299 N.Y. 399 | NY | 1949
Broadly, the question presented on this appeal by permission, is whether the tolling of limitations of time for suit by or against any person in military service (Military Law, §§
The claimant, Bellini, sustained accidental injuries November 1, 1938, while working as a plasterer's helper in the course of work on a house being built by Architectural Home Corp. as owner. Its carrier, the appellant here, paid compensation to claimant for the period from November 1, 1938, to February 6, 1939, when payments were discontinued, it being claimed that Anthony Castro, an independent contractor, was the employer. On May 11, 1939, Castro, on controverted proof, was found to be the employer and the case continued leading to an award of 65% permanent loss of use of left foot, a schedule loss (Workmen's Compensation Law, § 15, subd. 3.) The case was closed January 19, 1941. While the compensation claim was pending against Castro, who was uninsured and could not pay the award, a third party suit was brought by claimant against Architecutral Home Corp. This was voluntarily discontinued January 9, 1941. The compensation award against Castro was under review and was confirmed June 10, 1941. Castro's appeal to the Appellate Division from the award under date of January 11, 1940, was later dismissed on January 10, 1946, for failure to prosecute. Architectural Home Corp. and its carrier, Great American Indemnity Company, were not parties. Castro was inducted into the Army of the United States, January 22, 1941, and continued therein until his honorable discharge December 10, 1944. Thereafter on the date of March 14, 1946, he made application to have the compensation case reopened on the ground of newly discovered evidence showing he was not the employer. The claimant, Bellini, also applied to reopen, claiming additional compensation for protracted healing period. When the application to reopen was granted August 9, 1946, the Special Fund for Reopened Cases was put on notice because there had been "a lapse of seven years from the date of the injury * * * and * * * three years from the date of the last payment of compensation" (Workmen's Compensation Law, §
The Great American Indemnity Company as carrier of Architectural Home Corp. then took an appeal from such determination which has been affirmed by the Appellate Division (Third Department). The failure of the employer to join in such appeal in no way prejudices the rights of the carrier as an appellant (Workmen's Compensation Law, §§ 23, 54, subd. 2;Matter of Jaabeck v. Crane's Sons Co.,
"§ 308. STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS; TIME OF MILITARY SERVICE NOT INCLUDED. The period of military service shall not be included in computing any period now or hereafter to be limited by any law for the bringing of any action by or against any person inmilitary service". (Emphasis supplied.)
This plain language clearly indicates an intention to confine its limitation for the bringing of suits "by or against any person in military service" to the person actually in the armed services. It is personal in nature and cannot be extended to relieve or protect a third person from the operation of the limiting statute (Stutz v. Guardian Cab Corp.,
Castro as a plaintiff, or a person bringing suit against him as a defendant, may claim the protection and benefit of its *404
provisions. Such is not the situation here. The special fund is a third party and cannot qualify. Nor may the special fund be relieved on the theory that the claimant is prejudiced because an award against it "shall not be retroactive for a period of disability * * * longer than the two years immediately preceding the date of filing" of the application to reopen (Workmen's Compensation Law, §
It cannot be said that claimant is prejudiced in any event but assuming arguendo, that the retroactive time limitation is applicable on either phase of the case, the prejudice resulting to the claimant cannot serve to create a liability against the carrier in whose favor the Statute of Limitations has run and which it has not waived or forfeited by subsequent conduct. No such waiver of the statute or acknowledgment of liability has been established here. For more than six years prior to the reopening and for more than seven years after the accident, the carrier was lulled into security by the repeated rulings and decisions of the board that its insured was not the true employer. The circumstance that the claimant made his claim against *405
Castro, a person in the military service, does not change the situation so far as this appellant is concerned if reliance thereon depended upon the ruling of the board in the premises. The case of Matter of Sturesky v. Straussman (
The further contention of the board that the statutory time limitation of section 25-a should be diminished by the time during which Castro's appeal was pending is without merit (§§ 25-a, subd. 8; 23). Neither the employer, Architectural Home Corp., nor its carrier, Great American Indemnity Company, the appellant herein, were parties to the Castro appeal nor were they concerned with it. They had been excused and released from liability by the ruling that Castro was the employer. Under these circumstances the carrier may not now be penalized by a reversal by the board of its previous ruling on the merits after the running of the statutory time limit. The statute, in clear and understandable language, releases a carrier from continuing liability after a lapse of seven years (Workmen's Compensation Law, §§ 25-a, 123). The statute also provides that pendency of an appeal has the effect of diminishing the statutory period for reopening of claims but nowhere does it provide that the time an appeal is pending extends to the merits of the issue, so as to create liability not otherwise existing.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, the award annulled, and the matter remitted to the Workmen's Compensation Board in accordance with the opinion herein, with costs to the appellant against the Workmen's Compensation Board.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, CONWAY, DESMOND, FULD and BROMLEY, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *406