289 N.Y. 254 | NY | 1942
The Industrial Board has reopened this workmen's compensation proceeding, has made a new award to claimant of $18.46 per week, based on a finding that he is totally and permanently *256 disabled, and has "rescinded in the interests of justice" a "lump sum settlement" in the amount of $3,300 which the Board had approved in 1934. This full amount of $3,300 had been paid to claimant, part in a lump sum and part at the rate of $12 per week, all as ordered by the Board in 1934, and the Board has ordered that the self-insurer have credit for this sum of $3,300 against the new award which is made retroactive to September 1, 1937. Neither the total amount of the 1934 "settlement" nor the amount or number of the weekly installments in which it was paid bear any apparent relation to claimant's wage rate before the accident, or to the actual or probable duration of his disability. In other words, the directions of the statute as to the computation of the amount to be awarded a claimant, based on previous wages and on character and extent of disability, were not complied with in the 1934 decision. The attempt was to compromise the injured worker's claim by agreement, as if he were asserting a common-law cause of action. The Appellate Division, being of the opinion that this fully-executed "settlement" is binding and entitled to enforcement by the courts, has reversed the decision whereby the Board rescinded it.
The Workmen's Compensation Laws of certain other states (see for example Revised Statutes of New Jersey, vol. 2, 1937, 34:15-40, and General Statutes of Connecticut, § 5247) contain provisions authorizing the compromise of claims under those laws. The New York State Workmen's Compensation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 67) does not so provide. Our statute does empower the Industrial Board, in certain situations, to "commute" periodical payments to one or more lump payments (§ 25). Such a commutation, however (although sometimes called a "lump sum settlement"), is not a determination of amount by agreement of the parties, but is a mathematical computation of the present value of a series of future payments, which future payments are fixed as to amount and fixed or calculable as to number or probable number. True it is that our Compensation Law does not in terms prohibit "settlements," but, in view of the obvious and well-known policy and intent of the whole statute and in view of sections 32 and 33, which forbid any waiver by a claimant of his right to compensation or any release by him of benefits due, such an express prohibition of "settlements" *257 was probably thought by the drafters to be unnecessary. We hold that there can be no valid compromise of the amounts due a claimant under this law.
Even in the states which permit "voluntary agreements" compromising workingmen's compensation claims, little finality is accorded to such treaties though approved by the official or body administering the law. The Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors recently held (Sugrue v. Champion,
Procedural questions also are raised here by the self-insuring employer as to the power of the Industrial Board to reopen, in 1940, the 1934 "settlement." The employer asserts that there was no proof before the Board in 1940 of "a change in condition" of the claimant (see Workmen's Compensation Law, §
The award here appealed from was properly made payable by the self-insurer and not by the "Special Fund for Reopened Cases" described in section 25-a of the act. That section, as applied to the facts here, authorizes an award against the fund only when the proceedings are reopened more than three years after "the date to which the amount paid in the lump sum settlement would extend if the award had been made on the date the lump sum payment was approved at the maximum compensation rate which is warranted by the employee's earning capacity." It can readily be demonstrated mathematically that the date to which the amount of the 1934 "settlement" here would carry periodical payments at the maximum rate applicable to claimant is within three years of the date when these proceedings were reopened in 1940.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the decision and award of the State Industrial Board affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division. (See
LEHMAN, Ch. J., LOUGHRAN, FINCH, RIPPEY, LEWIS and CONWAY, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *259