OPINION
By the Court,
Thompson, J.:
Action was brought against the Nevada Industrial Commission to recover death benefits allegedly due the surviving widow and three minor children of Robert Underwood. Following a pre-trial conference, at which
an agreed statement of facts was reached, the case was submitted for decision without trial. The sole question presented was whether the plaintiifs had irrevocably waived their rights to compensation under the laws of Nevada. NRS 616.530(l).
The lower court found that a waiver did not occur and entered judgment for the plaintiifs. The Commission appeals.
Robert Underwood was employed by Holmes Construction Company, a subcontractor of Morrison-Knudson Company who had been engaged to perform highway construction work near Austin, Nevada. Each company had accepted the terms and provisions of the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act. Employees of Holmes Construction were also covered under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Idaho.
Underwood was hired in Idaho. He was an equipment operator. The performance of his employer’s subcontract in Nevada was to require about six weeks. On August 17, 1957 Underwood boarded his employer’s private plane at Austin, Nevada, destination Hayburn, Idaho. The purpose of the trip was to get equipment from the shop at Hayburn for use on the Nevada job. Enroute to Hayburn mechanical trouble developed. The plane was forced to land at Lucin, Utah. Underwood alighted from the plane before its propeller stopped. He apparently walked into the path of the rotating propeller and was instantly killed. The parties to this case agree that his death arose out of and in the course of his employment. NRS 616.520.
A claim for benefits was first presented to the Nevada Industrial Commission and rejected. Subsequently a
claim was presented to the Industrial Accident Board of Idaho. Following this event the workmen’s compensation carrier for Holmes Construction Company commenced paying the death benefits provided for by Idaho law. These payments were “voluntary” in the sense that they were made in the absence of either a formal award by the Idaho Industrial Accident Board or court adjudication. The insurance carrier and the claimant agreed that the latter reserve her rights to claim death benefits under the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act. The Idaho payments have continued and, in addition, the plaintiffs have obtained a Nevada judgment (from which this appeal is taken) ordering the Nevada Industrial Commission to pay the death benefits provided for by Nevada law.
In general terms this appeal puts into focus the successive award problem in workmen’s compensation law. Here the employee was hired in Idaho, regularly employed in Nevada, and accidentally killed in Utah. A statute of more than one state may apply to a single compensable injury, so long as each state has a relevant interest. 2 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, Sec. 85.00, p. 358. Idaho’s interest arose from the fact that Underwood was hired there. 11 Idaho Code § 72-615; Alaska Packers Assoc. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 294 U.S. 532, 55 S.Ct. 518, 79 L.Ed. 1044. Nevada’s interest flows from that part of NRS 616.520 (regarding accidents outside the state) which provides compensation for the injured employee (or his dependents in case of death) when “regularly employed” in this state.
In the absence of contravening statutory provision purporting to bar a second recovery, successive awards are permissible. Industrial Commission v. McCartin, 330
U.S. 622, 67 S.Ct. 886, 91 L.Ed. 1140, 169 A.L.R 1179 (where a prior Illinois award did not preclude a later Wisconsin award because there was nothing in the Illinois statute designed to bar additional recovery in another state) ; 1948 amend. Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 403. As a general rule the amount paid on the first award will be credited on the second, in accord with an underlying policy that a claimant is entitled to no more than the highest compensation allowed by any single state having an applicable statute.
Our study of Idaho law in effect when the present claim arose does not disclose a provision designed to bar additional recovery under the laws of another state.
It is settled that the “exclusive remedy” clause commonly present in statutes governing workmen’s compensation (see NRS 616.370 and NRS 616.520; 11 Idaho Code § 72-203) is exclusive only in the sense that no other common law or statutory remedy
under local law
may be sought. Industrial Commission v. McCartin, supra. That clause alone does not bar a foreign proceeding. Though Idaho law does not bar the present proceeding in Nevada, the Nevada Industrial Commission urges that Nevada law, NRS 616.530(1) affords a complete defense to the case, which the lower court should have respected. We turn to discuss this central issue.
