Schmidt v. O. K. Baking Co.

96 A. 963, 90 Conn. 217, 1916 Conn. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 96 A. 963 (Schmidt v. O. K. Baking 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
Schmidt v. O. K. Baking Co., 96 A. 963, 90 Conn. 217, 1916 Conn. LEXIS 58 (Colo. 1916).

Opinion

Prentice, C. J.

No question was, or is, made as to the claimant’s right to compensation, save such as arises from his delay in giving notice to his employer of his injuries, and it was for reasons growing out of that delay that his claim was disallowed by the compensation commissioner and the appeal from such disallowance dismissed by the Superior Court.

Preliminary to passing upon the question thus presented, as to the consequences attached to the delay in *220 the giving of notice to the employer, it becomes necessary to determine whether the provisions of § 21 of chapter 138 of the Public Acts of 1913, p. 1743, or those of §§ 3 and 13 of chapter 288 of the Public Acts of 1915, pp. 2117, 2122, which did not go into effect until May 20th, 1915, both dealing with that subject, but in a somewhat different manner, are controlling. In the claimant’s behalf, it is contended that the provisions of the earlier Act, which the court below interpreted and applied, relate to procedure and remedy, and therefore were superseded by those of the later Act, in force when the hearing before the commissioner was had. On behalf of the respondent, it is insisted that they concern substantive rights.

The latter contention is the correct one. The relation between the parties was contractual; their rights and obligations arose from that relation, and the terms and conditions of it were defined by the statute in force which formed a part of the contract of employment. Powers v. Hotel Bond Co., 89 Conn. 143, 147, 93 Atl. 245; Sibley v. The State, 89 Conn. 682, 686, 96 Atl. 161. By these terms and conditions, as prescribed by the Act of 1913, the liability of an employer, in case of injury to the employee, was not fixed by the simple fact of injury to the employee arising out of and in the course of his employment. The element of notice of injury to the employer, if he be ignorant of it, entered into the very essence of the injured party’s claim and the extent of it. The time when the notice should be given was made a factor to be considered in determining what the claim should be which he was entitled to enforce in the manner prescribed by statute.

The Act of 1913 was in force when this claimant’s injuries were received, when the thirty days provided by it for notice thereof to be given to his employer had run, when notice was in fact given to his employer, and when *221 the attempt to enforce his claim was begun. Whatever right of compensation he might have had thus became fixed, and the extent of it determined, or, rather, the elements to be considered in its determination became fixed. Whatever inchoate right, arising from his injuries, he may have lost by noneompliance with the conditions precedent to a definite and enforceable claim, was then lost. Whatever that loss was, it could not be restored to him by subsequent legislation. Any attempt to do so would be to deprive his employer of a right vested in it under its contract.

Turning to § 21 of the Act of 1913, we find that its opening sentence reads as follows: “No proceedings for compensation under this act shall be maintained unless a written notice of the injury shall have been given to the employer by the injured employee or in his behalf within thirty days of the happening thereof, and during the continuance of the incapacity on account of which compensation is claimed, nor unless claim for compensation is made within one year from the date of injury.” Then follow provisions as to the character of the notice and the manner of giving it. The section, omitting its final sentence, which relates to another matter, then concludes as follows: “but no want, defect, or inaccuracy of such notice and claim shall be a bar to the maintenance of proceedings unless the employer shall show that he was ignorant of the injury and was prejudiced by want, defect, or inaccuracy of notice. Upon satisfactory showing of such ignorance and prejudice, the employer shall receive allowance to the extent of such prejudice.”

The respondent’s contention is that two situations are thus dealt with, to wit: in the first portion of the section cases in which no notice, sufficient or defective, is given within the thirty days, and in the closing part, those in which some notice, but a defective or inaceu *222 rate one, is given, with the result that in the first class of cases, within which the present claimant’s falls, no recovery can be had, while in the latter class a conditional or limited recovery, according to the circumstances, is permitted.

This contention encounters an obstacle which has to be overcome in the use of the word “want” in connection with “defect” and “inaccuracy” in the second part of the sentence, where it is provided that no want of notice shall be a bar, etc. “Want of” naturally implies lack or absence of. If used here in that sense the respondent’s contention must fail. To avoid that result, counsel for the respondent concur with the trial court in interpreting the word as synonymous with “deficiency.” If the preposition “in” had been used in connection with “want,” more plausibility would be lent to the claimed construction, but “of” is the preposition used in the Act, and to construe “want of” as synonymous with “deficiency in” is to force the words a long way out of their ordinary meaning.

Moreover, such a construction would make the word “want” merely repetitious and surplusage, when used, as here, with “defect” and “inaccuracy.” We should be led to expect that some distinctive meaning, other than that conveyed by its associated words, was intended. Again, this construction, which would make the prohibition of proceedings to secure compensation, in cases where the thirty days’ notice was not given, absolute and unyielding, would lead to a harsh and rigid rule which might easily work injustice. It is hard to believe that the General Assembly intended to cut off claimants, whatever the circumstances of their cases might be, quite so inexorably and by so short a limitation of time for the giving of notice.

Still again, the workmen’s compensation statutes in other jurisdictions, with which the framers of ours were *223 doubtless familiar, notably those of Great Britain and Massachusetts, use the words “want of,” in connection with the giving of notice of injury, as signifying lack of, or absence of, notice. British Act, § 2, subsection 1 a; Massachusetts Act, Part 2, § 18. The same is true of the Michigan Act, Part 2, § 18. What is particularly significant is that in the British Act, which was undoubtedly carefully studied in the preparation of our own, and from which so many forms of expression touching the subject of notice were apparently taken, the provision for cases where the prescribed notice was not given, corresponding to the latter portion of our § 21, was couched in the form of a proviso qualifying a general prohibitory provision, previously stated, quite similar to the opening sentence of our § 21, and that the proviso clearly uses the words “want of” in the sense of lack of.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 963, 90 Conn. 217, 1916 Conn. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-o-k-baking-co-conn-1916.