Transwestern Oil Co. v. Partain

1940 OK 371, 106 P.2d 263, 188 Okla. 97, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 17, 1940
DocketNo. 29237.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1940 OK 371 (Transwestern Oil Co. v. Partain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Transwestern Oil Co. v. Partain, 1940 OK 371, 106 P.2d 263, 188 Okla. 97, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 389 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This is an original action in which the Transwestern Oil Company and the Maryland Casualty Company, as petitioners, present to this court for review an order and award of the State Industrial Commission.

The order complained of was entered on the 24th day of April, 1939. It determined that, as a result of an accident, the claimant, Robert Dow Partain (respondent herein), sustained an injury to his back and right side resulting in a hernia. He was found to have been temporarily totally disabled from and after June 22, 1938, and continuing compensation from that date (less the five-day waiting period) was ordered paid. It was also ordered that the claimant be given an operation for hernia.

*98 The claimant urges that any and all relief should be denied petitioner for the asserted reason that the order from which the appeal was taken was made after the jurisdiction of the commission had lapsed. It is claimed that another order disposing of the issues which the order herein deals with had been previously entered, and that the same had become final by reason of the lapse of time without the institution of a judicial action to review the same in this court.

The features of the case essential to a consideration of the point are as follows.

The claimant filed his first notice of injury on June 24, 1938. Various hearings were held before inspectors of the State Industrial Commission, resulting ultimately in an order adopted by a vote of three members of that board.

The provisions of the order were substantially the same as those of the subsequent order now presented for review. It was made and entered on the 13th day of March, 1939, which was eleven days after the effective date of chapter 72 (pp. 578 et seq.) S. L. 1939, which, in the ninth subdivision of section 2, contained provisions relating to a hearing before the entire commission, prescribing as a prerequisite for such hearing that the aggrieved party should file with the secretary of the Industrial Commission, within ten days after an order upon a hearing before a commissioner as therein described, a notice of appeal.

For the purpose of complying with the above-mentioned provisions of the law, and obtaining a hearing before the commission en banc, as contemplated by the foregoing statute, the employer and insurance carrier filed with the State Industrial Commission a notice of appeal requesting such hearing. This notice was filed on the 22nd day of March, 1939. Thereafter, and on the 11th day of April, 1939, the commission entered an order vacating the order of March 13th. Subsequently, and on the 24th day of April, 1939, the commission, upon hearing, entered the order herein presented for review.

The claimant takes the position that notwithstanding the filing of the notice of appeal on the 22nd day of March, the order of March 13th became final on April 3rd by reason of failure to challenge the same by appropriate proceedings in this court within the 20-day period allowed for that purpose by section 3 of chapter 72, S. L. 1939 (amending section 13363, O. S. 1931).

The claimant’s position is based on the hypothesis that the order of March 13th (since it was signed by three members of the commission) should be treated as an order upon hearing before the commission, and was therefore of such a character as to constitute a final determination of the cause, from which no appeal could be taken to obtain a hearing before the commission en banc.

This position is taken by the claimant notwithstanding that he seems to have regarded the order otherwise during the proceedings before the commission. Before that body he voiced no objection to the proceedings and subsequent orders of the commission in which the order of March 13th was treated as preliminary or tentative in nature and subject to review by the commission en banc.

It is apparent that the order of March 13th, which is now said to constitute a final and conclusive disposition of the rights of the parties to the proceeding, was made and entered during a transitory period immediately succeeding the effective date of chapter 72, S. L. 1939, supra. .The order was entered in accord with the proceeding established under pre-existing law and did not correspond in method of entry with either type of hearing or order contemplated by the 9th subdivision of section 2 of chapter 72, S. L. 1939, since it was not preceded by a hearing before either a commissioner or the commission as a whole.

It is obvious, however, that one of the purposes of subdivision 9, supra, was to make available to parties whose rights are subject to determination by the commission a hearing before the commission en banc by the simple method of giving notice of appeal within the time therein *99 described. The commission accorded to the petitioners this statutory right.

The question then arises, Does the failure on the part of the commission to conform to the requirements of the law in the manner of entering the first or tentative order deprive an aggrieved party of the right of a hearing before the whole commission?

This question must be answered in the negative. One of the obvious and principal purposes of the law was to accord to the parties an opportunity to present their cause to the commission en banc. To hold that the mere signing of an order by the members of the commission or a majority thereof operates to deprive a party of this statutory right would defeat the legislative purpose in enacting the law. The method employed by the commission may have been erroneous and denoted a lack of conformity to the requirements of the statute, but such error, if any, was that of the commission acting on its own responsibility, and we decline to construe the law in such a manner as to cause the erroneous action thus taken to deprive the petitioners of a valuable statutory right.

The foregoing conclusion on this point is impelled by the established rules of the court. In Carlile et al. v. National Oil & Development Co. et al., 83 Okla. 217, 201 P. 377, we pointed out in paragraph 8 of the syllabus that:

“A statute should receive a rational, sensible interpretation, one which tends to avoid or remove the mischief at which it was leveled and to accomplish the object sought by the legislative body which enacted it, rather than one which promotes or permits the evil and avoids the accomplishment of the purpose of the enactment.”

More recently and peculiarly appropriate to this cause, we said in paragraph 2 of the syllabus in Re Benson, 178 Okla. 299, 62 P. 2d 962:

“Statutes giving the right to appeal are to be liberally construed.” (Notice also authorities reviewed in body of opinion.)

The above rule was so applied in the foregoing case as to preserve and accord to a party litigant a right of appeal even though not within the literal meaning of the language used in the statute. In the case at bar the requirements in connection with its application are less stringent. The appeal here accorded and protected is clearly contemplated and provided by the statute. It follows that the order and award herein presented for review is properly before us for consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 371, 106 P.2d 263, 188 Okla. 97, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transwestern-oil-co-v-partain-okla-1940.