Mannes-Vale, Inc. v. Vale
This text of 717 P.2d 709 (Mannes-Vale, Inc. v. Vale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff employer and its insurer, State Insurance Fund, seek reversal of ah Industrial Commission award to Robert Vale for additional medical expense benefits attributed to his injuries sustained in 1968. Plaintiffs claim that an award of further medical benefits is barred because no claim was ever timely filed.
The essential facts are not disputed. On June 3, 1968, employee Robert Vale was injured in an automobile accident while in the course of his employment. Although Vale did not file a formal claim with the Industrial Commission (“Commission”), notice of the injury and a claim for benefits were given by him to his employer, and plaintiffs paid Vale medical benefits and disability compensation from 1968 through August 1971.
On July 19, 1968, plaintiff State Insurance Fund filed with the Commission a “Notice: Payment of Temporary Disability Compensation as per Utah Code (35-1-65).” In addition to. showing the amounts being paid to Vale, the notice indicated that the future disposition of Vale’s claim was held “pending medical reports.” We presume that the employer also filed its report of injury with the Commission as required by U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-97 (Repl.Vol.1974). 1 Because of the antiquity of the record, it is uncertain what other documents may have been initially filed by plaintiffs with the Industrial Commission, 2 but it is clear that at that time plaintiffs and the Commission *711 had notice of Vale’s claim and the material facts upon which his claim depended. 3
As noted, plaintiffs paid to Vale medical payments of over $5,600 and temporary total disability payments of $1,168.40 from 1968 through August 1971. A further medical payment of $675 was made in September 1975 for continuing medical treatment. Results of a medical examination were filed with plaintiff Insurance Fund and the Commission in February 1974. Plaintiff Insurance Fund advised Vale that it required additional medical reports in order to properly evaluate a complete settlement of his claim. When the delayed medical information was finally received in November 1975, plaintiffs denied any liability for further benefits, claiming that Vale had not filed a formal claim with the Industrial Commission within three years as required by section 35-1-99.
As a result of the employer’s denial, Vale filed a formal claim with the Industrial Commission in May 1976. Plaintiffs promptly asserted their defense that the Commission lacked jurisdiction because the 1976 claim had not been timely filed. 4 In 1977, the Commission concluded that under section 35-1-99, Vale’s 1976 claim had not been filed within the statutory three-year period and that the Commission had no jurisdiction to make any further award of compensation or medical benefits. Vale did not appeal that decision.
After our decision in Christensen v. Industrial Commission, 5 wherein we held that an employer’s obligation to pay medical benefits is not restricted by the three-year limitation period of section 35-1-99, Vale again petitioned the Commission to award him further medical benefits for treatments resulting from his initial injury but incurred subsequent to the 1976 determination. Plaintiffs objected on the grounds that the Commission had no jurisdiction and its prior decision was final and binding on the employee. The Commission held that its prior decision, which denied additional benefits through 1976, was not reviewable but that Vale was entitled to payment of his continuing medical expenses under our decisions in Kennecott Copper Co. v. Industrial Commission and Christensen v. Industrial Commission. Plaintiffs appeal that award of continuing medical expenses incurred after 1976.
This case is controlled by our decisions in Christensen v. Industrial Commission, Utah State Insurance Fund v. Dutson, Utah, 646 P.2d 707 (1982), and Mecham v. Industrial Commission, Utah, 692 P.2d 783 (1984), and we affirm the award of the Commission below. This Court has long recognized that a valid claim filed with the Industrial Commission for the purpose of invoking its jurisdiction need not bear particular formality. Great liberality as to form and substance is to be indulged. 6
In Utah State Insurance Fund v. Dut-son, we held that notice sufficient to invoke the original jurisdiction of the Commission was given when the employer filed a statutory report of injury, the notice of payment of compensation, and a medical report. Similar documents were initially filed in the instant matter, and as we noted, it is clear that at the time of Vale’s injury in 1968 “all interested parties ... were on notice of the employee’s claim and were duly apprised of the material, jurisdictional facts upon which the claim was based.” 646 P.2d at 709. In the instant case, plaintiffs paid compensation to Vale from 1968 to 1971 and medical benefits until 1975 without any *712 dispute as to liability. The failure of plaintiffs to dispute their statutory liability would certainly have led a reasonable person to assume that no formal adversary action would be necessary to protect his rights. 7 3 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation § 78.43(m), at 15-293 (1981).
While sections 35-1-99 and -100 are designed to create jurisdiction in the Commission, formality is not required as long as notice of the injury and claim is given to the employer and the Commission. Mecham v. Industrial Commission, 692 P.2d at 785; Dean Evans Chrysler Plymouth v. Morse, Utah, 692 P.2d 779 (1984). Adequate notice of Vale’s injury and claim and of plaintiffs’ liability was afforded in this case for the purpose of initially invoking the jurisdiction and authority of the Industrial Commission. Consequently, under Christensen v. Industrial Commission and Kennecott Copper Corp. v. Industrial Commission, Vale may recover all subsequent medical expenses arising out of the initial injury. The Commission is entitled to make such subsequent award of medical benefits or amend its prior actions as it may find equitable under the facts of this case. § 35-1-78.
The doctrine of res judicata, argued by plaintiffs, does not bar the award for continuing medical expenses in this case. Before res judicata can apply, the .subsequent action asserted must involve the same claim or cause of action previously concluded. Searle Brothers v. Searle, Utah, 588 P.2d 689, 690 (1978). Vale’s 1975 claim, denied by the Commission, was for compensation and benefits from 1971 through 1976.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
717 P.2d 709, 31 Utah Adv. Rep. 38, 1986 Utah LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannes-vale-inc-v-vale-utah-1986.