In short, NRS 616.530(1) provides that “the act of commencing an action or proceeding” in another state to recover damages or compensation, shall constitute an “irrevocable waiver” of any and all compensation in Nevada. The terms “action” and “damages” apparently refer to a common law action for damages in another state. NRS 616.050. Such an action was not commenced
in Idaho. The terms “proceeding” and “compensation” presumably refer to a proceeding to recover the money allowance payable under the workmen’s compensation law of another state. NRS 616.045. Whether such a “proceeding” occurred in this case is the point we must determine. It is the position of the Commission that, by filing a claim for benefits with the Industrial Accident Board of Idaho, a proceeding to recover compensation was commenced and an irrevocable waiver of Nevada compensation resulted therefrom.
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OPINION
By the Court,
Thompson, J.:
Action was brought against the Nevada Industrial Commission to recover death benefits allegedly due the surviving widow and three minor children of Robert Underwood. Following a pre-trial conference, at which
an agreed statement of facts was reached, the case was submitted for decision without trial. The sole question presented was whether the plaintiifs had irrevocably waived their rights to compensation under the laws of Nevada. NRS 616.530(l).
The lower court found that a waiver did not occur and entered judgment for the plaintiifs. The Commission appeals.
Robert Underwood was employed by Holmes Construction Company, a subcontractor of Morrison-Knudson Company who had been engaged to perform highway construction work near Austin, Nevada. Each company had accepted the terms and provisions of the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act. Employees of Holmes Construction were also covered under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of Idaho.
Underwood was hired in Idaho. He was an equipment operator. The performance of his employer’s subcontract in Nevada was to require about six weeks. On August 17, 1957 Underwood boarded his employer’s private plane at Austin, Nevada, destination Hayburn, Idaho. The purpose of the trip was to get equipment from the shop at Hayburn for use on the Nevada job. Enroute to Hayburn mechanical trouble developed. The plane was forced to land at Lucin, Utah. Underwood alighted from the plane before its propeller stopped. He apparently walked into the path of the rotating propeller and was instantly killed. The parties to this case agree that his death arose out of and in the course of his employment. NRS 616.520.
A claim for benefits was first presented to the Nevada Industrial Commission and rejected. Subsequently a
claim was presented to the Industrial Accident Board of Idaho. Following this event the workmen’s compensation carrier for Holmes Construction Company commenced paying the death benefits provided for by Idaho law. These payments were “voluntary” in the sense that they were made in the absence of either a formal award by the Idaho Industrial Accident Board or court adjudication. The insurance carrier and the claimant agreed that the latter reserve her rights to claim death benefits under the Nevada Industrial Insurance Act. The Idaho payments have continued and, in addition, the plaintiffs have obtained a Nevada judgment (from which this appeal is taken) ordering the Nevada Industrial Commission to pay the death benefits provided for by Nevada law.
In general terms this appeal puts into focus the successive award problem in workmen’s compensation law. Here the employee was hired in Idaho, regularly employed in Nevada, and accidentally killed in Utah. A statute of more than one state may apply to a single compensable injury, so long as each state has a relevant interest. 2 Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, Sec. 85.00, p. 358. Idaho’s interest arose from the fact that Underwood was hired there. 11 Idaho Code § 72-615; Alaska Packers Assoc. v. Industrial Accident Commission, 294 U.S. 532, 55 S.Ct. 518, 79 L.Ed. 1044. Nevada’s interest flows from that part of NRS 616.520 (regarding accidents outside the state) which provides compensation for the injured employee (or his dependents in case of death) when “regularly employed” in this state.
In the absence of contravening statutory provision purporting to bar a second recovery, successive awards are permissible. Industrial Commission v. McCartin, 330
U.S. 622, 67 S.Ct. 886, 91 L.Ed. 1140, 169 A.L.R 1179 (where a prior Illinois award did not preclude a later Wisconsin award because there was nothing in the Illinois statute designed to bar additional recovery in another state) ; 1948 amend. Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 403. As a general rule the amount paid on the first award will be credited on the second, in accord with an underlying policy that a claimant is entitled to no more than the highest compensation allowed by any single state having an applicable statute.
