application for review was received on April 12th of that year. In 1963 the section dealing with an application for review was amended and “twenty days” was substituted for “ten days”. See Laws 1963, p. 410, § 1. It is clear that the employee’s application was received by the Commission within the twenty days provided by § 287.480, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. It is likewise clear that the employer’s application for review was received on the twenty-first day. However, a reference to the calendar for the year 1965 will disclose that April 11th, the twentieth day after the award of the referee, fell upon a Sunday. Under these circumstances the employee’s contention is without merit and the employer did file a timely application for review.

The employee also contends that we are without jurisdiction in this matter for the reason that, to quote from his motion to transfer this appeal to the Supreme Court, “ * * * ‘the order and judgment of the Circuit Court’ * * * embodies a decision affecting the Treasurer of the State of Missouri * * The simple answer to this contention is that regardless of whether that State official was a party to this proceeding prior to the referee’s award, he ceased to be such after that time and the decision of the circuit court does not affect the State officer. The record discloses the employee filed his claim against the employer and, to quote from the claim, “State Treasurer, State of Missouri, Second Injury Fund, Jefferson City, Mo.” For some reason that cannot be discerned the State Treasurer never raised any question as to the propriety of the proceeding against the Second Injury Fund, filed an answer, and participated in the hearing before the referee. In his award the referee denied the employee’s claim for compensation from the State Treasurer as custodian of the Second Injury Fund. In his application for review the employee did not request review of that matter. Neither did the employer. Accordingly, that matter was then finally determined. Whatever may be the effect of the appearance by the attorney for the State Treasurer before the circuit court, that appearance cannot revive an issue which was already finally determined. It should be noted that the employer, appellant in the instant case, raises, no issue with regard to the Second Injury Fund. This court has jurisdiction of this, appeal.

*32 The facts out of which the employee’s claim arose are that he had first had trouble with his back some twenty-four or twenty-five years before this incident when he hurt his back while carrying some trays up a flight of stairs. This injury “ * * * wasn’t a sudden thing, it was a result of doing this more regularly, this twisting way of walking up the stairs with this weight.” As a result he had pains off and on sometimes at intervals of two to three years. Later on, while working as a boner at another meat company, he got a catch in his back and went to the doctor who thought his bad appendix was at least the partial cause and it was removed in 1950 or 1951. He did not lose any time nor did he make a claim because of his back on this occasion. After the' appendix operation there was a period of time when he had no pain and then in 1954 he began to have pain again at the lower right side of his back. The pain did not result from any “one particular thing” and after it hurt for a week or so he was examined by Dr. Ford who gave him a brace which he was to wear except when sleeping. He wore this brace regularly for about three months and then, being free of pain, discontinued its regular use although he has been wearing it off and on ever since then. In 1961 or 1962 the trouble in his back began to gradually return without being caused by any specific incident, and he went to see a chiropractor who gave him deep sound therapy. He was able to perform his regular duties and did not lose any work. In a matter of a week or so “it cleared up”. In early September of 1962, about one week prior to the incident upon which he bases this claim, he went to see a Dr. Vacca due to “pain in the lower part of my back on the right side.” Again this was not caused by any particular incident. Dr. Vacca prescribed medicine for him, took x-rays, examined him, and asked him to continue the deep sound therapy with the chiropractor. On all of these occasions he was without pain for the time between the occurrences, and between them had free movements of all of his limbs.

On September 13, 1962, the day of this accident, the employee went to the employer’s first aid room to get some pills as he had some pain in his back. He was wearing the brace Dr. Ford had prescribed for him. Later that day while taking a hindquarter of beef from a conveying rail located about five to six feet from the table where he was to bone it he suffered the injury forming the basis for this claim. The conveying rail was about seven to eight feet high and he put a hand hook held in his left hand into the meat to hold it. There was a truck (cart) furnished for waste and fat to be thrown into and this was parked in the employee’s way as he brought the hindquarter from the rail to the boning table. His normal method of removing the quarter would be to take it off the rail, pivot around on the right foot, swing the beef around to the table and drop it there all in a continuous motion. On this occasion the truck was not parked in its usual place but was parked in such a way that had he continued with this motion the handle of it would have struck him on his shin. Seeing this was about to happen, he stopped but “ * * * the beef continued to come, and that is when I felt the pain in my back.” He dropped the quarter which weighed about 125 lbs. and, falling forward, grabbed onto the truck. He was bent over with the pain which was on the left side of the lower part of his back, and was trying to avoid putting weight on the left leg as when he did so pain ran down it so that “I couldn’t stand it.” He could not put any weight on his left leg and had to be carried into the first aid room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 S.W.2d 29, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luketich-v-krey-packing-company-moctapp-1967.