Lead Opinion
Both cases entail appeals from decisions of the compensation review division affirming actions by the workers’ compensation commissioner for the third district in denying the defendant employer’s motions to correct the findings by opening and modifying the judgments rendered on the basis of stipulations by the parties.
The plaintiff Pauline D. Cuccuro is the dependent widow of Anthony Cuccuro who, as a member of the West Haven police department, suffered a heart attack on September 21, 1971. He was retired on August 2, 1972, and died on January 23, 1977. A notice of claim for benefits under General Statutes § 7-433c was filed on May 18,1976, with the commissioner. A stipulation was filed on June 13,1979, and benefits were awarded on July 10,1979. On July 22,1980, the defendant filed a motion to correct the finding and open and modify the award.
The plaintiff George Spragg was a member of the West Haven police department and suffered a heart condition on January 2,1973. A notice of claim was submitted on June 14,1974. A stipulation was filed on September 14, 1978, pursuant to which benefits were awarded on October 20, 1978.
The issue on appeal is whether the stipulations by the parties which recited that the notices of claim were filed more than a year after the injuries were suffered deprived the commissioner of jurisdiction to render the awards.
“The procedure for determining recovery under [General Statutes] § 7-433c is the same as that outlined in chapter 568 [the Workers’ Compensation Act], presumably because ‘the legislature saw fit to limit the “procedural avenue” for bringing claims under § 7-433c to that already existing under chapter 568 rather than require the duplication of the administrative machinery available . . . and further burden the courts and the municipalities . . . .’ Plainville v. Travelers Indemnity Co. [
Neither the commissioner nor the review division found that a notice of claim was filed within the statutory period of one year. Section 31-294 of the General Statutes, however, contains an exception to the one year notice requirement: “[I]f within the applicable period an employee has been furnished, for the injury with respect to which compensation is claimed, with medical or surgical care as hereafter provided in this section, no want of such notice of claim shall be a bar to the maintenance of proceedings . . . .”
The defendant has not established that it did not furnish medical care to the plaintiffs. That alternative method of notice could have conferred jurisdiction on the commissioner to render the awards challenged here. When jurisdiction is possible, and the court has taken jurisdiction over a cause, every presumption supports the judgment which it renders. Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Costle,
On the basis of the exceptions to the statutory notice requirements, the commissioner had jurisdiction to render the awards to the plaintiffs.
There is no error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I concur in the majority’s disclosure of the material facts. I also agree with its conclusion that the one year written notice required by General Statutes § 31-294, a condition precedent for benefits to be payable to the plaintiffs under General Statutes § 7-433c, is jurisdictional in nature and cannot be waived or conferred by stipulation. Walsh v. A. Waldron & Sons,
There is no factual basis for finding compliance with § 31-294. Neither the facts stipulated by the parties for compensation in these cases,
The basis for the majority’s assumption of the commissioner’s jurisdiction is the indulgence of every presumption which favors the jurisdiction of the court. Tuccio v. Zehrung,
The notice requirement of § 31-294 of the Workers’ Compensation Act is a limitation upon the right to compensation benefits and must be strictly complied with. Walsh v. A. Waldron & Sons, supra.
For the foregoing reasons, I dissent.
Notes
It should be noted that neither of the stipulations for compensation between the respective plaintiffs and the defendant approved by the commissioner was entered into or adopted by the defendant’s insurance carriers. Since they did not appear in the compensation proceedings, they are not parties to these appeals.
