Ratzlaff v. Friedeman Service Store

436 P.2d 389, 200 Kan. 430, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 295
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1968
Docket45,070
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 436 P.2d 389 (Ratzlaff v. Friedeman Service Store) 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
Ratzlaff v. Friedeman Service Store, 436 P.2d 389, 200 Kan. 430, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 295 (kan 1968).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This is a review and modification proceeding of a workmen s compensation award under K. S. A. 44-528.

Claimant-appellant initially claimed compensation for two separate accidental injuries. He alleged a neck injury occurring November 17, 1962, and a low back injury occurring February 1, 1963. [431]*431The claims were consolidated and heard together. Eventually, and on February 4, 1965, the district court found appellant had not sustained the alleged neck injury and it denied compensation therefor. However, the court found appellant had sustained the low back injury complained of, resulting in temporary total disability commencing June 28, 1963, and awarded compensation for the back injury payable at the rate of $38.00 per week.

At this juncture appellant’s two different claims of injury take separate courses.

Appellant appealed from the district court’s adverse finding as to his neck injury to this court.

No appeal was taken as to the back injury and the award of compensation for it became final, subject only to the statutory right of review and modification.

On April 27, 1965, the employer and its insurance carrier, appellees herein, filed their application to review and modify the award for the back injury, on the grounds the disability of appellant had diminished and the award was excessive. Appellant was served with a copy of the application on April 21,1965. Appellees promptly produced their evidence at a hearing before the workmen’s compensation examiner but final hearing on the application was delayed, apparently by agreement of the parties pending decision by this court upon appeal of the neck injury claim.

Meanwhile appellees, in conformity with the rule of the workmen’s compensation director (KAR 51-19-1), had continued to pay appellant compensation at the rate of $38.00 per week as initially awarded for total temporary disability.

On November 6, 1965, this court affirmed the trial court’s finding that appellant did not sustain an accidental injury to his neck (Ratzlaff v. Friedeman Service Store, 195 Kan. 548, 407 P. 2d 513).

The workmen’s compensation examiner did not make a decision on the review application as to the back injury until October 19, 1966. We know of no reason for this further delay in the processing of the application, except only that appellant did not complete the presentation of his evidence until January 5, 1966. On October 19, 1966, the examiner sustained appellees’ application, finding that appellant was temporarily totally disabled from June 28, 1963, until April 23, 1965; that as of April 23, 1965, appellant’s disability had diminished to forty per cent permanent partial disability for which he was entitled to compensation commencing April 23, 1965, at the [432]*432rate of $20.50 per week for the remainder of the statutory period. The examiner computed the amount of the compensation due up to October 14, 1966, as the total sum of $5,188.50, being for ninety-five weeks of temporary total disability at the rate of $38.00 per week for the period June 28, 1963, to April 23, 1965, plus seventy-seven weeks of permanent partial disability at the rate of $20.50 per week for the period April 23, 1965, to October 14, 1966, and he further ordered that appellees be credited with payments already made in excess of the total amount. In other words, he allowed appellees credit on future payments of compensation for overpayment of compensation to appellant during the period from April 23, 1965, to October 14, 1966 ($38.00 minus $20.50 equals $17.50 per week multiplied by 77 weeks or a total of $1,347.50 allowed as credit on payments after October 14, 1966).

The workmens compensation director, upon review, and the district court, upon appeal, made the same finding and award and allowed the same credit. This appeal followed.

Appellant does not contest the factual finding as to the partial disability, in effect conceding it is supported by the evidence, but he challenges the right of the examiner, the director and the district court to allow credit in a review and modification proceeding to an employer for payments already made under the award being modified.

Appellant argues the action taken here under 44-528 amounts to entering an award retroactively, that no authority exists for allowing credit for payments already made under an existing award and that the action in effect permits appellees to “recover back” payments for compensation which action is prohibited.

Appellant concedes we have no precedent precisely in point but he maintains our decision in Tompkins v. Rinner Construction Co., 196 Kan. 244, 409 P. 2d 1001, supports his arguments and is so similar it should control here.

In Tompkins the claimant, the widow of a workman who was accidentally killed, was initially awarded compensation by the workmens compensation director and by the district court. The employer appealed to this court meanwhile paying compensation to the claimant pending its appeals as required by K. S. A. 44-556. Upon the appeal from the original award this court held as a matter of law that the workman’s death did not arise out of his employment with the employer, reversing the trial court. Thereupon [433]*433the employer and its insurance carrier filed a motion in the district court, in the same case, for “restitution” of the amount paid to the claimant pending the appeals. The motion prayed for judgment against her for such amount.

At the outset of its opinion in Tompkins this court pinpointed the issue:

“The question may be stated very briefly.
“Where, in an appeal to this court by an employer and its insurance carrier from a judgment affirming an award of compensation by the director, it is ultimately determined that the accidental injury did not arise ‘out of the employment and therefore compensation is to be denied, is the insurance carrier entitled to ‘recover back’ the payments made by it pending disposition of the appeals?” (pp. 244-245.)

This court answered the question in the negative, holding, as succinctly stated in the syllabus:

“. . . (1) The workmen’s compensation act provides a procedure of its own covering every phase of the right to compensation and of the procedure for obtaining and enforcing it, which procedure is complete and exclusive; (2) the act contains no provision for ‘recovery back’ of payments made under an award pending appeals; (3) common law rules relating to the doctrine of restitution are inapplicable, and (4) ‘recovery back’ is not to be permitted.”

We deal here with K. S. A. 44-528, which, so far as pertinent, provides:

“At any time before but not after the final payment has been made under or pursuant to any award or modification thereof agreed upon by the parties, it may be reviewed by the director upon good cause shown upon the application of either party . . . and the director shall hear all competent evidence offered and if he shall find that the award ... is excessive or inadequate, or that the incapacity or disability of the workman has increased or diminished, the director may modify such award upon such terms as may be just by increasing or diminishing the compensation subject to the limitations herein-before provided in this act. . . .”

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Ratzlaff v. Friedeman Service Store
436 P.2d 389 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
436 P.2d 389, 200 Kan. 430, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratzlaff-v-friedeman-service-store-kan-1968.