Valier Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission

149 N.E. 805, 319 Ill. 99
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1925
DocketNo. 16895. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 N.E. 805 (Valier Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valier Coal Co. v. Industrial Commission, 149 N.E. 805, 319 Ill. 99 (Ill. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the course of his employment by the Valier Coal Company, Pete Batrecivich on June 28, 1921, was accidentally caught between a heavy coal car which he was loading and the face of the coal and his hips and chest were crushed. Upon his petition to the Industrial Commission he was awarded compensation by an arbitrator at the rate of $14 a week for 40 weeks, being the period of his temporary total incapacity to work. He filed a petition for review, which was heard on February 14, 1923. Without the taking of any testimony, by agreement of the parties the Industrial Commission set aside the award of the arbitrator and entered an award of compensation at $14 a week for a period of 61J4 weeks, the period of total incapacity. On the next day the petitioner again went to work as a trapper for the Valier Coal Company for $7.25 a day and continued to work for six months. This work consisted of opening doors for the motor and throwing switches, and required quick motion, rapid running and stooping. On August 15 he was compelled to quit this work because his physical condition had become worse and he was no longer able to do the work. He asked for work at single door trapping, but the company did not give him this work. He tried cleaning road and cleaning coal and rock off the track, but was forced to abandon that after three or four days on account of the pain in his hips and spine. On September 18, 1923, he filed with the Industrial Commission his petition under section 19h of the Workmen’s Compensation act, averring that his disability had recurred and increased and asking for an award of additional compensation. After a hearing on this petition.an award was made on August 1, 1924, finding that the petitioner’s disability had recurred and increased and that he had become permanently partially incapacitated, and an award was made under section 8h of the act of $14 a week for 303-4/7 weeks for such permanent partial incapacity. The record of the proceeding was reviewed by the circuit court upon a writ of certiorari, the award was confirmed, and upon the petition of the Valier Coal Company a writ of error was allowed.

The plaintiff in error argues that there is no evidence that after the award of the commission on the review of the arbitrator’s award there was a recurrence or increase of disability, and that the commission in its order made no finding that the disability of the defendant in error had recurred or increased since the last hearing, and made no order as to when compensation payments should begin under the order. The award of February 14, 1923, was conclusive of the nature and extent of the disability of the-defendant in error then existing. It settled the question that the accident had partially incapacitated the defendant in error for work for' 61J4 weeks, which had then elapsed, and that there was at the time of the hearing no existing permanent disability. No evidence was admissible on the hearing by the commission of the subsequent petition as to that question, and if the evidence at the later hearing showed that the defendant-in error was permanently partially disabled it would be conclusive that his disability had recurred or increased since the previous hearing. (Summit Coal Co. v. Industrial Com. 308 Ill. 121; Stromberg Co. v. Industrial Com. 305 id. 619; Simpson Construction Co. v. Industrial Com. 275 id. 366.) The order of the commission finds that the disability of the defendant in error has recurred and increased and that he has now become permanently partially incapacitated from pursuing his usual and customary line of employment as a result of the injury sustained on June 28, 1921. Since he was shown not to have been permanently disabled at the time of the last hearing but worked for months afterward, this finding of a recurrence of his former disability must refer to a recurrence since the last hearing. The finding has abundant support in the evidence. The injuries of the defendant in error were severe. There were two fractures of the bones of the pelvis on the left side and fractures of two ribs on the right side. These have healed with some deformity. There is an enlargement of some of the articulations of the bones of the pelvis and an angulation or curvature of the spine in the dorsal-region, caused by the slipping of the fourth and fifth dorsal vertebrae upon themselves. The defendant in error has lost weight, having fallen off since his injury from 140 pounds to 116 pounds. There is some difference of opinion among the experts, but there can be no serious question about the fact that the bodily strength of the defendant in error is diminished; that his capacity for hard physical labor, the only employment for which he is qualified, is reduced; that he cannot do heavy manual labor; and that, as one of the physicians expressed it, he will probably finish his life as a workman with a handicap. He has sustained no additional injury, but the evidence justifies the inference that his present physical disability is a recurrence of the original disability occasioned by the crushing of his body, and that it is permanent.

The order of the commission does not find the date of the recurrence of the disability and does not fix the time for beginning the additional payments. At the time of the original award the 61% weeks during which compensation was ordered to be paid had already expired. There could be no further compensation awarded except upon a recurrence of disability occasioned by the injury. There was no such recurrence before August 15, 1923, for the defendant in error was working during all that time in the mine. At that time he quit work for the reason that he was unable to do the work in which he was employed, and he has since continued unable to work at that employment. The evidence justified the commission in finding that at that time there was a recurrence of disability occasioned by the injury. It did not include an express finding to that effect in its order. The commission should have stated in its order the time when compensation payments under it should begin, and under the evidence should have directed them to begin on August 22, 1923. The total amount of the award is $4250. This is $250 greater than the act permits. The defendant in error had two children under sixteen years of age, and the maximum compensation allowed under the act of 1919, under which this case was to be determined, was $4000.

The plaintiff in error contends that the decision of the commission extended the payments beyond the period of eight years from the date of the accident, limited by section 8h of the act of 1919,-except in case of complete disability. The order directed that the plaintiff in error should have credit for all compensation theretofore paid. The court should have limited the amount of the payment to $4000, which would have reduced the period to 285-5/7 weeks. Deducting the 61% weeks for which the order gives the plaintiff in error credit, the payments would extend through 224 weeks from August 15, 1923, and would end in 1927, about six and a half years from the date of the injury, June 28, 1921.

The plaintiff in error contends that there is no competent evidence in the record on which to base an award of $14 a week.

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Related

Summit Coal & Mining Co. v. Industrial Commission
139 N.E. 1 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 805, 319 Ill. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valier-coal-co-v-industrial-commission-ill-1925.