3 P.2d 6 | Cal. | 1931
On rehearing we are satisfied with and reassert the views expressed in our former opinion filed December 27, 1930, except as to one point. On the question of the jurisdiction of the Industrial Accident Commission, after the two hundred and forty-five weeks of continuing jurisdiction had expired, to make the award of "further medical and hospital treatment as (the injured employee) may reasonably need from time to time", we have reached a different conclusion, as will presently be made to appear, from that first announced. As to all other matters, we adopt our former opinion, viz.:
"Jack J. Coen, a minor, suffered a fracture of the skull on July 16, 1924, while acting within the scope and course of his employment as a messenger for petitioner, the Postal Telegraph Cable Company. Three months later he returned *546 to his employment, and continued therein until June 1, 1926, receiving full wages during all of this period. On the latter date he left the employ of petitioner and engaged in other work. Application for adjustment of claim against petitioner was filed April 29, 1927, and the respondent Commission, after hearing, found that temporary total disability had been caused from July 16, 1924, the date of the injury, to September 21, 1924, and from April 28, 1927, continuing indefinitely thereafter. Based on this finding, an award of $8.55 a week was made in accordance with the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act (Stats. 1917, p. 831, and amendments thereto). Subsequently, and on March 7, 1929, pursuant to further petitions and hearings, the Commission filed its amended findings and award, whereby it was determined, upon competent evidence, that the injury had resulted in the mental derangement of the applicant causing permanent disability, the percentage being 100. The applicant was awarded $20.83 a week for 240 weeks, beginning July 24, 1924, which was eight days after the date of the accident, as required by section 9 (b) of the act (as amended by Stats. 1919, p. 914, § 4), and a pension thereafter at the rate of $12.82 a week for the remainder of his life. Credit was allowed for all payments theretofore made as disability compensation and attorney's fees, but was refused as to all payments of wages subsequent to the injury. The Commission filed its second amended findings and award on June 28, 1929, the amendments relating only to attorney's fees and to provisions for further medical and hospital treatment.
"The employer, being self-insured, seeks to have the award annulled and set aside, contending that credit should have been allowed to it for all wages paid to the applicant upon his return to work subsequent to the injury. Reference is made to section 21 of article XX of the Constitution and to section 1 of the Workmen's Compensation Act, supra, wherein it is provided that `A complete system of workmen's compensation includes adequate provision . . . to the extent of relieving from the consequences of any injury or death incurred or sustained by workmen in the course of their employment.' Petitioner asserts that this language precludes the employee `from the benefit of an award for 240 weeks following July 24, 1924, as during such period was included *547 a period from September 22d 1924, until April of 1927, during which no consequences of the injury were sustained by the respondent Coen'. [1] Concisely stated, the question confronting us is this: Is an employer entitled to credit against an award of compensation for wages earned by and paid to an employee subsequent to an industrial accident, which accident eventually leaves the employee permanently and totally disabled?
[2] "Section 9 (b) of the Workmen's Compensation Act provides that an injury to the brain resulting in incurable imbecility or insanity is conclusively presumed to be permanent and total in character for which the compensation shall be `sixty-five per cent of the average weekly earnings for a period of two hundred forty weeks and thereafter forty per cent of such weekly earnings during the remainder of life'. The award in the present case was computed on this basis, and is, therefore, in strict accord with the letter of the statute.
"In our opinion it was not error for the respondent Commission to refuse to credit the employer with payment of wages made to the employee for services performed subsequent to the date of the injury. [3] These payments were not made as disability compensation and were not intended as gratuities, but represented money earned by the employee. Primarily, the question is, has the workman's physical and mental efficiency been substantially impaired, and, if so, to what extent, and for what period of time will this impairment extend into the future? The statute is plain, and recovery is allowed for total disability because the employee is unfitted by his injury to follow any occupation. InBurbage v. Lee,
"In the case of Mercury Aviation Co. v. Industrial Acc.Com.,
"`The extent to which the payments should be considered, if at all, was entirely in the discretion of the commission. It was logical for the commission to deduct the amount of compensation payable during the period of total disability to offset the payments made by the employer when it received no return whatever from the employee. There was no abuse of discretion in the refusal of the commission to credit the employer with the amount by which the payments actually made during the period of total disability exceeded the payments called for by the act, nor in refusing to make any allowance for payments made after the employee returned to work.'
"In the case of De Zeng Standard Co. v. Pressey,
[4] "We are of the view that it definitely appears from these cases, which indicate the trend of judicial decision, that the right to compensation is not lost or diminished by the injured employee's return to work at the same or a different wage than that theretofore earned by him. The statute does not require a showing of loss of earning power as a prerequisite to the payment of compensation for a permanent disability, but, on the contrary, provides for the payment in installments of a fixed and definite sum of money therefor. As stated in the early part of this opinion, mental derangement resulting from an industrial accident is conclusively presumed by section 9 (b) of the act to be permanent and total in character, for which the definite rate of compensation prescribed was properly applied by the Commission. The payments made to the employee subsequent to his injury, and for which the employer now seeks credit as against the award of compensation, were not intended nor accepted as disability compensation or gratuities, but represented wages for services performed. The authority of the Commission to refuse to allow credit therefor is beyond question.
