119 Wash. 21 | Wash. | 1922
— The plaintiff, Maddox, commenced
this action in the superior court for Pierce county by summons and complaint as an ordinary action, seeking a judgment directing the industrial insurance commission to reclassify his injury, received in an extra-hazardous occupation, as one of total disability, and to make him an award accordingly; his injury having theretofore been classified by the commission as one of lesser degree and he having been awarded compensation accordingly. The commission demurred to plaintiff’s complaint upon the ground, among others, of want of jurisdiction in the superior court; which demurrer was by the superior court sustained. The plaintiff. having elected to stand upon his complaint and not plead further, judgment of dismissal was aceordingly rendered against him with prejudice.
The facts determinative of appellant’s claimed rights in this action, as disclosed by his complaint, in so far as we need here notice them, are as follows: In January, 1918, appellant was injured while employed in an extra-hazardous occupation, and his injury was thereafter classified by the industrial insurance commission as one of lesser degree than total disability, upon which classification he was awarded compensation. On May 5, 1921, appellant, conceiving that the results of his injury had become so aggravated, since the original award made to him, as to entitle him to a reclassification as one totally disabled, filed with the
We tMnk it is plainly apparent that this is nothing but an effort on the part of appellant to bring into the original jurisdiction of the superior court a controversy over which that court does not have any original jurisdiction. It is plain from the provisions of our workmen’s compensation act that the original jurisdiction to determine the classification of injuries received by workmen in extra-hazardous occupations and the amount of awards to be made such injured workmen rests exclusively in the commission, and that such questions must first be decided by the commission before the courts can be resorted to looMng to the further consideration of the merits of such controversies. The manner of bringing such controversies into the superior court is by review in the nature of an appeal from the final decision of the commission, the procedure for which is very simple and clearly pointed out in § 6604-20,
Counsel for appellant complains particularly of that part of the superior court’s judgment of dismissal reciting that such dismissal is “with prejudice.” Counsel seems to fear that this will prevent further prosecution of appellant’s claim for reclassification before the commission and before the superior court upon appeal from a decision of the commission. We think such is not the result. The judgment is final and with prejudice only in the sense that appellant cannot maintain any action invoking the superior court’s original jurisdiction looking to the adjudication of his claim therein.
The judgment is affirmed.
Bridges, Fullerton, Mitchell, and Tolman, JJ., concur.
Note: See Rem. Comp Stat., § 7697.