Noll v. Department of Labor & Industries

36 P.2d 809, 179 Wash. 213, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 747
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1934
DocketNo. 25240. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 809 (Noll v. Department of Labor & Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noll v. Department of Labor & Industries, 36 P.2d 809, 179 Wash. 213, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 747 (Wash. 1934).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

Respondent, a workman engaged in extrahazardous employment, made claim for compensation for injuries received in the course of his employment on October 22, 1928. The matter took the usual course, and finally resulted in an order by the department closing the claim with an allowance of fifteen degrees permanent partial disability as of May 27, 1930. No appeal was taken, the award was paid, and the case was thus finally closed.

Thereafter, and in May, 1933, the respondent filed a duly verified petition with the department praying for a reopening of his claim upon the ground of aggravation of his injuries occurring since the date of the original closing. The department refused to reopen. An appeal was taken to the joint board, a hearing was had, evidence being taken upon both sides of the controversy before an examiner, and after considering the evidence so taken, the joint board sustained the action of the department in refusing to reopen the claim, thus determining, as a fact, that no aggravation had occurred. An appeal to the superior court promptly followed. The case was there heard upon the written record which had been before the joint board. No other evidence was taken in the superior court.

The trial court, upon the record which had been presented to the joint board, reached a different conclusion, and specifically found, as a matter of fact, that there had been a marked and substantial aggravation of the injuries since the time of the original allowance and closing of the claim.

Neither the joint board nor the superior court heard *215 or saw the witnesses, and we, therefore, are perhaps in as good a position to judg'e of the facts as either. A careful study of the evidence touching respondent’s condition at and following the time of the original allowance convinces us that the trial court was not in error in finding that the respondent had suffered an aggravation of Ms injuries since May 27, 1930.

But the trial court went further, and found that the aggravation had increased the permanent partial disability by twenty-five degrees, and by the judgment entered, directed the department to grant the respondent an additional award of twenty-five degrees, and thus pay, in addition to the previous award, the further sum of $750 to the respondent.

The department contends that, in this, the trial court exceeded his powers; and that, having found aggravation, the only proper course was to remand the case to the department that it might exercise its original jurisdiction upon the subject of the extent of the disability resulting from the aggravation.

Prior to the amendment of the statute by the act of 1927, hereinafter referred to, the practice in this respect was attempted to be outlined by this court in the case of Cole v. Department of Labor and Industries, 137 Wash. 538, 243 Pac. 7. In that case, the department had decided the claim upon a finding that the injuries were not the result of a fortMtous event. On appeal to the superior court, the case was tried before a jury, and the court submitted to the jury not only the issue as to whether the injuries were the result of a fortuitous event, but also the questions as to whether or not such injuries caused permanent partial disability and the degree thereof, if any, and the amount of compensation the claimant should receive. The jury awarded compensation in the sum of twenty-four hundred dollars and the trial court, by his judg *216 ment, awarded the sum fixed by the jury for permanent partial disability and a further sum for temporary total disability based upon a special finding. An appeal was taken, and this court, after quoting from Rem. Comp. Stat., §7697, said:

“This language, it seems to us, clearly shows a legislative intent that the superior court shall not have any original jurisdiction in the administration of the law, or decide any question to be decided in the first instance by the department. It seems to us, the lawful inquiry, upon review in the superior court, is only with reference to a question or questions which have been actually decided by the department. When the department decided that Cole was not injured as the result of a fortuitous event, and that, therefore, he had no right whatever to compensation, it manifestly made no decision on the question of proper classification or degree of any injuries suffered by him. Indeed, the department then had no occasion to decide any such questions. For the superior court to entertain those questions and determine the amount of compensation, as it did in this case, was to assume original jurisdiction over a subject within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the department.”

Clearly, in the Cole case, in deciding that the injuries Were not the result of a fortuitous event, the department had no occasion to examine into the nature and extent of those injuries, or to determine what, if any, award should be made therefor, and very clearly this court there applied the correct rule.

In this case, however, in determining the question whether or not respondent had suffered aggravation, the department and the joint board must necessarily fully inquire into respondent’s physical condition during the time following the original award; and when the joint board determined that there had been no aggravation, it decided the whole issue of fact which was before it as to respondent’s physical condition. *217 If the case were now remanded to the department to determine the extent of the aggravation and the degree of disability caused thereby, it would be placed in the embarrassing position of reversing its former finding of facts, and the extent to which it would so reverse itself would be problematical.

The rule announced in the Cole case, supra, is in harmony with the views expressed in the earlier case of Maddox v. Industrial Insurance Commission, 113 Wash. 137, 193 Pac. 231.

By § 8, chapter 310, Laws of 1927, p. 850, the section of the statute considered in the Cole case was amended, and among other things, a new clause was incorporated which reads:

“If the court shall determine that the department has acted within its power and has correctly construed the law and found the facts, the decision of the department shall be confirmed; otherwise, it shall be reversed or modified. In case of a modification or reversal the superior court shall refer the same to the department of labor and industries with an order directing it to proceed in accordance with the findings of the court: Provided, That any award shall be in accordance with the schedule of compensation set forth in this act.” Rem. Rev. Stat., §7697 [P. C. §3488.]

Whether this amendment was intended to and does broaden the power of the court, we need not now inquire; because, as we shall later see in this case, no broadening of the original act was needed.

This court again, in Taylor v. Department of Labor and Industries, 175 Wash. 1, 26 P. (2d) 391, reaffirmed the doctrine of the Cole case. In the Taylor

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36 P.2d 809, 179 Wash. 213, 1934 Wash. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noll-v-department-of-labor-industries-wash-1934.