142 A. 745 | Conn. | 1928
On June 21st, 1927, the compensation commissioner made a finding and award dismissing *160 the plaintiff's claim for compensation. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, including in the appeal a motion to correct the finding, which the court (Wolfe, J.) granted in part, and rendered judgment remanding the case to the commissioner for an award to the plaintiff in accordance with the finding as corrected. No appeal to this court was taken from this judgment. Subsequently the defendants filed a motion requesting the commissioner to reopen and allow the defendants to produce additional evidence. The commissioner denied this motion and, on January 9th, 1928, made an award of compensation to the plaintiff in accordance with the finding as corrected by the Superior Court and the direction of that court. The defendants filed an appeal to the Superior Court from this award, which appeal was dismissed and erased from the docket on plaintiff's motion. From the judgment entered dismissing the appeal and affirming the award, the defendants now appeal. The question presented by this appeal, stated simply, is whether an appeal may be taken from an award made by the compensation commissioner in compliance and accordance with the direction of a judgment of the Superior Court rendered on an appeal from the original award by the commissioner.
The reasons filed in the second attempted appeal from the commissioner contained no claim that the award as made by him did not comply, in all respects, with the direction of the judgment of the Superior Court on the first appeal. They questioned, instead, the action of the latter court in correcting the finding upon the evidence submitted to it, the conclusions reached from the subordinate facts stated in the finding as corrected, and the judgment remanding the case to the commissioner for an award in accordance therewith. No doings of the commissioner independently *161
of or not in conformity with that judgment were complained of with the exception of the denial of defendants' motion to reopen, which motion was not based on any of the grounds specified in § 5355 of the General Statutes, and from the denial of which no appeal lies. Chzrislonk v. New York, N. H. H.R.Co.,
If the trial court "finds harmful error either in a conclusion of law or of fact, or in the finding of a material fact or the refusal to find a material fact, it should, if the award may be changed or modified without requiring a further hearing, sustain the appeal to this extent, and direct the commissioner to make the award in accordance with its direction." Thompson
v. Twiss,
So far as a careful investigation of our compensation cases discloses, the recognized, unvarying, and hitherto unquestioned practice has been to treat the judgment of the Superior Court, either dismissing the appeal and affirming the commissioner's award, or sustaining the appeal and remanding the cause to the commissioner for an award or other further proceedings in accordance with directions, as the judgment from which an appeal to this court to test the decision of the trial court must be taken. Among the more recent cases *162
which exhibit the closest analogy, in nature and scope of judgment, to that in the present case, the following are illustrative: MacFarquhar v. Columbia GraphophoneCo.,
The practice is decisively settled, therefore, that a decision of the Superior Court in a compensation case is to be reviewed by appeal from the judgment of that court rather than by a new original appeal from the award entered by the commissioner in conformity to that judgment. The practice so established is a simple, direct and orderly procedure, and affords the aggrieved party ample opportunity for redress, if seasonably availed of.
We think that the Superior Court judgment is the final judgment from which an appeal lies (Norton v.Shore Line Electric Ry. Co.,
The trial court was correct in ruling that review of the questions sought to be raised by the appeal which it dismissed, could and should have been had by appeal to this court from the judgment of the Superior Court directing that award.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.