267 N.W. 790 | Mich. | 1936
Plaintiff on August 29, 1928, while employed by the Otis Elevator Company in Detroit, sustained compensable injuries. By an agreement filed with and approved by the department, the defendant insurance company agreed to pay him $18 per week, the maximum rate, unless the amount was changed by supplemental agreement approved by the department or by an award. On the 23d of May, 1933, plaintiff filed a petition for a lump sum payment. He set forth that he required $1,500 in his *76 chemical manufacturing business, a successful venture, for raw materials, labels, printing and advertising and an automobile to aid in distribution.
He further represented that all sums were to be used for business purposes and only under supervision; that the lump sum was petitioned for "In accordance with the terms of section 22, * * * part 2 of the workmen's compensation act, reading as follows: 'Whenever any weekly payment has been continued for not less than six months, the liability therefor may be redeemed by the payment of a lump sum by agreement of the parties subject to the approval of the industrial accident board,'* and under no other conditions whatsoever, petitioner agrees to forego, waive or release, any or all future claims to further compensation."
He prayed that the department authorize a lump sum payment of $1,500. Defendant insurer indorsed on the petition a statement that it was "not adverse to making payment of compensation in the form prayed for in the above petition under the first provision of section 22, * * * of part 2 as quoted." An order was entered by the department on June 16, 1933, authorizing the payment of the "balance of the compensation due herein in a lump sum of $1,500 in accordance with part 2, § 22, of the workmen's compensation law and as prayed for in said petition." Thereafter, plaintiff, on a form furnished by the department, signed a settlement receipt which stated at its very beginning:
"This receipt means a final settlement. Do not sign it unless you intend to end payments of compensation and close the case." *77
The receipt acknowledged the payment of $1,500 and that the aggregate of payments totaled $6,000. Contemporaneously with the filing of the petition, an agreement was also filed fixing the compensation at $5.906 for 254 weeks, but as defendant was relieved from any further payment by virtue of the lump sum settlement, we need not consider the effect of this agreement.
On January 21, 1935, plaintiff filed a petition stating that he had received $18 per week from August 29, 1928, to May 22, 1933; that he had been disabled since May 22, 1933, and that he received a lump sum "advance" for $1,500 on or about May 22, 1933. He asked that he be granted full compensation. The deputy commissioner made an award denying such further compensation, but upon application for review, the department granted plaintiff compensation for total disability at the rate of $18 per week from and after May 22, 1933, subject to a credit of $1,500 paid in accordance with the terms of the order of the department.
Plaintiff claims that the payment of $1,500 was simply an advance of payments under a direction for deferred payments in accordance with the second part of section 22 (2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 8438). Counsel for plaintiff calls attention to the cases of Norbut v. I. Stephenson Co.,
The award is vacated.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, BUSHNELL, EDWARD M. SHARPE, and TOY, JJ., concurred. POTTER, J., took no part in this decision.