Nickerson's Case

133 A. 161, 125 Me. 285, 1926 Me. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 A. 161 (Nickerson's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nickerson's Case, 133 A. 161, 125 Me. 285, 1926 Me. LEXIS 51 (Me. 1926).

Opinion

Morrill, J.

This case is an appeal under the Workmen's Compensation Act by the employer of one Roy Nickerson, and the insurance carrier, from a decree of the Chairman of the Industrial Accident Commission upon their petition for a determination of their liability under a decree of the Chairman dated December 19, 1923, upon the petition of Margaret E. Nickerson, dependent widow of said Roy Nickerson. The facts are undisputed. On November 5, 1920 the said Roy Nickerson was injured while employed by Penobscot Coal & Wharf Company. An agreement for compensation, duly approved by the Commissioner of Labor and Industry, was made between the parties by the terms of which Mr. Nickerson was to receive compensation in the sum of $15 per week, (the maximum amount then payable) beginning November 15, 1920 and continuing during period of disability. Compensation was paid accordingly until the death of Mr. Nickerson which occurred February 21, 1922.

On March 1,1923, Margaret E. Nickerson filed a petition for compensation, as the dependent widow of Roy Nickerson, alleging that her husband died as a result of the injuries sustained on November 5, 1920; the respondent answered, denying that the death resulted from said injuries, and a hearing was had. On December 19, 1923 the Chairman filed his decree, finding “that Roy Nickerson died on February 21, 1922, as a direct result of the injuries received by him while in the employ of the Penobscot Coal & Wharf Co. on November 5, 1920,” and ordering compensation paid to Mrs. Nickerson “in the sum of fifteen dollars per week, commencing February 21, 1922, and continuing according to the provisions of Section 12 of the Compensation Act.”

[287]*287This order of December 19, 1923 was complied with, and Mrs. Nickerson was paid in accordance with its terms until the amount so paid, added to the amount paid to Mr. Nickerson, and a check of Five Dollars tendered to Mrs. Nickerson as a final payment and refused by her for that reason, aggregated $3500. The employer and insurance carrier then filed their petition dated June 27,1925, claiming that the total payments made to said deceased and his said dependent widow in the sum of $3500, fulfill their obligation under Section 12 of the Compensation Act, and praying for a ruling as to whether or not the decree of December 19,1923 had been fulfilled. Upon hearing the employee and insurance carrier were ordered “to continue the weekly payments of compensation to Margaret Nickerson in the sum of $15 each, commencing from the date of the last payment to her and continuing until they have paid to Margaret E. Nickerson the sum of $3500 or until a period of 300 weeks from the'date of the accident has expired.” From this order the appeal before us was taken.

Briefly stated, it is the contention of appellants that the Legislature intended to limit to $3500 the amount which the employer may be required to pay for compensation for injury, or for injury and death, should death follow injury after compensation has been paid to the injured employee, as held in Sinclair’s Case, 248 Mass., 414,143 N. E., 330. Mindful that The Workmen’s Compensation Act is to be liberally construed so that its beneficent purpose may be reasonably accomplished (Simmons’ Case, 117 Maine, 175, 177; Scott’s Case, 117 Maine, 436, 443; White v. Ins. Co., 120 Maine, 62, 69), we think that Sinclair’s Case is not decisive of the case before us. That decision is based upon a construction of the Massachusetts Act (G. L. 1921, Chap. 152, Secs. 31, 34) in which there is the same limitation ($4000) upon liability in case of death and liability for total disability. The law of Maine has never had such uniform limitations.

The instant case is governed by The Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1919, Chap. 238, Secs. 12,14; in Section 12 a limitation of liability in case of death resulting from injury is fixed at $3500 and in Section 14 a limitation of liability in case of total incapacity is fixed at $4200; by later legislation (Public Laws 1921, Chap. 222, Secs. 4 and 5) those limitations are $4000 and $6000 respectively. Both sections also contain provisions for continued payments to dependents after the death of an injured employee who has been receiving compensation in his lifetime, provisions which upon first reading appear contradictory.

[288]*288The record discloses that the injuries received by Mr. Nickerson resulted in a total incapacity for work, although they were not of the character enumerated in the last sentence of Section 14 in which permanent total disability is conclusively presumed; nor were they included in the schedule of injuries in Section 16 in which the disability is deemed to be total for certain specified periods. But under Section 14 he was entitled to receive $15 a week, while the total incapacity continued, for a period not greater than 500 weeks, and to an amount not exceeding $4200. Mr. Nickerson died while totally incapacitated, about fifteen and one half months after the injury. What then were the rights of the dependent wife? We quote from Section 14:

1 ‘If the employee shall die before having received compensation to which he is entitled or which he is receiving as provided in this act, the same shall be payable to the dependents of the said employee for the specified period, and the dependents shall have the same rights and powers under this act as the said employee would have had if he had lived.”

Does this mean that in the instant case the rights of dependents are fixed by this section, and that the widow becomes entitled to receive $15 dollars a week for the remainder of the period of 500 weeks, not exceeding the balance of $4200? A literal interpretation of the language might lead to that conclusion, but we think that such could not have been the intention of the Legislature. It will be noticed that the rights of dependents are not made contingent upon death resulting from the injury; but death from any cause before the injured employee has “received compensation to which he is entitled or which he is receiving as provided in this act,” fixes the rights of dependents. If this provision is applied literally to a case like the present case, it would be possible, upon the death of an injured employee, who was recovering from a total incapacity not conclusively presumed to be permanent, nor presumed to be total for a specified period (Section 16), for the dependent to receive compensation for a longer period and to a greater amount than the employee would have received, if he had lived, because there would be no way of ascertaining with certainty when the period of total incapacity would have ceased. We think that the passage quoted refers to cases of presumed total incapacity to work, and that the words “specified period” refer to the period of total disability [289]*289conclusively presumed to be permanent in cases specified in the following sentence, viz.: 500 weeks, and to the periods of presumed total disability fixed in Section 16. It follows that in cases like the present, where • there is no presumed period of total incapacity to labor, the rights of dependents are not fixed by Section 14, but must be referred to Section 12 for determination.

'When the original Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1915 (R. S., 1916, Chap. 50, Secs. 1-48) was repealed and the Act of 1919 substituted therefor the provisions of Section 12, relating to compensation to depéndents in cases of death of the employee resulting from the injury, modified as to the amount of weekly compensation, were retained, with a single amendment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 A. 161, 125 Me. 285, 1926 Me. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickersons-case-me-1926.