Maryland Casualty Company v. Kravig

385 P.2d 669, 153 Colo. 282, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 7, 1963
Docket20126
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 385 P.2d 669 (Maryland Casualty Company v. Kravig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Company v. Kravig, 385 P.2d 669, 153 Colo. 282, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 318 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Day.

This is a workmen’s compensation case. We will refer to the parties as “employer,” “claimant” and “Commission.”

Claimant was granted three hearings. At the first hearing the claimant, a witness who was at or near him at the time he claims to have been “hurt,” and a relative all testified. The referee then continued the matter to a second hearing, at which was taken the testimony of two doctors who saw claimant immediately after the incident forming the basis of this claim. On this evidence, details of which will be later discussed with more particularity, the referee entered findings, amply supported by the record, denying compensation. In substance the reason for the denial was that the claimant had suffered an aneurysm, resulting in massive hemorrhage in the brain; that this was a congenital condition unrelated to and having no causal connection with the incident described by the claimant upon which he relied as an “industrial accident.” The Commission adopted the findings of the referee and entered its order denying compensation.

Because the claimant failed to follow the statutory procedure with reference to perfecting review of its or *284 der, the Commission made the order final, and thus the results of the first hearing could not be reviewed in the district court or here. Brown v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corporation, 111 Colo. 253, 140 P. (2d) 619; Industrial Commission v. Plains Utility Co., 127 Colo. 506, 259 P. (2d) 282.

Thereafter the claimant filed a petition admitting that the Commission was “technically” correct in refusing to review its findings in making the order final, but petitioned that the case be reopened on the ground of “change in condition.” The “change” alleged was that at the first hearing the claimant had difficulty in speaking because of partial paralysis and that since the first hearing he had fully regained his faculties of speech. This change being a substantial improvement in the claimant and not a worsening of his condition (which is the usual ground of reopening a case because of change of condition) the Commission on its own motion reopened on the ground of “mistake.”

Thereafter a third hearing was held at which the claimant was the only witness except for additional medical testimony. At this hearing he related an entirely different story, described an “accidental blow” never mentioned by him before to anyone and, in effect, repudiated and impeached his previous testimony, the testimony of the four witnesses called by him at the previous hearing, and his written claim for compensation. On the basis of his new story, the referee found that it too failed to establish a causal connection between what he then claimed happened to him and the aneurysm which he had suffered. The Commission, however, overruled and set aside the referee’s findings and entered findings of its own, ordered maximum compensation to be paid for total temporary disability and “until such time as claimant shall have attained maximum improvement” and reserved until an indefinite date the determination of permanent disability, if any.

The district court affirmed the order of the Commis *285 sion. To that judgment the employer and his insurance carrier bring this writ of error.

We will first take up the propriety of the Commission’s action in reopening the case for an asserted “mistake.” When the Commission has lost jurisdiction because review has not been sought within the statutory time it can, on a proper showing, reopen the case on a finding of error, mistake or change of condition. However, the question of the right to reopen being jurisdictional, a denial of the petition to reopen requires no findings; if the petition is granted specific findings as to the error or mistake or the change in condition are mandatory. National Lumber & Creosoting Co. v. Kelly, 99 Colo. 442, 63 P. (2d) 457; Kokel v. Industrial Commission, 111 Colo. 188, 139 P. (2d) 259.

In the case at bar the attempt of the Commission to comply with this rule does not meet the mandatory requirements of a finding. In addition, there is no evidence to support what the Commission designated as the probable mistake. The Commission found: “* * * that the mistake in all probability existed in the receipt of testimony at his hearing [the original hearing] before the referee, and in the interest of correcting that mistake and error it is necessary that the case be reopened * * (Emphasis supplied.)

If this finding, characterized as a probability, means that it was a mistake to hold the first hearing and to take testimony thereat, the record does not support such a finding. There is no conflict on the point, thus we are not bound by the Commission’s finding, if such it was. Arvas v. McNeill Coal Corp., 119 Colo. 289, 203 P. (2d) 906. The record shows that the referee at the first hearing was advised that the claimant would have some difficulty in speaking, but that is all that was said or done on this phase.

There was no request for a continuance on the ground of his speech impediment and no showing that the claimant was not ready or that he would be unable to present *286 his case or be prejudiced if the hearing were held. He was present, offered himself as a witness, and had two other witnesses to corroborate his story. Because of claimant’s speech difficulty, the referee permitted counsel to ask leading questions. There was no contention that he could not understand the questions; that he did not have all of his faculties, or that he did not have an awareness of what was going on. This hearing from the reading of the transcript was not a confused one. The claimant was in no different position than many persons who are without the ability to speak, even completely dumb from birth or with other speech impediments. If one is able to communicate in one fashion or another and to demonstrate the complete use of one’s mental faculties, including reasoning and memory, the fact that the mode of communication is awkward or difficult does not make the hearing a nullity. One may communicate with a nod or by writing notes or through gestures and signs. Even these aids were not needed at the hearing. Counsel encountered no difficulty having claimant understand his questions and got ready answers, sometimes in terse sentences and sometimes with a “yes” or “no” response. However, claimant’s testimony was entirely cumulative. He did not even have to testify to fully present his initial claim. He had four other witnesses who told the same story as he did. They were allowed wide latitude in relating what was told them by the claimant. The real issue before the Commission was not the condition of the claimant on the date of his hearing but the condition of the claimant on the date of the alleged accident and whether he sustained injury therefrom. What took place on that day was related in exact detail by the claimant and his four witnesses. The claimant’s recital of the facts to these four persons, one within minutes after the incident and others within a few hours thereafter, was very consistent.

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Bluebook (online)
385 P.2d 669, 153 Colo. 282, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-company-v-kravig-colo-1963.