41 P.2d 751 | Kan. | 1935
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The proceeding was one for compensation to a shot firer in the coal mine of his employer, for total and permanent disability occasioned by premature explosion of a shot. Claimant was denied awards for certain items for which he contended, by both the compensation commissioner and the district court. The compensation commissioner awarded compensation, based on weekly wages of $19.20, the sum which claimant was receiving when injured. The district court computed the weekly wages as being $21.42. The employer’s insurance carrier was joined. All parties appeal.
The accident occurred February 21, 1933. While claimant was undergoing treatment after injury, it was recommended that he should have his teeth removed. Nineteen teeth, all claimant had,
Part of claimant’s treatment after injury consisted of removal of one eye. After removal had been recommended] claimant asked a physician of claimant’s own choice to examine him, and the physician charged claimant $10 for the examination. Claimant demanded reimbursement. The employer fully performed its statutory duty to provide physicians and surgeons to cure claimant and relieve him from effects of his injury. N]o dissatisfaction with their services was manifested, and there was no basis in law for charging to the employer the fee of the physician whom the claimant voluntarily consulted. (R. S. 1931 Supp. 44-510.)
Claimant wanted an allowance of $100 for future medical treatment. The claim for compensation stated claimant had requested the employer to furnish medical attention and the employer had done so. The sum paid by the employer for hospital services, for services of physicians and surgeons and for medicines is not disclosed by the record. So far as appears, the amount may have exceeded the statutory limit. There was no showing which called for exercise of the compensation commissioner’s discretion in extreme cases (R. S. 1931 Supp. 44-510), and this court has no authority to make any order in the premises.
Claimant was awarded compensation by the compensation commissioner at the rate of $11.52 per week, or sixty per cent of the weekly wage of $19.20. The district court made a slightly larger allowance. Claimant contends he should have been awarded $18 per week. The statute under which the allowance was made was R. S. 1931 Supp. 44-511 (a), relating to continuous employment by the same employer for a year or more. Claimant invoked subdivision (6) of the same section, relating to employment for less than a year, and introduced evidence accordingly.
Claimant was employed by the coal company as a shot firer in
; The -facts which have been narrated warranted an inference claimant had been continuously employed by the coal company for more than a year, but he did not work all the time, for the unavoidable cause, the coal company was mining soft coal part, of the time. . This was the interpretation placed on the facts by the compensation commissioner and the district court. It was the function of the compensation commissioner and the district court to deal with'the evidence, and this court is. not authorized to interfere. ■ -.
The computation of weekly wages made by the compensation commissioner- took into account the wages claimant was receiving when he was injured,- but did not take into account the higher wages claimant received before he was laid off. The district court considered the higher wages, and its computation is approved.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.