Sheker v. Quealy

4 N.W.2d 250, 232 Iowa 429
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 1942
DocketNo. 45766.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 N.W.2d 250 (Sheker v. Quealy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheker v. Quealy, 4 N.W.2d 250, 232 Iowa 429 (iowa 1942).

Opinions

Hale, J.

This proceeding was brought by Earline Sheker, by her mother and nest friend, and Evelyn Sheker Berg, against S. R. Quealy, the insurance company, being insolvent, not being made a party. The original application for arbitration was filed October 18, 1939, and the order for hearing, made by the industrial commissioner under section 1457 of the Code, regarded such application as a petition for review by way of reopening. To this application a resistance was filed, and thereafter an amended and substituted petition for review and reopening, and an amendment to the resistance. Claimants treated the proceeding as the commissioner had designated it, as under section 1457 of the Code. It was so treated by the district court and is so considered here.

Earl Sheker received a fatal injury, arising out of and in the course of his employment, on February 22,1934. Evelyn Sheker was his surviving wife and Earline Sheker was born about two months after her father’s death. Evelyn remarried -on the 1st of June 1938. On the 8th of March 1934, a memorandum of agreement was executed by S. R. Quealy, the employer, and Mrs. Evelyn Sheker, which was approved by the industrial commissioner on March 12, 1934. This memorandum recited the facts that the injury arose out of and in the course of decedent’s employment as truck driver; that the employee’s actual earnings were-$3 per day; that the number of days employed was four days per week, and the compensation rate was computed as $3 times 225 divided by 52, equalling $12.98 times 60 per cent, or $7.79 per week. No claim is made that the method of computa *431 tion is incorrect. The compensation period was fixed at 300 weeks; the amount of medical and hospital and relief supplied, $150; and the beneficiary named was Mrs. Evelyn Sheker. The petition for reopening recites that the award should have been made in favor of Evelyn and Earline at the rate of $15 per week for 300 weeks, and states that the defendant has paid for approximately 205 weeks at the rate of $7.79 per week, or the sum of $1,596.95, and claims that there is still owing the sum of $2,903.05, with interest at 5 per cent per annum. It is claimed that Evelyn Sheker Berg is entitled to an award for the difference in compensation paid and compensation legally allowable for a period' of 205 weeks, or the sum of $7.21 for 205 weeks, or $1,478.05, with interest at 5 per cent, and is further entitled to receive compensation at the rate of $15 per week from the date of March 1, 1938, until June 1, 1938, the date of her remarriage, oí-an additional period of approximately 10 weeks at $15 per week, or $150, with interest; and that compensation accruing subsequent to the first day of June 1938, was payable to Earline Sheker, the sole surviving child of Earl Sheker. The resistance and answer alleged estoppel on the part of Evelyn Sheker and any other claimant; that the greatest amount that could be established against anyone in this proceeding would be for a period of not more than 95 weeks and in a sum not greater than that provided for in the order heretofore entered; and that said balance could be made payable only weekly in the future, and without interest. The answer further alleged that' the claimant has the right to enforce her claim only against the insurer, and said right must be established and enforced before any claim against the employer in this proceeding; and asks that the proceeding be abated until such time as it may be determined what amount will be paid in the liquidation of the insurer. The answer denied that the claim is open to review, and alleged that the industrial commissioner has no jurisdiction to hear such proceeding on the application filed by the claimant, or to hear any petition for review set forth in claimant’s application. The resistance further stated that the employer was at the. time of the injury an excavating contractor, and the deceased was employed as a truck driver in connection with such business of excavating, which is a seasonal occupation; and the employer *432 asked that the award heretofore made be corrected to conform to the facts and that he be credited with the excess payments heretofore made. The matter proceeded to hearing before the deputy industrial commissioner acting for the industrial commissioner, and the proceeding was under Code section 1457. This is the same as section 1457 of the Code of 1935. The section in the Code of 1931 was the same, with the exception that the words at any time “within five years” were not included.

The reopening opinion and award of the deputy industrial commissioner (who will hereinafter be designated as the commissioner) makes a finding of facts as heretofore set out, including the original award, the birth of Earline, and the remarriage of Evelyn, with the allegations of the petition. The issues set out in the commissioner’s opinion and award to be determined are the rights, if any, of claimant, and the power of the commissioner to reopen the case for review of the agreement for settlement for the purposes of: (1) Investigation and correction of the weekly compensation rate if it be incorrect; (2) determination of the status of the posthumous child, Earline Sheker, as to her dependency as of the date of the death of her father; (3) determination of the original or primary liability of the defendant employer because of the insolvency of his insurance carrier; and (4) determination of the rights, if any, of recovery as against the employer of the respective claimants.

The commissioner found for claimants, and in his opinion recited that the formula for computation was correct but that decedent was not engaged in a seasonal occupation and the correct compensation under the 300-day rule should be $10.39; that he had power and authority to reopen and correct the former award; that the surviving spouse is entitled to recover from the employer the balance of weekly compensation payments due to the date of her remarriage and that due her on the corrected rate; that the surviving child is entitled to that portion of the compensation payments from the date of its mother’s remarriage to the termination of the 300-weeks ’ compensation period. Claimant Evelyn Sheker was therefore awarded the additional sum of $2.60 per week on 205 weekly payments already made. From the date of the expiration of the 205 weeks to June 1, 1938, she was *433 allowed $10.39 per week. Earline Sheker, the child, was allowed $10.39 per week for 77 weeks and 2 days. Interest was computed on all amounts allowed.

While the issues set out in the resistance to the application to reopen include more, there are argued and we need consider only two of the propositions urged by the defendants in this case: first, the power to reopen; and second, estoppel as preventing the right of the commissioner to reopen the case. There can be no doubt, under our holding in the recent case of Stice v. Consolidated Indiana Coal Co., 228 Iowa 1031, 1038, 291 N. W. 452, 456, that there is no such right on the part of the commissioner, under the facts of that case. Under such facts, the only matter to be decided was whether there was a right of review in a case where there had been a hearing with testimony introduced. This opinion was filed in September 1940, and held, in substance, that section 1457 of the Code contains no provision for re-examination of matters adjudicated by an award which is subject to review under it, and states:

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.W.2d 250, 232 Iowa 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheker-v-quealy-iowa-1942.