McKee v. Industrial Commission

206 P.2d 715, 115 Utah 550, 1949 Utah LEXIS 156
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1949
DocketNo. 7258.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 206 P.2d 715 (McKee v. Industrial Commission) 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.

Bluebook
McKee v. Industrial Commission, 206 P.2d 715, 115 Utah 550, 1949 Utah LEXIS 156 (Utah 1949).

Opinion

LATIMER, Justice.

Certiorari to the Industrial Commission to review an order denying compensation to plaintiff, Bert T. McKee. The commission held that plaintiff had sustained an injury but that his right to compensation was barred by the provisions of Sec. 42-1-92, U. C. A. 1943, which, inter alia, provides:

“If no claim for compensation is filed with the Industrial Commission within three years from the date of the accident or the date *552 of the last payment of compensation, the right to compensation shall be wholly barred.”

Plaintiff was employed intermittently by the Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe Company of Provo, Utah, from June 27, 1936, to February 21, 1944. Sometime in the early part of 1937, while working- in the Pipe Company’s foundry, he claims to have suffered an injury to his back. He testified that while he was loading pipe into a rack, part of the pipe fell in such a way as to throw him to one side and in so doing he claims to have twisted his back. Experiencing extreme pain he reported to his superintendent who told him to go home and to report to the company doctor in the morning if he did not feel better. On reporting for medical attention the following day, he claims he was informed that a vertebra in his back had been torn loose and he was taped up and sent home. This is at variance with the medical reports which indicate a right inguinal region injury with torn muscles on the right side. Plaintiff was paid compensation by the Pipe Company for six days, after which time the company doctor released him to go back to work. He apparently continued to work regularly for the company until June 21,1937, at which time he was laid off because of reduced operations. He worked only one day in 1938 and was not again employed by the company until February 7, 1944. In 1942, plaintiff’s family physician, Dr. Glen B. Orton, began treating him for a back ailment which the doctor diagnosed to be rheumatism and muscular spasm. However, plaintiff claims not to have experienced any other injury to his back until the 21st day of February, 1944. At this time, while engaged in lifting heavy pipe for the defendant company, he felt something in his back snap causing terrific pain. He reported the sensation to his foreman who told him to go home. The following day he went to a chiropractor, but after being treated by him for four or five days without receiving- any relief, plaintiff consulted Dr. Orton about the injury. The treatments given by the doctor apparently afforded him some relief because shortly *553 thereafter, plaintiff submitted himself to the Pipe Company’s doctor for a clearance to go back to work. After the company doctor had made an examination, including X-ray, he informed plaintiff his back had not been injured, but told him he could never do manual labor again because of a muscular condition of his back which he diagnosed to be rheumatism and muscular spasm. On reporting to the Pipe Company for work, plaintiff was told there was no light work for him and so he secured a job as a service station attendant. No claim for compensation or medical expense was made for this injury. Although plaintiff experienced no other serious trouble until 1946, he had recurrent difficulty with his back, attended by severe pain and suffering. Dr. Orton, his family physician, continued to treat him for musclar spasms and rheumatism as he had done prior to the accident. In spite of having treated his back before the injury in 1944, Dr. Orton testified he accepted the Pipe Company doctor’s diagnosis of plaintiff’s back condition without making X-rays of his own until about June 5, 1946, when plaintiff informed him that he (plaintiff) had noticed his right leg was beginning to drag. Dr. Orton then made some X-rays of his own and from these he concluded there was a weakness in the neural arch of plaintiff’s back which the doctor described as a congenital weakness and that a strain or stress on a back with such a weakness would likely cause it to slip or become unstable. After making this examination, Dr. Orton sent the plaintiff to Dr. Paul S. Richards of Bingham Canyon, Utah. Dr. Richards made additional X-rays and confirmed the fact that plaintiff had a congenitally weak back but in addition found evidence of a slipping of the fifth lumbar vertebra. He testified that unless a person in such condition were to submit to a spinal fusion, he would undergo quite a lot of pain and suffering so long as he continued to engage in manual labor.

The sole question to be decided in this case is whether Sec. 42-1-92, U. C. A. 1943, is an effective bar to plaintiff’s right to recover compensation. Plaintiff concedes that *554 more than three years expired from the time of the accident until he filed his application for compensation with the Industrial Commission. He contends, however, that the statute did not begin to run against him until 1947 when he learned for the first time that his suffering was not the result of rheumatism or lumbago. In so arguing, he relies upon the rule announced in Salt Lake City v. Industrial Commission, 93 Utah 510, 74 P. 2d 657, and Williams v. Industrial Commission, 95 Utah 376, 81 P. 2d 649. These cases overruled a line of cases from this court which had held that Sec. 104-2-26, Rev. St. 1933, a one year general statute of limitations, commenced to run on industrial accidents from the time of the accident. In the cited cases we held that to follow the rule announced in the earlier cases might permit the statute to run before a cause of action accrued inasmuch as an employer’s duty to pay under the Workmen’s Compensation Act did not arise until there was an accident and injury and a disability or loss from the injury. We therefore held that the time prescribed in Sec. 104-2-26, U. C. A. 1943, would start to run from the time an employee’s cause of action arose and not from the time of the accident.

Subsequent to these cases and in 1939, the legislature of this state enacted a statute of limitations which dealt specifically with actions arising under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. This statute is 42-1-92, U. C. A. 1943, which is hereinbefore set forth and which pro- vides that unless an application for compensation is filed with the Industrial Commission within three years from the date of the accident or the date of the last payment of compensation the right to compensation is barred. The language of the statute is clear and leaves no room for doubt. Regardless of the decisions rendered by this court prior to 1939, the law now is that the limitation statute begins to run from the date of the accident or from the date of the last payment of compensation.

Inasmuch as there is a period greater than three years between the date of the accident and the time plaintiff filed *555 his application for compensation, the decision of the Industrial Commission must be affirmed unless, as plaintiff contends, the statute has either been waived or the Pipe Company is estopped from setting it up in bar of plaintiff’s claim. In this regard, plaintiff does not claim he could not have discovered the true nature of his injury immediately after the accident. In fact, he must concede his own medical advisor could have discovered the truth at any time by taking X-ray pictures or by examining those taken by the Pipe Company’s doctor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. HCIC
2002 UT 75 (Utah Supreme Court, 2002)
State v. Huntington-Cleveland Irrigation Co.
2002 UT 75 (Utah Supreme Court, 2002)
Rice v. Granite School District
456 P.2d 159 (Utah Supreme Court, 1969)
Fredrickson v. Industrial Commission of Utah
429 P.2d 981 (Utah Supreme Court, 1967)
United States Smelting, Refining & Mining Co. v. Nielsen
430 P.2d 162 (Utah Supreme Court, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P.2d 715, 115 Utah 550, 1949 Utah LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-industrial-commission-utah-1949.