160 So. 655 | La. Ct. App. | 1935
Council for plaintiff, in application for rehearing, vigorously assert that our interpretation of paragraph 3 of section 1 of Act No.
It is the contention of plaintiff that the court in which the suit for compensation is filed may declare, even in the absence of an agreement between the employer and the employee, that the particular occupation involved is hazardous, although not specifically so classified in the act, and that in that suit compensation may be awarded.
But to so hold would be to write out of the statute the concluding sentence of the above-quoted paragraph, which provides that "the decision of the Court shall not be retroactive in its effect."
This question was first presented to this court in 1917, in the matter of Dejan v. Ujffy, 14 Orl. App. 230, in which the court, referring to the paragraph under consideration, said: "If the meaning of this paragraph be that the question whether the occupation is hazardous, shall at all times be a matter for Judicial Ascertainment, whether before or after a claim arises between the parties, then the concluding provision, that the decision on that head shall not be retroactive, is totally inoperative, and, of course, by every rule of interpretation we are obliged to give effect to this clause which is perfectly clear and unambiguous."
A few years later, in 1921, the same question was again presented to this court in Alexander v. Tharp-Bultman-Southeimer Co., No. 7373 of our docket (unreported) decided January 10th of that year. See Southern and Louisiana Digest. There the court approved and adopted certain language of the district judge. This court said:
"The plaintiff did not allege that, under section 3, he had agreed with the defendants, or that either he or his employer had submitted, at any time, to any competent judge, the question of whether or not his occupation was hazardous. The learned judge of the District Court was of opinion that this agreement and this submission must take place prior to the accident. He said:
"`That the agreement must be effected prior to the accident or injury for which compensation is sought is plainly required by section 3. And that the submission to the court must also precede the accident results clearly from the provision that the decision of the Court shall not be retroactive. This means that the Court's judgment as to whether or not the contract comes within the provisions of the act affects the relations of the parties in the future, and does not determine what their relations were in the past.'"
In 1929, in Smith v. Marine Oil Co.,
In 1933, in Adams v. Hicks Co., Ltd., (La.App.)
See, also, Richardson v. Crescent forwarding Transp. Co.,
The question was given most serious consideration on each of the various occasions to which we have referred, and we see no reason to adopt, at this time, a view different from that which has become so well established and which appears to be so sound.
The rehearing requested is refused.
*804Rehearing refused.