Morrison v. Hurst Drilling Co.

512 P.2d 438, 212 Kan. 706, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 14, 1973
Docket46,934
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 512 P.2d 438 (Morrison v. Hurst Drilling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Hurst Drilling Co., 512 P.2d 438, 212 Kan. 706, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 572 (kan 1973).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Foth, C.:

This is a workmen’s compensation case in which the examiner held that he had no jurisdiction to make an award. He based his decision on his findings that the accident happened in Oklahoma, and that the contract of employment was made there. The director approved the examiner’s findings, and the district court adopted them. The basic issue on this appeal by the workman is whether the examiner abused his discretion' in permitting the employer and its insurance carrier to withdraw their initial stipulation as to where and when the accident happened.

In early August, 1967, the claimant resided in Page, Oklahoma. The evidence is undisputed that while there he accepted a job offer *707 in a telephone conservation with Doyle Hurst of the employer Hurst Drilling Company. Mr. Hurst placed this call from his office in Great Bend, Kansas. “The rule is thoroughly established that where an acceptance is given by telephone the place of contracting is where the accepter speaks his acceptance.” (Pearson v. Electric Service Co., 166 Kan. 300, 302, 201 P. 2d 643. See also, Hartigan v. Babcock & Wilcox Co., 191 Kan. 331, 380 P.2d 383.) It is thus clear that the contract of employment here was made in Oklahoma.

It is true that claimant thereafter moved to Great Bend, Kansas, and for the duration of his employment (just over two months) worked out of that city. This fact might, as claimant suggests, be a relevant consideration if we were faced with a conffict-of-laws question of choosing the law applicable to the employment contract itself. But the applicable section of our workmens compensation act, K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 44-506, makes the act applicable to injuries sustained outside the state only if “the contract of employment was made within the state.” Thus the statute speaks only of where the contract was “made.” This, as noted, was in Oklahoma.

The employment agreed upon required claimant to operate a ten foot seismographic drilling rig. While he and a co-worker were attempting to raise this rig a cable broke and hit the claimant in his right eye. On October 7, 1967, the claimant’s wife filled out a form entitled “Employer’s First Report of Injury” at the claimant’s directions, and therein it was stated that the accident occurred on October 4, at about 9:30 a. m. outside of Newton, Harvey County, Kansas. This form was then delivered to Hurst by the claimant and apparently relied on and treated as a claim for compensation by both parties.

At the first hearing before the workmen’s compensation examiner on November 29, 1967, the attorney for respondent arid insurance company stipulated that the accident occurred in Harvey County, Kansas, on October 4,1967. However, the claimant’s own testimony at that hearing gave some indication that the injury may have occurred at an earlier time and at a different place.

At a subsequent hearing before the examiner on January 24, 1968, the testimony and evidence showed that on October 2 the claimant and his co-worker operated the drilling rig near Caldwell, Kansas, and spent the night of October 2nd in Caldwell. The following morning at 7:00 a. m. they left Caldwell for Newkirk, Oklahoma. *708 They arrived in Newkirk at about 7:30 a. m., worked there until 7:30 p. m. and then drove to Newton, Kansas, arriving there about 10:30 p. m. They spent that night (the night of October 3) in Newton. They worked the next morning outside of Newton and completed their entire assignment that day (October 4) shortly after noon.

The testimony of the claimant, the claimant’s wife, the claimant’s co-worker, and various drilling reports signed by the claimant all placed him in Newkirk, Oklahoma, at the time the injury was alleged to have occurred, and all indicated that the date of the injury was October 3, instead of October 4. Exact dates were not always referred to in the testimony, but the sequence of events as outlined by the claimant and other witnesses when compared with all the documentary evidence almost conclusively placed him in Oklahoma at the time of the accident. Thereupon, at the hearing of January 24, 1968, the attorney for the respondent and insurance company orally withdrew the prior stipulation as to the time and place of the accident.

A subsequent deposition of the doctor who treated the claimant for his eye injury on October 4, 1967, revealed that the claimant had given the doctor a history of the accident occurring on October 3, iri Newkirk, Oklahoma.

Following a series of other depositions, the claim was finally submitted to the examiner for his decision on April 8, 1969. Briefs were submitted and on December 4, 1969, the examiner entered an award denying the claim on the grounds of lack of jurisdiction. He stated, “The preponderance of the evidence in this case indicates that the claimant’s accident of whatever kind or nature occurred in Oklahoma near the city of Newkirk and not in Harvey County, Kansas.” The examiner allowed the withdrawal of the stipulation, stating that the place of the accident was jurisdictional arid could thus be raised at any stage of the proceeding.

On appeal we are, of course, bound by the factual determinations made below, since they are supported by ample competent evidence. Streff v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 211 Kan. 898, 508 P. 2d 495, and authorities cited therein. In deciding this case we then regard it as settled that the accident iri fact took place in Oklahoma, and that the contract of employment was made there. The claimant would still have us hold that the respondent and insurance company are bound by their preliminary stipulation, and that it was error for *709 the examiner to allow its withdrawal and for the district court to make findings which disregard it. We cannot agree.

The circumstances justifying a court in relieving a party from a stipulation are summarized in the encyclopedias:

“The general rule is that a stipulation having all the binding force of a contract cannot be set aside on grounds other than those justifying the setting aside of contracts generally, such, for instance, as fraud, collusion, mistake, accident, surprise, undue influence, false representations innocently made, inadvertence or improvidence in making the stipulation, or some other ground of the same nature. . . .
“Generally, the court -will afford relief where enforcement of the stipulation would be unjust or give one party an unconscionable advantage; but it is not a ground for relief against a stipulation that it was disadvantageous to the party asking relief, or that the case had gone contrary to his expectations. A trial court may, on a proper application, relieve a party from the effects of a stipulation which admits as a fact that which is not true and is of such a material character as to change the rights of the parties, but parties will not be relieved from a stipulation as to certain facts in the absence of a clear showing that the matter stipulated is untrue.” (83 C. J. S., Stipulations, § 35, p. 90. Emphasis added.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
512 P.2d 438, 212 Kan. 706, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-hurst-drilling-co-kan-1973.