720 S.W.2d 2 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1986
This is an appeal by employer and insurer from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cole County quashing a preliminary writ of prohibition. The preliminary writ, issued upon appellants’ application, had prohibited the respondent director of the Division of Workers’ Compensation from proceeding with a claim for workers’ compensation benefits by intervenor-employee, one Edwin E. Kelly. The claim of appellants is that a dismissal of an earlier claim by Mr. Kelly (the same claim as that asserted in the second proceeding) had constituted an adjudication thereof, and that hence the respondent on res judicata grounds had no jurisdiction of the second claim. The dismissal by the Division of the first claim had been recited to be “without prejudice” and was in pursuance of claimant’s voluntary dismissal of the same “without prejudice”.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court. The claimant’s dismissal of his claim without prejudice, upon which the Division had entered its order of dismissal without prejudice, was not an adjudication of the claim, and was no bar to claimant’s refiling the same and its hearing by the Division. This we think is clear from Hugelman v. Beltone Kansas City Hearing Service Company, 389 S.W.2d 220, 223 (Mo.App.1965), where a widow’s earlier filing and voluntary dismissal of a workers’ compensation claim for the death of her husband was held not to be an “appropria
Appellants point out that Hugel-man antedated the enactment of § 287.655, RSMo 1978. That section, however, deals with an involuntary order of dismissal for failure to prosecute, and has no application to the present case.
The preliminary writ was correctly quashed. Judgment affirmed.
All concur.