Our study of Idaho law in effect when the present claim arose does not disclose a provision designed to bar additional recovery under the laws of another state.
It is settled that the “exclusive remedy” clause commonly present in statutes governing workmen’s compensation (see NRS 616.370 and NRS 616.520; 11 Idaho Code § 72-203) is exclusive only in the sense that no other common law or statutory remedy
under local law
may be sought. Industrial Commission v. McCartin, supra. That clause alone does not bar a foreign proceeding. Though Idaho law does not bar the present proceeding in Nevada, the Nevada Industrial Commission urges that Nevada law, NRS 616.530(1) affords a complete defense to the case, which the lower court should have respected. We turn to discuss this central issue.
In short, NRS 616.530(1) provides that “the act of commencing an action or proceeding” in another state to recover damages or compensation, shall constitute an “irrevocable waiver” of any and all compensation in Nevada. The terms “action” and “damages” apparently refer to a common law action for damages in another state. NRS 616.050. Such an action was not commenced
in Idaho. The terms “proceeding” and “compensation” presumably refer to a proceeding to recover the money allowance payable under the workmen’s compensation law of another state. NRS 616.045. Whether such a “proceeding” occurred in this case is the point we must determine. It is the position of the Commission that, by filing a claim for benefits with the Industrial Accident Board of Idaho, a proceeding to recover compensation was commenced and an irrevocable waiver of Nevada compensation resulted therefrom. Opposing this position is the claimants’ argument that the Idaho payments were “voluntarily” made, with an express reservation of rights to claim death benefits under Nevada law; that there was no award by the Idaho board; that the cases concerning successive awards are not applicable. They urge that the prohibition of NRS 616.530(1) does not touch these circumstances.
Our attention is especially called to Cline v. Byrne Doors, 324 Mich. 540, 37 N.W.2d 630, 8 A.L.R.2d 617; Industrial Exchange v. Industrial Accident Commission, 80 Cal.App.2d 480, 182 P.2d 309; Miller v. National Chair Co., 19 N.J.Misc. 275, 18 A.2d 847, affirmed 127 N.J.S. 414, 22 A.2d 804; Annot., 8 A.L.R.2d 628. In each case it was held that a voluntary payment in one state did not bar a subsequent claim in another, though prior payments would be credited to the later award.
Yet, close examination of those cases shows that the state to which the later application was made did not have a statute similar to Nevada’s irrevocable waiver law. Accordingly, their effect upon the resolution of the point before us is considerably diminished, if not eliminated entirely. Here we are faced with a legislative declaration of policy that was not present in the Cline, Industrial Exchange and Miller cases.
Though it may be argued (as, indeed, the claimants-respondents do contend) that a careful dissection of the
Idaho compensation act will show that a “proceeding for compensation” was not commenced there,
a contrary position is equally tenable. In the final analysis, our task is to accord appropriate significance to the policy of Nevada as declared in its legislative enactment.
We find no other state with a statute identical to NRS 616.530. Its apparent purpose is to compel a claimant to elect between proceeding in Nevada or in any other state. It assumes two coexisting remedial rights, cf. McColl v. Scherer, 73 Nev. 226, 315 P.2d 807, and has application only where a claimant is entitled to compensation under the laws of more than one state.
The forced election is designed to assure those who contribute to the Nevada “State Insurance Fund,” NRS 616.430 (and who also pay premiums in another state to provide compensation for the same occurrence), that an employee, or his dependents, shall receive compensation from one state only. In the legislative scheme it is the counterpart of NRS 616.525 to which we have heretofore referred. Though some may think the legislative purpose severe in application (preferring as a policy the idea that the claimant
should be permitted to obtain the highest compensation allowed by any single state having an applicable statute, without penalty for having made application in another state), yet it is within its province to so provide. It is not within ours to interfere. We therefore conclude that the judgment below must be reversed and the cause dismissed.
Badt, C. J., and McNamee, J., concur.