Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
We are construing the Workers’ Compensation Act and the legislature has mandated that it be given a liberal construction. This makes it different from the cases relied on by the majority as controlling authority in this case, which involve the Rules of Civil Procedure. As set out in the majority opinion, Article 8307, sec. 5b of the Workers’ Compensation Act is controlling here. Cases construing the Rules of Civil Procedure would be analogous except for the fact that in construing Section 5b we
I quote from the concurring opinion of Judge Gammage in Zidell v. NHP Real Estate Company,
The arbitrary and rigid application of rules in a manner which ignores logic can only serve to confirm in the minds of those laymen and lawyers what is already believed, or at best strongly suspected, by many—that the law bears little relationship to reason or reality. Such practices in an earlier day motivated Charles Dickens (and could well motivate others in our time) to comment through a frustrated Mr. Bumble: “If the law supposes that, ... the law is a ass—a idiot_ [A]nd the worst I wish the law is, that his eye may be opened by experience—by experience.” Dickens, Oliver Twist, in Three Novels (Hamlyn, 1977), at 356.
I am not sure that the summary judgment proof in the case before us supports the majority position. A valid order of the Commissioners Court of El Paso County, declaring July 5 a holiday, was presented on behalf of the workman. An order of a commissioners court, in a proceeding in which it has jurisdiction, is in effect a judgment having all the incidents and properties attached to a similar judgment pronounced by any regular court. Busch and Company v. Caufield,
It is held that the legislature has enumerated the legal holidays as they apply to judicial proceedings. Article 4591, Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. (Vernon Supp.1983); Zidell v. NHP Real Estate Company, supra. But the Appellant here is caught between an act of the legislature giving him a claim for injuries and the valid act of the commissioners court preventing him from pursuing that claim. His only relief can come from the courts. It is not a liberal construction of Section 5b when the courts deprive an injured workman of his day in court on a distinction between a state declared holiday and a county declared holiday.
In two fairly recent cases, the Supreme Court has relaxed the twenty-day rule. Ward v. Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co.,
I would reverse the summary judgment.
Lead Opinion
OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment dismissing Appellant’s attempted appeal from an award of the Industrial Accident Board because the petition was not filed within twenty days as required by Article 8307, sec. 5, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. We affirm.
The facts are undisputed. The Industrial Accident Board rendered its final award on May 27, 1982. Appellant timely filed his notice of intention to appeal on June 14. He had twenty days within which to bring suit. Article 8307, sec. 5, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. The twentieth day for filing suit was Sunday, July 4. Article 4591, Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat.Ann., declares the 4th day of July as a legal holiday. Article 8307, sec. 5b, Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., provides that “in computing the twenty (20) days to institute a suit to set aside the final ruling of said Board, if the last day is a legal holiday or is Sunday, then, and in such case, such last day shall not be counted, and the time shall be and the same is hereby extended so as to include the next succeeding business day; * * The record contains an affidavit of the District Clerk that by a proclamation passed by the El Paso County Commissioners Court, July 5, 1982, was a holiday for all county employees and the office of the District Clerk was closed on that date. Appellant’s petition appealing the award of the Industrial Accident Board was filed on July 6.
By three points of error, the Appellant complains of the trial court’s determination that his appeal was not timely filed and the court’s dismissal of the suit.
Only the days designated in Article 4591, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., are legal holidays. Smith v. Harris County-Houston Ship Channel Navigation District,
The twenty-day period for filing a petition to set aside an award of the Industrial Accident Board is mandatory and jurisdictional. A failure to file within the statutory period leaves the trial court without jurisdiction over the case. Standard Fire Insurance Company v. LaCoke,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