"Petitioner attempts to distinguish the present case from the decisions above referred to on the ground that in each of the cited cases there was present immediately following the date of the injury, and at all times thereafter, including the subsequent period of employment, a total permanent disability of some kind or nature, for which the award was *551 later made. We cannot conceive of a more severe permanent disability than that resulting from a mental derangement which entirely unfits the person to follow the ordinary pursuits of life. The impairment of one's mental faculties certainly results in as great a detriment to the individual as the loss of feet or arms or fingers, even though the mental derangement does not follow immediately upon the happening of the accident."
[5] Section 20 of the Workmen's Compensation Act, after dealing with what the Commission shall do after final hearing, and what matters may be included in an award, provides in subdivision (d) that the Commission "shall have continuing jurisdiction over all its orders, decisions and awards made and entered under (the general sections relating to compensation) and may at any time, upon notice, and after opportunity to be heard is given to the parties in interest, rescind, alter or amend any such order, decision or award made by it upon good cause appearing therefor, such power including the right to review, grant or regrant, diminish, increase or terminate, within the limits prescribed by (the) act, any compensation awarded, upon the grounds that the disability of the person in whose favor such award was made has either recurred, increased, diminished or terminated; provided, that no award of compensation shall be rescinded, altered, or amended after two hundred forty-five weeks from the date of the injury . . ." The order of June 28th, which directed the telegraph company to furnish the employee such further medical and hospital treatment as he may reasonably need in the future "to cure and relieve him from the effects of said injury", was made by the Commission more than two hundred and fifty-eight weeks subsequent to the date of the injury. While we cannot say whether or not the denial of the right of the Commission to make the questioned order in this case will work a hardship on the mentally incapacitated employee some time in the future, the legal question involved is of such importance by reason of its relation to the whole system of compensation for industrial injuries that we granted a rehearing for the sole purpose of examining into this particular phase of the present case.
The order of March 7th, which gave the applicant a permanent total disability rating, granted him a weekly compensation *552 for two hundred and forty weeks, and a pension at the rate of $12.82 per week for the rest of his life; but made no provision for future medical and hospital care. The employer petitioned for a rehearing, protesting against the compensatory features of the award. The applicant, in his answer to this petition, set out the facts establishing his lapses of speech and memory, and submitted that the award "should be amended to provide for such hospital and medical attention as his condition might require . . . in the future". The record discloses that both the petition and the answer were filed with the Commission within the two hundred and forty-five weeks' period, but were not acted upon by the Commission until after that period had expired.
The Commission relies upon language of this court in the case of Bartlett Hayward Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
The legislature is vested by the state Constitution with plenary powers, unlimited by the Constitution itself, to create and enforce a complete system of workmen's compensation by appropriate legislation. (Const., art. XX, sec. 21.) The legislature has done so, and one of the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act declares that whenever any of the provisions of the act are to be "interpreted by a court, it shall be liberally construed . . . with the purpose of extending the benefits of the act for the protection of *553
persons injured in the course of their employment". (Workmen's Compensation Act, sec. 69a.) One of the purposes of the act is to make "full provision for such medical, surgical, hospital, and other remedial treatment as is requisite to cure and relieve from the effects of (an) injury" sustained by workmen in industry. (Const., supra.) An injured employee, although permanently disabled, is entitled to such medical and hospital treatment as may be reasonably required to relieve him from the effects of his injury. (U.S. Fidelity etc. Co. v. Department of IndustrialRelations,
The question of medical and hospital treatment appears, from the record of this case of serious injury to the employee, to have been constantly in the minds of the parties and of the Industrial Accident Commission and its referees who conducted the various hearings. Following the making of the first order and award in the case, in which the previously incurred and future medical treatment for the employee was held to be necessary, there were supplemental hearings for the purpose of determining whether or not the employee was permanently injured, and to determine the extent to which he would require future medical treatment and hospital care. The diagnosis or finding of the Commission in the so-called final award, that the injury to the employee "caused permanent disability consisting of psychoneurosia, psychasthenia, hysterical anaesthesia, and periods of amnesia", would seem to convey to one of common knowledge that a patient in that condition would not only be apt to need medical treatment and hospital care in the *554
future, but would, in all likelihood, be certain to require it. The reasoning in the U.S. Fidelity case, supra, seems to persuasively apply to the facts now under consideration. If, as seems quite probable, the failure to carry into the order of March 7, 1929, the finding and provision for the future medical treatment for the employee, which was under consideration all the time the Commission had continuing jurisdiction, was caused by inadvertence and mistake, that fact was "good cause" and a sufficient ground upon which to grant the rehearing of the order. (Standard etc. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com.,
The award, including the order of June 28, 1929, is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Richards, J., Preston, J., Seawell, J., and Shenk, J., concurred.