Luttrell v. Traylor Bros.

157 N.E.2d 292, 129 Ind. App. 573, 1959 Ind. App. LEXIS 121
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1959
DocketNo. 19,269
StatusPublished

This text of 157 N.E.2d 292 (Luttrell v. Traylor Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luttrell v. Traylor Bros., 157 N.E.2d 292, 129 Ind. App. 573, 1959 Ind. App. LEXIS 121 (Ind. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Kelley, J.

Appellant, as employee, and appellee, as his employer, on February 18, 1957, entered into a compensation agreement providing for the payment by appellee to appellant of compensation at the rate of $33.00 per week for a period of 200 weeks from and including July 20, 1956, for a 40% permanent partial impairment to the body of appellant as a whole. Said agreement was filed with and approved by the Industrial Board on February 25, 1957. On said latter mentioned date there was filed with said Board an agreement between said parties for the payment by appellee to appellant of a lump sum, to be fixed by the Board, in redemption of 170 weeks of the remainder of appellee’s weekly compensation liability. The Board, at said time, approved said agreement and fixed the lump sum payment at $5345.94, and on March 1, 1957, appellee filed its Form No. 6 Memorandum showing that final compensation had been paid appellant as “per said Lump Sum Agreement.”

On February 3, 1958, appellant filed his application, Form No. 14, for a review of award on account of a change in conditions which was alleged to be that the disability of appellant “has increased since the date of said award, and that said injury has resulted in a permanent total impairment.” It was also alleged that the “employer and employee have disagreed relative to continuance of payments of said award.” Appellee filed a special answer alleging the foregoing facts and asserting that appellant’s application was “prematurely filed” and should be dismissed in that it was filed approximately two years and ten months “before [576]*576the expiration of the time for which he has been paid compensation benefits.”

The Board found that appellant’s application was filed approximately two years and ten months before the expiration of the time for which he has been paid compensation benefits and that said application “should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.” The Board entered an order dismissing appellant’s application.

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the Industrial Board is authorized by the Compensation Act to refuse to entertain appellant’s application because filed prior to the expiration of the time for which he had been paid benefits under said approved agreements. Appellee states that said expiration date would be approximately November 22, 1960.

Section 45 of Acts 1929, being Section 40-1410, Burns’ 1952 Replacement, provides:

“40-1410. CONTINUING POWER TO CHANGE OR MODIFY AWARD. — The power and jurisdiction of the industrial board over each case shall be continuing, and, from time to time, it may, upon its own motion or upon the application of either party, on account of a change in conditions, make such modification or change in the award, ending, lessening, continuing or extending the payments previously awarded, either by agreement or upon hearing, as it may deem just, subject to the maximum and minimum provided for in this act.
Upon making any such change, the board shall immediately send to each of the parties a copy of the modified award. No such modification shall affect the previous award as to any money paid thereunder.
The board shall not make any such modification upon its own motion, nor shall any application therefore be filed by either party after the expiration of two (2) years from the last day for which compensation was paid under the original award made either by agreement, or upon hear[577]*577ing, except that applications for increased permanent partial impairment are barred unless filed within one (1) year from the last day for which compensation was paid. The board may at any time correct any clerical error in any finding or award.”

The statute vests the Board with a continuing power and jurisdiction over each case. It also authorizes the Board, from time to time, on its own motion or upon application of either party, to modify or change the payments previously awarded, whether such award resulted from a hearing or an agreement of the parties, and the change or modification is made subject to the maximum and minimum provisions of the Act. Such change or modification is authorized “on account of a change in conditions” and may consist of the ending, lessening, continuing, or extending the previously awarded payments. No provision appears limiting such action by the Board, whether upon its own motion or upon application therefor by either of the parties, to a time subsequent to the expiration of the time for which benefits were previously awarded.

Appellee does not seem to seriously urge that the Board was without statutory authorization to entertain and determine the appellant’s application. The appellee does seriously urge, however, that the Board “has the initial power and duty to determine its own jurisdiction,” and that the Board is entitled to refuse to assume jurisdiction over the matter it has already decided until the benefits derived from such decision have been used and the effects of the decision have become final. In particular, in argument, appellee proposed that it had paid appellant a considerable sum of money as a lump sum settlement in February of 1957 and in less than one year thereafter appellant [578]*578filed this application for review, leaving appellee without any opportunity for recovery or adjustment of the money paid to appellant.

Legal ratiocination quickly leads to dissipation of the aforesaid argumentative proposal. It would seem rather to provoke a consideration of whether the Board can of its own volition refuse to extend the functions of its office to pass upon and determine the merits of an application timely filed. It may be, as appellee expostulates, that the employer, or his insurer, may be seriously inconvenienced and without certainty of circumstance when a lump sum adjustment is made. But such situation is not only a matter more appropriate for consideration by the Board in its final arrangement and disposition of the application upon the facts made evident at the hearing thereon, but is recognized by the aforesaid section of the act itself by the provision that “No such modification shall affect the previous award as to any money paid thereunder.”

We are here dealing only with the right or power of the Board to refuse the assumption of jurisdiction over a properly filed application for relief by one of the parties to the existing award. Appellee seeks to justify the herein appealed from action of the Board on the ground that the Board has the “initial power and duty to determine its own jurisdiction.” The idea of this statement seems garnered from the case of Homan v. Belleville Lumber & Supply Co. (1937), 104 Ind. App. 96, 8 N. E. 2d 127, wherein it is said: “. . . it is our belief that the legislature intended that the Industrial Board itself should be at least the primary judge of its own jurisdiction.” But whatever meaning may be attached to that unfortunate and unexplained remark of the court, under the facts evi[579]*579dent in that case, it would seem grossly improper to attribute to it the meaning now insisted upon, i.e., that the Board can judge for itself whether to act upon a timely tendered application. The court, in that case, was, at the time of the aforesaid statement, considering whether the Board had the right to set aside an award made by the Board at a time when it was without jurisdiction to make such award.

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Related

Martz v. Grasselli Chemical Co.
162 N.E. 737 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1928)
Homan v. Belleville Lumber and Supply Co.
8 N.E.2d 127 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1937)
In re Stoke
66 Ind. App. 38 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1917)
Enterprise Fence & Foundry Co. v. Majors
121 N.E. 6 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 N.E.2d 292, 129 Ind. App. 573, 1959 Ind. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luttrell-v-traylor-bros-indctapp-1959.