Mizrahi's Case

71 N.E.2d 383, 320 Mass. 733, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 559
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 71 N.E.2d 383 (Mizrahi's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mizrahi's Case, 71 N.E.2d 383, 320 Mass. 733, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 559 (Mass. 1947).

Opinion

Qua, J.

On November 16, 1940, the employee, while working as a longshoreman for Jarka Corporation of Boston, and while engaged upon a pier in piling .heavy cases, received a personal injury consisting of double hernias, which, however, did not at that time cause incapacity. On April 22, 1942, while working upon navigable water for the saíne employer, covered by the same insurer, the employee received a second injury, this time to his fingers, which did cause temporary total incapacity. For this total incapacity the insurer paid compensation under the longshoremen’s and harbor workers’ compensation act, U. S. C. (1940 ed.) Title 33, § 901, et seq. While so incapacitated, and while receiving compensation for total incapacity under the Federal act, the employee decided to have, and did have, an operation for the cure of the hernias. This operation of itself would have caused total incapacity for ten weeks. The employee now seeks total incapacity compensation for ten weeks under the State act. But for the same ten weeks he has been paid by the same insurer total incapacity compensation under the Federal act, amounting, according to the record, to slightly more than the State act would give him.

The board ruled that the employee was not entitled to compensation under the State act (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 152) for incapacity but allowed a small sum for a physician’s fee under § 9A of the act as appearing in St. 1938, c. 381. The [735]*735Superior Court took the same view, saving however to the employee any rights in respect of any future incapacity due to the hernias. The employee appeals.

Since both the compensation which the employee has received under the Federal act and that which he seeks under the State act are posite'd upon total incapacity and not upon specific injury and cover the same period of time, no amount of reasoning from technicalities can conceal the fact that the employee claims double, compensation for the same loss. He stresses the conventional character of workmen’s compensation payments and the self sufficient nature of each act. He cites Thompson v. London & North Eastern Railway, [1935] 2 K. B. 90, where it was held that an employee receiving compensation for partial incapacity resulting from one injury might receive additional concurring payments under the same act for loss of his remaining capacity resulting from a second injury. He cites Walsh’s Case, 227 Mass. 341, Whitehead’s Case, 312 Mass. 611, and Harwood v. Wyken Colliery Co. [1913] 2 K. B. 158, where it was held that an employee receiving compensation for partial incapacity might continué to receive it notwithstanding that a later noncompensable injury had brought on total incapacity. He cites Mavroulias v. Mugiana, 155 Pa. Super. Ct. 573, where it was held that an employee receiving under the Ohio act compensation for partial incapacity resulting from an injury in Ohio could nevertheless receive the full compensation allowed by the Pennsylvania act for a total incapacity subsequently brought on by an injury in Pennsylvania. Doubtless those cases present difficulties. One or two of them turned largely upon the structure and wording of particular acts. None of them goes so far as to hold that an employee who has already been fully paid the maximum amount allowed by any applicable statute can obtain additional payments for precisely the same loss. However, in Shelby Manuf. Co. Inc. v. Harris, 112 Ind. App. 627, not in a court of last resort, it was held, by a majority of the court only, that the widow of an employee who was concurrently employed by two employers, having recovered for his death under the Ohio act, could also recover for his death under [736]*736the Indiana act. We have seen no other decision that has gone so far.

It is unnecessary to discuss at length the policy of the law in general against double recovery for the same injury or loss. We are not convinced that we must overlook that policy in this instance. Under our own act, where two injuries contribute to cause the same total incapacity there is but a single recovery, and that is against the insurer who covered the risk at the time of the later injury. Evans’s Case, 299 Mass. 435. Falcione’s Case, 305 Mass. 433. Borstel’s Case, 307 Mass. 24. Blanco’s Case, 308 Mass. 574. See Marhoffer v. Marhoffer, 220 N. Y. 543; Hoffman v. Chatham Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. 249 N. Y. 433; Fredenburg v. Empire United Railways, Inc. 168 App. Div. (N. Y.) 618. Before the Supreme Court of the United States held in Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Hunt, 320 U. S. 430, that an award of compensation in one State which was intended tó be a complete and final adjudication is a constitutional bar to the recovery of additional compensation in another State having a more liberal law, there had been decisions that the latter State would allow credit in fixing the compensation under its own law for sums paid according to the law of the former State. McLaughlin’s Case, 274 Mass. 217, 220, 222. Migues’s Case, 281 Mass. 373. Gilbert v. Des Lauriers Column Mould Co. Inc. 180 App. Div. (N. Y.) 59. McCartin v. Industrial Commission, 248 Wis. 570. The rule last mentioned was adopted in the Restatement. Restatement: Conflict of Laws, § 403. The State act and the Federal act were plainly designed to operate independently in separate fields and not concurrently in the same field. - The difficulty' of ascertaining for how long one injury would have caused incapacity if there had been no other injury would in many cases prove an almost insurmountable obstacle to effective and just administration, if recovery could be had under both acts. All compensation acts rest upon the policy that the industry should bear the burden of industrial accidents, but there is no policy that justifies placing the burden upon the industry twice, especially where that results in paying the employee so much that it becomes to his advantage to re[737]*737main away from work. Schneider, Workmen’s Compensation Law (2d ed.) § 47, at page 412. The amount involved in the present controversy is small, but if double recovery is allowed for the same period of incapacity cases may arise in which double or even manifold payments must be made over long periods of time and not in accordance with the policy of any act.

The employee further relies upon G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 38, which reads, “No savings or insurance of the injured employee independent of this chapter shall be considered in determining the compensation payable thereunder, nor shall benefits derived from any other source than the insurer be considered in such determination.”- But compensation payments received under the Federal act were not “savings or insurance of the injured employee,” and we do not believe that the word “benefits” as used in this section was intended to include payments received by the employee under some other compensation act. This section was part of the original act, St. 1911, c. 751, in which it appeared as § 12 of Part II. At that time there was no longshoremen’s and harbor workers’ compensation act, and our own act did not apply to injuries received outside the Commonwealth. Gould’s Case, 215 Mass. 480. St. 1927, c. 309, § 3. There was then very little possibility that any employee who had already received compensation under another act would apply for compensation under our act.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.E.2d 383, 320 Mass. 733, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mizrahis-case-mass-1947.