508 N.E.2d 181 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1986
Plaintiff, Roy D. Bush, appeals from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas and raises two assignments of error as follows:
"1. The trial court erred in granting the defendant-appellee's motion for summary judgment because material issues of fact remained to be litigated concerning the facts and circumstances of the claimant's injury.
"2. The trial court erred as a matter of law in granting the defendant-appellee's motion for summary judgment since Ohio Revised Code §
Plaintiff filed an application on September 9, 1983 for workers' compensation benefits with respect to an alleged injury sustained during the course of his employment with defendant Dresser Industries, Inc., a self-insured employer, more than five years earlier on April 26, 1978. The Industrial Commission denied the application for the reason that it was barred by application of R.C.
"In all cases of injury or death, claims for compensation or benefits for the specific part or parts of the body injured shall be forever barred unless, within two years after the injury or death:
"(1) Written notice of the specific part or parts of the body claimed to have been injured has been made to the industrial commission or the bureau of workmen's compensation;
"(2) In the event the employer has elected to pay compensation or benefits directly, one of the following has occurred:
"(a) Written notice of the specific part or parts of the body claimed to have been injured has been given to the commission or bureau;
"(b) Compensation or benefits have been paid or furnished equal to or greater than is provided for in sections
By his first assignment of error, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in construing the evidence as demonstrating that he does not have a compensable injury, specifically objecting to language in the decision of the trial court that "there is no showing of compensable injury of plaintiff attributable to an industrial injury caused by either faulty safety shoes or by heavy objects falling on plaintiff's feet." While we would agree with plaintiff that a question of fact may exist as to whether he has sustained a compensable injury if application had been timely filed therefor, the basic issue before us (and the only issue determined by respondent Industrial Commission) is whether plaintiff's claim is barred by application of R.C.
Plaintiff concedes that he gave no written notice of a claimed industrial injury until he filed his application on September 9, 1983, more than five years after the date of the alleged injury. He contends, however, that one of the tolling provisions of R.C.
Accordingly, the issue before us is whether the payment of insurance benefits pursuant to the nonoccupational accident and sickness policy constituted payment of benefits within the contemplation of R.C.
Construing the evidence most strongly in favor of plaintiff, reasonable minds could only conclude that no compensation or benefits as defined by R.C.
Since no written notice of the parts of the body claimed to have been injured has been given, and no compensation or benefits have been paid within two years after the alleged injury, plaintiff's application filed more than five years after the alleged injury is barred by application of R.C.
For the foregoing reasons, both assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
TYACK and SPAHR, JJ., concur.
SPAHR, J., of the Licking County Court of Common Pleas, sitting by assignment in the Tenth Appellate District.
"(2) The employer, with knowledge of a claimed compensable injury or occupational disease, has paid wages in lieu of compensation for total disability[.]"
Also, the following was added to the end of former R.C.
"* * * or the employer has furnished treatment by a licensed physician in the employ of an employer; providing, however, that the furnishing of such treatment shall not constitute a recognition of a claim as compensable, but shall do no more than satisfy the requirements of this section[.]"