233 Mass. 485 | Mass. | 1919
Before November 2, 1916, the London Guarantee and Accident Company, Limited, issued to one T. Owen Tully a policy of insurance under the workmen’s compensation act to cover a period from January 3, 1916, to January 3, 1917. On November 2, 1916, William E. Sterling, the deceased husband of Rena E. Sterling, and William L. Sterling, the deceased husband of Maud M. Sterling, employees of the said T. Owen Tully, a carpenter contractor, in the course of their employment while engaged in installing shifting boards on the steamship Devonian while the steamship was lying at the wharf in Boston Harbor, at Boston, upon navigable water, came to their deaths through exposure to fumigating gas used on the steamship for the purpose of exterminating rats and vermin before the loading of the ship.
At some time before March 21, 1917, the insurance company and the two widows came to an agreement by which the insurance company agreed to pay to each “$10 weekly for a period of four hundred weeks,” beginning with November 2, 1916. In accord
On October 1, 1917, the insurance company filed petitions and amended petitions in each case to vacate the decrees; it,also filed motions in each case to vacate the decrees. These petitions and motions after hearing were severally denied on March 16 and April 18, 1918, and the insurance company in each case severally appealed. It is plain that the petitions and motions to vacate the decrees were denied rightly. The procedure under the compensation act is governed by the practice in equity. Gould’s Case, 215 Mass. 480. The right first created by St. 1875, c. 33, now B. L. c. 193, §§ 15-19, to have final judgments in civil actions reviewed and vacated in practice is limited to proceedings in courts of law under the forms of the common law as distinguished from suits in equity and criminal prosecutions.
On May 2, 1918, the insurance company filed a petition in each case with the Industrial Accident Board, in which it prayed “that the agreement entered into by the insurer with the widow of the deceased employee be modified and annulled and that the insurer
“The Industrial Accident Board is not a court of general or limited common law jurisdiction; ... it is purely and solely an administrative tribunal, specifically created to administer the workmen’s compensation act in aid and with the assistance of the Superior Court. . . . [It] possesses only such authority and powers as have been conferred upon it by express grant or arise therefrom by implication as necessary and incidental to the full exercise of the granted powers.” Levangie’s Case, 228 Mass. 213, 216. The agreement between the insurance company and the widows was an undertaking to pay compensation under the act. It was not an admission of any common law or statutory liability under a claim for damages resulting to the claimants because of the conscious pain, suffering and death of their husbands, the employees, and the amount agreed to be paid was not an adjustment settlement or compromise of an admitted or disputed claim for damages grounded on causes of action outside the scope of the compensation act. The jurisdiction of the Industrial Accident Board under Part III, § 4, to approve agreements regarding compensation, and the jurisdiction of the Superior Court under Part III, § 11, to “render a decree in accordance” with the agreement “approved by the Industrial Accident Board,” necessarily rest upon an assumption and the fact that the agreement concerns a compensation for injuries sustained by an employee protected by the act, and then only when the terms of the agreement "con
On September 6, 1918, the insurance company filed petitions for leave to file a bill of review in each case. These petitions were allowed and.bills of review were filed on September -13, 1918. On October 16, 1918, decrees were entered dismissing the bills of review, and the petitioner appealed.
The fact that the injuries to which the agreements of compensation relate were maritime in their nature and hence not within the scope of the workmen’s compensation act under the Jensen decision, supra, was apparent on the record when presented to the Superior Court, and also when “in accordance to said agreement” on September 5, 1917, the Superior Court “decreed that the said . . . insurer . . . pay . . . ten dollars weekly for a period of four hundred weeks from November 2nd, 1916.” In the opinion of a majority of the court it follows that the decree of September 5, 1917, was void for want of jurisdiction and must be vacated for error on the face of the decree. Clapp v. Thaxter, 7 Gray, 384, 386. Sawyer v. Davis, 136 Mass. 239, 247.
On September 6, 1918, the insurance company brought bills in
Decrees accordingly.