Tulsa Terminal, Storage & Transfer Co. v. Thomas

1933 OK 53, 18 P.2d 891, 162 Okla. 5, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 31, 1933
Docket23180
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1933 OK 53 (Tulsa Terminal, Storage & Transfer Co. v. Thomas) 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
Tulsa Terminal, Storage & Transfer Co. v. Thomas, 1933 OK 53, 18 P.2d 891, 162 Okla. 5, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 466 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

On October 25, 1930, the employer, Tulsa Terminal, Storage & Transfer Company, on form 2, furnished by the State Industrial Commission, filed with the Commission employer’s first notice of injury, in which it gives the date of accident as October 7, 1930, and in answer to the question, “Business, Goods Produced, Work Done or Kind of Trade or Transportation,” it is written, “Truck transportation”; and in answer to the question, “Location of Plant or Place Where Accident Occurred,” the answer is, “Petroleum Exposition”; and in answer to the question, “Occupation When Injured,” it is written, “Driving and loading truck.” On November 7, 1930, there was filed with the Commission an instrument signed by the employee, employer, and insurance carrier on form 7, in which it is stated, “We, the parties to this instrument, have reached an agreement in regard to the facts with relation to an injury sustained by the claimant, and submit the following stipulation of facts relative thereto, for the order, decision, or award of the State Industrial Commission;” then follow the words, “Stipulation and Receipt” In the body of the stipulation and receipt it is- stated that the injury occurred October 7, 1930, disability ended October 27, 1930; nature of injury, “acute hemorrhoids”; extent of disability, “temporary”; employee quit work October 11, 1930; employee returned to work October 28, 1930; compensation began October 16, 1930. It is then stated in the receipt that the employee received full wages for day of injury, gives his average monthly wages, rate of compensation per week, period for which compensation was paid, and receipt for the amount of compensation. The purported agreed statement of facts does not designate the business of the employer. On December 5, 1930, the State Industrial Oommission made an order in which it states that:

“The Oommission having examined the record and having considered said stipulation and receipt, finds that claimant was injured October 7, 1930; that disability ended October 27, 1930, and that claimant received compensation for temporary total disability to hemorrhoids at the rate of $18 per week for said period of 1 weeks and 5 days based on a wage of $160 per month.
“And further finds claimant has received compensation at said rate for a period of 1 weeks and 5 days in the total amount of $33.
“It is therefore ordered: That .said amount so paid for temporary total disability be approved and that the case be closed. ”

The attending physicians report was filed October 25, 1930. All that the Commission had before it for consideration at the time the order of December 5, 1930, was made, was the employer’s first notice of injury, agreed statement of facts, in form as above stated, stipulation and receipt on form 7, and the physician’s report. On June 11, 1931, the employee filed a motion with the Commission to determine the extent of disability. A hearing was ordered on this motion, and on October 9, 1931, evidence was taken at Tulsa, Okla. It next appears in *6 the record that on October 13, 1931, the employee filed a claim for compensation. There was no issue raised relative to the claim for compensation not being filed earlier in the proceedings, and we do not think that that issue would he material for the reason that the parties within the year next after the date of the alleged injury filed an agreed statement of fact and stipulation and receipt which we have held to be a substitute for the claim. Further testimony was taken at Tulsa, Okla., on November 6, 1931. The employer and insurance carrier moved to dismiss upon two grounds: First, that there was no competent evidence showing that the accidental injury arose out of and in the course of the employment of the employee; and, second, that the employment did not come under the Workmen’s Compensation Law and the Commission had no jurisdiction over the case. This objection was overruled and the Commission made an award on November 20, 1931, in favor of the claimant for 50 per cent, permanent partial disability by reason of said injury. A corrected order was filed on November 27, 1931, and the employer and insurance carrier commenced this proceeding within the time provided by law to review said order.

The first specification of error presented by the petitioners is that:

“The Industrial Commission had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, for the reason that respondent at the time of the alleged accident was engaged in class B trucking, and said occupation is not covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Law.”

We have carefully examined the record and fail to find any competent evidence showing that the employment of the employee was in the “transfer and storage” business. It is equally silent regarding the contention of petitioners that the employee wag engaged in class B trucking. The claimant at the time of the alleged injury was engaged in loading a truck with heavy machinery and in driving the truck, but the record does not show that the machinery was being loaded for the purpose of being stored by the employer. Neither does the record show that the employee was driving a truck operated under a class B permit. In answer to the question, “In what capacity wiere you employed,” the claimant answered, “I had charge of the heavy work; that was, moving heavy machinery and all heavy work.” And in answer to the question, “Tell the court under what circumstances you were injured,” he answered : “I was moving some machinery at the Oil Exposition site, some stuff going to the Hinderliter Tool Company; we were lifting a heavy box, weighing from five to eight hundred pounds with a rope and pulley. There were three or four of us doing this; something slipped, and the box came back on me and in trying to hold the box up I strained myself.” The claimant also testified that he received $2 per day extra on out-of-town drives, and in response to the question, “How much were you out of town,” he answered, “At that time almost all the tíme.” And in answer to the question, “You heard this last witness testify. Who was he?” he answered: “Mr. Hard-wick. 1-Ie was the truck foreman. He tended to the city business and I was on the out-of-town truck. Mr. I-Iardwiek was my boss, and I worked directly under him.” There is other testimony in the record that *at the time claimant was injured he was driving a truck and delivering freight at different places and that the employer operated a transportation or truck branch in its business at the time the claimant was injured. There was no competent evidence in the record that the employee was working in the transfer and storage business for the employer at the time of his injury. The record shows that at the time the employee commenced offering evidence the Commissioner conducting the hearing stated: “He has been paid compensation and form 7 approved. The ease hinges on a change of condition from the time this form 7 was approved.” No further effort was made by counsel for claimant to show in what branch of the business of the Tulsa Terminal, Storage & Transfer Company the employee was working at the time of the injury. If the employer had a transfer and storage branch in its business and the employee was loading heavy machinery for the purpose of storing the same in the warehouse or storage house of (the employer, then such facts would bring him within the phrase “transfer and storage” found in section 7283, as amended by section 1, e. 61, Session Laws 1923 (13349, 0. S. 1931).

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 53, 18 P.2d 891, 162 Okla. 5, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsa-terminal-storage-transfer-co-v-thomas-okla-1933.