Ray v. Sanitary Garbage Co.

278 N.W. 139, 134 Neb. 178, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 14
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1938
DocketNo. 30327
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 278 N.W. 139 (Ray v. Sanitary Garbage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. Sanitary Garbage Co., 278 N.W. 139, 134 Neb. 178, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 14 (Neb. 1938).

Opinion

Messmore, J.

This is an appeal from the district court for Lancaster county, dismissing plaintiffs’ action, and holding that such action was barred by the statute of limitations. We are first concerned with the statute of limitations as it affects the plaintiffs’ action.

Wallace B. Ray, an employee of defendant company, was injured in the course of his employment in an accident on October 4, 1931. He died on October 15, 1931. At that time he was living with his wife and one minor child. Subsequently, another child was born to deceased’s widow, who remarried November 28, 1932. Both minor children were of tender years-, being five and four years of age, respectively, at the time this action was- filed on September 26, 1936, by the next friend and legal guardian of the minors and the administratrix of deceased’s estate. On the trial of this cause a compensation judge dismissed the case as barred by the statute of limitations. The compensation court also dismissed the case, as did the district court, for the same reason. Plaintiffs contend that such dismissal constitutes error and rely on the proposition that the minor children of tender years were mentally and legally incapacitated to sue until such time as they obtained a next friend or legal guardian; that the widow of deceased failed to file a claim, as required by the workmen’s compensation law, and, on her remarriage, the minor children, dependents of the deceased, are entitled to any compensation that may be owing.

The following are the sections of the statute involved and requiring our consideration: Section 48-132, Comp. St. .1929, reads: “If an injured employee is mentally incompetent or is a minor at the time when any right or privilege accrues to him under this article, his guardian or next friend may, in his behalf, claim and exercise such right or privilege.” Section 48-133, Comp. St. 1929, as [180]*180amended.by section 21, eh. 57, .Laws 1935,-is in part as follows: “Or in case of. death of the employee, or in-event of his physical or mental incapacity, within six months after death or the removal of such physical or mental incapacity,” etc. The words “within six months after death” apply to the time of filing the claim.

Section 48-138, Comp. St. 1929, reads: “In case of personal injury, all claim for compensation shall be forever barred unless, within one year after the accident, the parties shall have agreed upon the compensation payable under this act, or unless, within one year after the accident, one of the parties shall havé filed a petition as provided in section 3680 (48-139) hereof. In case of death, all claims for compensation shall be forever barred unless, within one year after the death, * * * one of the parties shall have filed a petition as provided in section 3680 (48-139) hereof. * * * In the event of legal disability of an injured employee, said limitation shall not take effect until the expiration of one year from the time of removal of such legál disability.”

It will be noted that from the date of the death of the deceased employee until this action was filed nearly five years had elapsed, and from the date of the remarriage of deceaséd’s widow nearly four years had elapsed. Clearly, the statute has run against the plaintiffs’ action, unless this court can so interpret the compensation law as to give to it a liberal construction, extending the statutory time to meet the conception of plaintiffs’ contention.

Plaintiffs contend that in the exception the term “legal disability,” both by definition and by previous history of its use in law, includes minority or infancy, and that the term “injured employee” includes dependents of the deceased employee; and plaintiffs concurrently contend that the concluding exception in section 48-138, Comp. St. 1929, should be construed to read: “In' the event of the mental incompetency, mental incapacity or minority of an injured employee or his dependent or'dependents in case of death, said limitation shall not take effect until the expiration of [181]*181one year from the: time of removal of such mental incompetency, mental incapacity, or minority.” It is also contended by plaintiffs- that sections 48-133 and .48-138, Comp. St. 1929, are to be construed together; that so construing said sections and placing the meaning thereof in one sentence would make it read as follows: “In death cases the claim for compensation must be made in six months and the petition for compensation filed in one year from the death of the employee or the removal of any legal disability of the claimant.”

There can be no doubt of the legal disability of the minors in this case, and no objection can be had to construing the statutes together as contended. We must, however, recognize that the language of both sections 48-133 and 48-138, supra, fails to include minor dependents, and to include minor dependents would require language to be written into the act.

Plaintiffs cite Walgreen Co. v. Industrial Commission, 323 Ill. 194, 153 N. E. 831. In that case the petitioner admitted that no claim for compensation was made by or on behalf of the injured boy until almost four years after the accident happened, but based her contention on a paragraph of the compensation act of Illinois as follows: “In case an injured employee shall be incompetent at the time when any. right or privilege accrues to him under the provisions of this act, a conservator or guardian may be appointed, pursuant to law,. and may, on behalf of such incompetent, claim and exercise any such right or privilege with the same force and effect, as if the employee himself had been competent and had claimed or exercised said right or privilege; and no limitations of time by this -act provided shall run so long as said incompetent employee is without a conservator or a guardian.”

Plaintiffs review the above case in detail and their analysis is correct. However, it must be remembered that the Illinois court was construing a statute that expressly provided, in case an injured employee shall be incompetent, that no limitation of time by the act provided shall run so [182]*182long as said incompetent employee is without a conservator or guardian, and the court declared that minority was incapacity. We do not have, the same act in Nebraska, nor .the same limitations as set forth in the section of the ■statute quoted.

Plaintiffs cite Chase v. Ulster & D. R. Co., 215 App. Div. 581, 214 N. Y. Supp. 615, wherein it was held: “ ‘Next friend,’ within workmen’s compensation law 1914, sec. 116, as it existed in May, 1922, providing that limitation shall not run against minor dependent, unless minor has committee, guardian, or next friend, is one who had already performed services for minor respecting matter in hand, and not one who might perform them in future.” In construing the act in question in the case cited, we find language very specific: “No limitation of time provided in this chapter shall run as against any person who is mentally incompetent or a minor dependent so long as he lias no committee, guardian, or next friend.” The above case is not analogous to the case at bar. It specifically mentions minor dependents and involves an additional statute of limitations directly affecting such dependent minors.

Plaintiffs cite Southern R. Co. v. Grigsby, 155 Tenn. 285, 292 S. W. 3. In that case it was held (292 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
278 N.W. 139, 134 Neb. 178, 1938 Neb. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-sanitary-garbage-co-neb-1938.