This is an appeal on questions of law from an order of the Eoss County Common Pleas
The petition alleges, in substance, that appellant, on July 29, 1966 while working for appellee brushed his hand against a live 2300 volt wire on a breaker control panel and that as a result he suffered injuries. He filed a claim for compensation claiming injuries described as “electrical shock and injury of the left arm and hand, left shoulder, cervical spine, and neuritis.”
The Deputy Administrator, on August 26, 1968, entered the following order:
“It is ordered that the claim be allowed for an injury described as electric shock to left arm with electric burns on left hand and left shoulder; that related medical bills be paid.
The Administrator finds that claimant did not sustain osteophytic spurs on the cervical spine as the direct and proximate result of the injury in this claim.”
An application for reconsideration was filed and denied. On appeal to the Board of Review, the order was affirmed and an appeal to the Industrial Commission denied.
The pivotal question in this appeal is whether the administrative order was a determination as to the extent of disability.
R. C. 4123.519 provides in part:
“The claimant or the employer may appeal a decision of the Industrial Commission in any injury case, other than a decision as to the extent of disability, to the Court of Common Pleas * * *
i i # * #
‘ ‘ * * * The court, or the jury under the instructions of the court, if a jury is demanded, shall determine the right of the claimant to participate or to continue to participate in the fund upon the evidence adduced at the hearing of such action.” (Emphasis added,)
“(C) ‘Injury’ includes any injury, whether caused by external accidental means or accidental in character and result, received in the course of, and arising out of, the injured employee’s employment.”
If a claimed injury falls within the definition, the amount of compensation, aside from medical expenses, is dependent upon the degree of disability proximately caused by the allowed injury. “Disability,” broadly interpreted, means, in essence, the incapacity to work by reason of the injury. See
Cleveland Provision Co.
v.
Hunter,
It must, also, be borne in mind that a workmen’s compensation claim may properly consist of more than one claimed physical injury with disability arising from each such injury. Even if a described injury claim is allowed from an industrial accident, the fact that an additional and separate injury is not then claimed from the accident does not bar a participation upon the separate injury at a later date since it was intended to compensate for
all
injuries and ensuing disabilities arising from the accident. This is clearly the reasoning of the Ohio Supreme Court in
Kittle
v.
Keller,
The order here under consideration allowed certain claimed injuries, but denied the right to compensation for the back injury by a finding that “the claimant did not sustain osteophytic spurs on the cervical spine as the direct
The Ohio Supreme Court has provided guidelines as to Avhat is meant by ‘ ‘ other than a decision as to the extent of disability.” In
State, ex rel. Mansour,
v.
Indus. Comm.,
“In Carpenter v. Scanlon,168 Ohio St. 139 , it was argued that a finding that ‘the arthritic condition is not related to (the) injury’ was not appealable under Section 4123.519. The court stated:
“ ‘The finding of the administrator that “the claimant’s generalized arthritic involvement is not related to or the result of the injury in this claim, and, therefore, payment of compensation or for medical services for the treatment of said condition is not authorized,” is clearly not “a decision as to the extent of disability” but rather a finding that the arthritic condition of claimant was not a disability resulting from the injury — an absolute denial of the claim on a jurisdictional ground going to the basis of claimant’s right. From such a decision an appeal is authorized by the above-quoted promsion of the Code.’ (Emphasis supplied.)
“The emphasized language provides another guideline for identification of the scope of the ‘extent of disability’ as used in the statute, i. e., a denial that is absolute going to the basis of claimant’s right. If this kind of a denial has not been made by the Industrial Commission, it follows that the appeal would be unavailable.”
The concept of a denial upon a “jurisdictional ground”
“* * * If such denial is made because the Commission has determined the extent of disability, and has awarded compensation to cover such disability, then the action of the Commission is final. But if the denial is made for the reason that the Commission has or had no jurisdiction, and therefore no authority, then the claimant is entitled to an appeal.
“Much of the confusion occurs because the finding denying jurisdiction and authority to make an award is itself denied by the fact that a former award had been made. An analysis of the facts, however, will frequently disclose that the Commission erroneously assumed jurisdiction in the first instance, or that, while the first finding may have been properly made, the subsequent denial of the right to continue to receive compensation may he due to the fact that the claim for further compensation is based upon facts beyond the jurisdiction and authority of the Commission; for example, that the claimant’s condition is not attributable to an industrial accident, or was not the result of the injury sustained, or that the injury which is the basis of the claim for further compensation did not arise in the course of employment, or occurred beyond the jurisdiction of the state under a contract of employment not made in the state # * V’
We have no hesitation in holding that the claim for the back condition herein was denied upon a jurisdictional ground going to the basis of claimant’s right to participate. On the face of the order, it was denied because of the administrator’s determination that the condition “was not a direct and proximate result of the injury.” Because the claim was denied on this basis, jurisdiction, insofar as
Even assuming such medical finding by the Administrator to be before the court below, it would still not preclude an appeal. The claimant still asserts he has a back condition proximately resulting from the accident and other recognized injuries. The entry of an order of denial of compensation upon the ground that the claimant has no injury as a proximate result of the accident is not equivalent to a determination that the claimant has a disability in a xero per cent. Rather, it is a rejection on a jurisdictional ground and even when the word “disability” is used instead of “injury” it is still an appealable order. This is precisely the holding of the Ohio Supreme Court in
Keels
v.
Chapin & Chapin,
“A determination by the Industrial Commission that a claimant did not sustain any disability as a result of an accidental occurrence arising out of and in the course of his employment does not constitute a decision as to the extent of disability within the meaning of Section 4123.519 (4123.51.9), Revised Code. (Carpenter v. Scanlon, Admr.,168 Ohio St. 139 , 5 O. O. 2d 386, followed.) ”
Judgment reversed.
