Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Nelson

197 N.E. 797, 50 Ohio App. 182, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 270, 3 Ohio Op. 52, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 226
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 197 N.E. 797 (Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Nelson, 197 N.E. 797, 50 Ohio App. 182, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 270, 3 Ohio Op. 52, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 226 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Ross, J.

This cause comes into this court on error to the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton county. The judgment of that court certified to the Industrial *183 Commission a verdict of a jury in favor of the right of the plaintiff, Jake Nelson, to participate in the State Insurance Fund as against a self-insurer, The Western Union Telegraph Company, plaintiff in error.

It is the contention of the plaintiff in error that no application for compensation was ever made to plaintiff in error by the claimant prior to the filing of the instant litigation. Section 1465-72», General Code, is as follows:

“In all cases of injury or death, claims for compensation shall be forever barred, unless, within two years after the injury or death, application shall have been made to the industrial commission of Ohio or to the employer in the event such employer has elected to pay compensation direct.”

An examination of the record discloses the following:

The plaintiff was a member of a crew whose duty it was among other things to place poles for the telegraph company along its right of way. While engaged in such employment a pole slipped, causing the weight to shift toward the plaintiff, who was supporting it with a long pole. His wrist was bent backward and injured. The plaintiff was tubercular, and by reason of the injury so received accelerating the cause of the disease it became necessary to amputate his arm a little below the elbow.

The plaintiff, however, continued to work for some time after the injury, but was finally compelled to quit his employment, owing to his inability to carry on his work with his injured arm. A few days after he had ceased his work, he called upon his foreman and asked him for his pay. It was claimed that it was at this time he made application for compensation. The claimant’s brother and fellow-workman testified as to a conversation between the claimant and the foreman of plaintiff in error, as follows:

*184 “18. Well, now, did you hear the conversation, any conversation between him and Mr. Stumbaugh, the foreman, at any time after the accident? A. I did, after he was laid off, when he came back out there and I was with him in the room there. He came in and asked Mr. Stumbaugh would he make a state case out of it, and he said no, he did not want to turn in an accident report.

“19. Did you hear that conversation? A. Yes.

“20. Where did that occur? A. Elm Hotel, Nor-wood.

-“21. And you used the language that Mr. Nelson used at that time; or recall any words he said? A. No, I can remember me asking him is all. * * *

“24. Was there anything said by Mr. Stumbaugh at that time, when he asked him to make a state case out of it, about the exact dates when this occurred? A. Yes, sir, Mr. Stumbaugh said he did not know the exact date was the reason he .did not want to put in for a state case.

“23. Was Mr. Stumbaugh present when this pole fell, injuring Mr. Nelson’s arm at the wrist? A. Yes, sir.

“26. Did you hear any other conversation between Mr. Stumbaugh and Mr. Nelson regarding this injury? A. No, sir, I did not.”

The claimant testified to the following:

“25. Well, now, what happened after that with reference to your hand? Did you continue to work? A. Well, I continued working a few days and the hand started going on the bum, getting worse. Finally it just got so I could not use it. I was working with one hand, and Mr. Stumbaugh gave me soft work like going down the track and doing some things to prevent trouble on the lines.

“26. And did you ever talk to him afterwards about the injury? A. Well, I asked Mr. Stumbaugh for com *185 pensation after he discharged me. I came hack, I was discharged on the 10th and the 15th was pay day, so I had some pay coming and I went hack to the hotel where Mr. Stumbaugh was paying off. He said ‘What are you doing here?’ I said ‘I got some little pay and I want to try to get a little out of this case, try to make it a state case out of it. ’ Mr. Stumbaugh asked me if I had an exact date of the injury and I told him no. He says ‘I don’t want to report on the accident without an exact date in reporting the accident to the company.’ So I just let it drop.

“27. Did he offer you any papers to sign? A. No, sir. He had papers there intended to fill it out, some kind of sickness I believe it was that he did fill in— something of that kind.

“28. He put that in? A. I do not know exactly except that it was some kind of sickness. .

“29. Did you tell him to put that in? A. Well, he just said ‘you report that and you will get back to work.’ He says ‘if you report that you will get back to work.’ I just did not know what he meant by it, I guess I was dumb and Mr. Stumbaugh will admit the fact I asked him, and he knows he discharged me.

“30. Well, how long after the discharge was it, that is when he temporarily laid you off, how long was it after that when you asked him for compensation, the same time or later? A. No, he discharged me on the 10th. He did not fill out no papers. Just told me to get my hand fixed. On the 15th I came back and he filled out this discharge paper as sickness, on the 15th, that was pay day when I was back collecting my money.

“31. What did you do after that, after he refused to help you get any compensation, what did you do ? A. Well, I had a little money, couple of hundred dollars, and I went down to Mr. Behrmann. Spent all my money there. Did not have no more money. Then I went over to Bell Street Hospital, went there for two *186 treatments. They would not care for me, but they give me a permit to go to the (xeneral. * * *

“59. What was the conversation you had with Mr. Stumbaugh, the foreman, at the Elm Hotel in Norwood, shortly after the accident, the night you had been laid off? A. Well, I went back to get my pay. He said, ‘WThat are you doing around here?’ I said ‘I am back to make a state case out of my injury to the wrist.’ Mr. Stumbaugh, he asked me if I had the exact dates and I told him ‘No.’ He said ‘Well, he could not turn in an accident report without the exact date of the injury. ’

“60. Did you have a talk with him about this injury before that time? A. Sure I talked to him about it before I was discharged, when he told me I had better get that wrist fixed up.

“61. What did he say to you when he discharged you in September, 1928, September 19th, I think it was?” ■

Mr. Ireton: “Object to that.”

Referee: ‘ ‘ Objection overruled. ’ ’

“A. Why, Mr. Stumbaugh told me he would not make out an accident report. He would report some kind of sickness so I would be able to get back on the job. Said if I reported an accident like that I would not have much chance of getting back.”

The foreman testified:

“22. Do you remember the accident when the pole they were erecting there on that job fell? A. I remember the pole falling up there, yes, sir.

“23. Was that a pole upon which Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 797, 50 Ohio App. 182, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 270, 3 Ohio Op. 52, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-union-telegraph-co-v-nelson-ohioctapp-1934.