118 A. 922 | Conn. | 1922
The plaintiff appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court vacating the award of the Commissioner, "that the payments of compensation for seventy-three weeks, beginning March 19, 1921, be commuted into a lump sum of $1,003.23, to be paid forthwith," etc. The essential facts surrounding the injury and the award made by the Commissioner, as detailed by him, are these: The plaintiff has suffered a total present loss of the use of the injured foot at the ankle, but that loss will not be permanent. It is impossible now (March 15th, 1921) to determine the duration and degree of the future partial loss. The foot will improve to some extent, and it is probable that at a period of from six months to a year and a half hence, there will be reached a permanent condition of the foot resulting in a partial loss of the foot to a substantial degree, but whose extent cannot now (March 15th, 1921) be determined. The improvement in the foot will be due partly to the curative processes of nature, and partly to the effect of treatment. The plaintiff is in apparent good health, and except in the unlikely event of his death, is certain to be entitled *235 to compensation in some form or other for a period of more than one hundred weeks. The Commissioner finds that it is just and necessary that there should be a commutation to the extent of $1,000. The award confirmed the voluntary agreement for compensation for a total incapacity, and denied defendant's motion for a determination of the proportionate loss of the use of the foot at the ankle, without prejudice to the right to renew the motion at the termination of the period of total incapacity. And the Commissioner further adjudged that the payments of compensation for seventy-three weeks, beginning March 19th, 1921, be commuted into a lump sum.
The single error assigned is that the Commissioner, upon a finding that "except in the unlikely event of his death, the plaintiff is certain to be entitled to compensation in some form or other for a period of more than one hundred weeks," could not commute compensation for a less number of weeks, or seventy-three weeks, into a lump sum to be paid forthwith. The authority of the Commissioner, at the date of this award, to approve or direct the commutation of weekly compensations, is found in General Statutes, § 5367. We interpreted this section in Anderson v.Lynch,
In another paragraph the Commissioner finds: "Except in the unlikely event of his death, he is certain to be entitled to compensation in some form or other for a period of more than one hundred weeks." We presume that this means that the period of total incapacity, antecedent to the time when the proportionate loss of use can be determined, will be one hundred weeks. This finding conflicts with the finding to which we have referred, which fixes the duration of total incapacity at a minimum of six months and a *238
maximum of one and a half years, and it is this finding which represents the true situation as the Commissioner viewed the facts. The other facts of the finding lend support to this conclusion. The commutation of compensation which the Commissioner made was for seventy-three weeks, and exceeds the fixed period of incapacity of six months, as found by him, and hence was beyond his power to make, as the trial court correctly held. When the Commissioner made his award the opinion in the case of Anderson v. Lynch,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.