The Superior Court has reserved this case for our opinion under what is now General Statutes § 31-324. In a pro forma ruling, the workmen’s compensation commissioner for the second *155 district determined that the plaintiff is not entitled to receive payment of an award of compensation from the second injury and compensation assurance fund, created by 1959 Public Act No. 580, § 12, because his injury antedated the effective date of the act, though the award of compensation for the injury was made after that date. 1 The parties have stipulated the facts.
The plaintiff, on July 1, 1959, sustained an injury to his right eye in the course of and arising out of his employment by the named defendant. The injury totally incapacitated him until September 2, 1959. Maximum improvement following the injury was reached on September 3. On January 15, 1960, the commissioner awarded the plaintiff compensation for temporary total incapacity, reimbursement for medical expenses, and specific compensation for loss of vision in the right eye. The award for specific compensation was commuted by the commissioner on February 5, 1960, to a lump sum. After the defendant employer was credited with certain partial payments which he had made to the plaintiff, the balance of the lump sum award plus medical expense reimbursement was $7682.90. On the date of the plaintiff’s injury, his employer had not secured payment of workmen’s compensation to his employees, as required by law. The plaintiff, on default in the payment of the award, obtained an execution, but it was returned unsatisfied on May 31, 1960. The plaintiff then applied to the commis *156 sioner for an order directing payment of the award by the state treasurer from the second injury and compensation assurance fund. The commissioner denied the application, pro forma, on the ground stated above.
Prior to the enactment of No. 580 of the 1959 Public Acts, there existed a fund, known as the second injury fund, which had been set up to pay compensation for permanent total incapacity resulting from a second injury to an employee who had previously been permanently partially incapacitated. General Statutes §§ 31-216—31-221 (now, as amended, §§31-349—31-354). By §12 of Public Act No. 580 (now, as amended, General Statutes § 31-354), the title of the fund was changed to “second injury and compensation assurance fund.” Section 13 of the act provided: “When an award of compensation shall have been made under the provisions of chapter 566 of the general statutes [the Workmen’s Compensation Act] against an employer who has failed to comply with the provisions of said chapter or who is insolvent or whose insurer is insolvent, such payments shall be made and such compensation provided from the second injury and compensation assurance fund established in section 12.” Section 13, as amended, is now § 31-355 of the General Statutes.
The answer to the question reserved is to be found in the legislative intent as expressed in the phrase “[w]hen an award of compensation shall have been made.” See
Smith
v.
State,
We answer the question in the reservation in the affirmative.
No costs will be taxed in this court to any party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Tie question of law involved in this matter is: Where the injury complained of occurred prior to October 1, 1959, the effective date of No. 580 of the 1959 Public Acts, and the award in favor of the injured employee was made subsequent to that date, may the provisions of § 13 of the act (now, as amended, 5 31-355 of the General Statutes) be applied to the award so as to require the state treasurer to pay it?
