163 S.E. 62 | W. Va. | 1932
Petitioner seeks to invoke prohibition against payment, by the compensation commissioner, of an award, dated January 8, 1932, to John New, claiming in support of the writ that the *640 commissioner's jurisdiction over the claim had long since expired, by virtue of the limitation set out in section 40, chapter 71, Acts 1929.
Claimant was injured in 1925; an award of 45% disability was entered in 1927, payments expiring thereunder May 20, 1929; an additional award of 5% was entered on October 3, 1929, expiring October 7, 1929; in February, 1931, claimant was sent before a doctor for an X-ray of his pelvis; after a prolonged hearing, held on objection by petitioner herein to a proposed additional award of 25%, an award of 5% (payment of which is now sought to be prohibited) was made.
Section 40 of the original compensation statute, chapter 9, Acts 1915 (Code 1923, chap. 15-P, sec. 40), provided that: "The power and jurisdiction of the commissioner over each case shall be continuing, and he may from time to time, after due notice to the employer, make such modifications or change with respect to former findings or orders with respect thereto as in his opinion may be justified." That section was in full force and vigor at the time of claimant's injury. However, by section 40, chapter 71, Acts 1929 (redrafted slightly for clarity in Code 1931,
Does the above proviso apply to claims arising from injuries sustained prior to its enactment? The commissioner and claimant both contend that it does not, while petitioner herein answers that it does in cases like the instant one. The petitioner and respondents each rely in a measure on Jenkins v. Commissioner,
It is clear that the limitation attaches to all rights accruing after its enactment, but can we say that it attaches in any manner to the rights already accrued? The commissioner had continuing jurisdiction in all cases arising prior to its enactment. Higgins v. Coal Company,
As we read the Jenkins case, it does not purport to limit claims arising under the old act at all, but leaves the commissioner's jurisdiction as continuing under the former act in all cases of injury arising prior to the amendment. Bonner
v. Commissioner,
Writ denied.