Plecity v. George McLachlan Hat Co.

164 A. 707, 116 Conn. 216, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 14, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 164 A. 707 (Plecity v. George McLachlan Hat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plecity v. George McLachlan Hat Co., 164 A. 707, 116 Conn. 216, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 23 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J,

In this case the commissioner made a pro forma award. Section 5266 of the General Statutes provides that if the commissioner finds that a claim before him involves a doubtful question of law, which the public interest requires should be finally and definitely determined, he may find the facts as in other cases and make his award pro forma; that such an award shall be of the same effect as one in an ordinary case except in certain particulars which are then stated as follows: On the filing of the award the question comes before the Superior Court as though an appeal had been taken and that court thereupon reserves the case for the opinion of this court, unless in the opinion of the Superior Court the principles of law involved are free from reasonable doubt and public interest does not in fact require that they be determined by this court, in which case it may in its discretion hear and determine the controversy as in other cases. If no corrections in the finding are sought, the procedure outlined in the statutes is sufficient for the final determination of the case without any appeal to the Superior Court or to this court. If corrections in the finding are claimed, an appeal for that purpose is necessary, but it should be restricted *220 in scope to the issues involved in the effort to secure them. The function of the Superior Court where a pro forma award is made and an appeal seeking changes in the finding is filed, is to determine that appeal alone, thus settling the facts upon which this court will consider the principles of law involved in the award. Practice Book, p. 258, § 75. From the decision of such an appeal by the Superior Court an appeal may be taken to this court. But no appeal is necessary to bring before it the legal questions involved in the award. The record before us shows a failure to appreciate the function of an appeal where a commissioner makes a pro forma award and we call attention to the proper practice, although that failure in no way affects the disposition of this case by us.

The plaintiff became incapacitated December 5th, 1930, by reason of mercurial poisoning resulting from his employment by the defendant the George McLachlan Hat Company. He had been employed by the company ever since 1917, except for a period from October, 1917, to May, 1919, when he was in the army, and a period when he made a trip to Europe in June, July and August, 1926, as a member of a troupe of gymnasts. Passing for the present the appellant’s claims for corrections, the finding of the commissioner is that the plaintiff’s employment previous to this trip was not a material factor in causing his disability; that the first manifestation of a symptom of the poisoning was in June or July, 1930; that his employment subsequent to that date was also not a factor in causing his disability; and that the disability did result from his employment between 1926 and June or July, 1930. During the period of the plaintiff’s employment, the company had carried compensation insurance with various insurers as follows. From July 8th, 1919, to July 8th, 1922, with the *221 Employers Liability Assurance Corporation; from July 8th, 1923, to September 13th, 1923, with the Travelers Insurance Company; from July 21st, 1923, to September 10th, 1930, with the Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company; from August 21st, 1930, to October 8th, 1930, with the Merchants Mutual Insurance Company; from September 18th, 1930, to November 11th, 1930, with the Maryland Casualty Company; and from November 1st, 1930, to the date of the hearing, with the American Mutual Liability Insurance Company. The commissioner made his award against the employer and the Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company, dismissing the claims against the other insurers. The controversy upon this appeal is entirely one between the insurance companies to determine upon which rests the obligation to discharge the compensation due the plaintiff.

The Workmen’s Compensation Act requires that every policy issued to an employer under its terms shall be so drawn as to cover the entire liability of the employer under Part B of the Act; General Statutes, §§5255 and 5256; and that as between an injured employee and an insurer, such a policy shall be conclusively presumed to cover the entire liability of the employer. General Statutes, § 5286. “The purpose of these provisions is to make certain that an employer shall at all times be in a position to fulfil all his obligations to his employees under the Act.” Witchekowski v. Falls Co., 105 Conn. 737, 739, 136 Atl. 565. The statutes, as we inferentially held in the case last cited, do not require a single continuous policy of insurance to cover the compensation which may become payable by an employer. Miller Brothers Construction Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 113 Conn. 504, 515, 155 Atl. 709. Their requirements can be met by a succession of policies, one taking up the risk *222 where another drops it, provided at all times the whole liability of the employer for compensation is covered, and the point at which the transmission of risk from one company to another takes place is not of particular importance as regards the requirements of the statutes. Thus, for example, we may assume a case analogous to the one before us, where an employee incurs poisoning from his employment between the dates specified in one insurance policy as the beginning and end of its policy period, the symptoms of the disease manifest themselves between such dates as specified in a succeeding policy and incapacity results between such dates as specified in a third policy. In such a situation it would not be important, as far as the requirements of the statutes are concerned, whether the policies were expressly drawn so that each covered the obligation of the employer to pay compensation for any poisoning resulting from employment during its policy period or so that each covered his obligation to pay compensation for any such poisoning the symptoms of which manifested themselves during the policy period, or so that each covered his obligation to make compensation for any such poisoning incapacity from which resulted during its policy period. It follows that, to determine in such a case which of the insurers should bear the burden of the compensation, it is necessary to have recourse to the terms of the policies issued by them.

The policies of the insurers involved in this case, copies of which have been filed with us, are uniform as regards the provisions affecting its disposition, and we assume that that is also true with regard to the policies of the insurers which have not filed copies with us. In each policy the seventh clause reads as follows: “This agreement shall apply only to such injuries so sustained by reason of accidents occurring *223 during the policy period limited and defined as such in item 2 to such declarations.” The item in the declarations referred to, leaving out the dates, reads as follows: “The period during which the Policy shall remain in force unless cancelled as in the Policy Provided (herein called the policy period), shall be from to at twelve and one minute o’clock a. m.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 707, 116 Conn. 216, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plecity-v-george-mclachlan-hat-co-conn-1933.