DALE F. SCAMMAHORN, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. GIBRALTAR SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 44,127
Supreme Court of Kansas
July 10, 1965
195 Kan. 220 | 404 P. 2d 165
Alan W. Farley, of Kansas City, argued the cause and was on the briefs for appellant.
Joseph T. Carey, of Kansas City, argued the cause, and David W. Carson, John K. Dear, Ernest N. Yarnevich, John William Mahoney and John H. Fields, all of Kansas City, were with him on the briefs for appellee.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FATZER, J.: This is an appeal from a lump-sum judgment of workmen‘s compensation award entered by the district court pursuant to
Counsel for the parties filed a stipulated and agreed record which is summarized as follows: On October 28, 1963, the examiner granted the plaintiff, Dale F. Scammahorn, a workmen‘s compensation award and ordered the defendant, Gibraltar Savings & Loan Association, to pay $9,629.73 compensation and $1,937.20 medical benefits. Gibraltar requested a review by the director of workmen‘s compensation who entered an order November 20, 1963, affirming the award. Two days later Gibraltar appealed the award to the district court, which was docketed as case No. 15,892-B, and is appeal No. 44,146, Scammahorn v. Gibraltar Savings & Loan Assn., 195 Kan. 273, 404 P. 2d 170, this date decided.
On December 19, 1963, the plaintiff served an amended demand upon Gibraltar for all compensation due and unpaid in the amount of $9,629.73. However, on December 18, 1963, Gibraltar tendered to plaintiff all compensation due for the ten-week period next preceding the director‘s decision of November 20, 1963, and did thereafter make weekly tenders of checks in the sum of $23.25 each for compensation due the plaintiff as ordered by the examiner and approved by the director оf workmen‘s compensation, up to and including January 24, 1964. The plaintiff refused to accept Gibraltar‘s weekly tender of compensation due, and returned each of its checks as they were tendered.
On January 24, 1964, the plaintiff commenced this action to recover a lump-sum judgment of compensation awarded in the sum of $9,629.73. He alleged he had made all statutory demands and performed all other conditions precedent, but that Gibraltar had failed to pay all compensation which was then due and unpaid.
Gibraltar‘s answer alleged that plaintiff‘s award for compensatiоn was pending on appeal in the district court in case No. 15,892-B; that it had complied with the provisions of
The parties stipulated that Gibraltar had no workmen‘s compensation insurance and that it had not taken steps to qualify as a self-insurer under the provisions of
On June 16, 1964, the district court filed a written memorandum opinion containing its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $9,629.73.
The real issue presented is whether Gibraltar, who had no workmen‘s compensation insurance and who had failed to qualify as a
In its conclusions of law, the district court stated that priоr to the amendment to
“Section 44-532, G. S. Kansas 1949, described what it takes to be a self-insurer. It provides that every employеr shall secure compensation to his employees by insuring in one of the following ways:
“First, by insuring and keeping insured the payment of such compensation with any stock corporation or mutual association or reciprocal or interinsurance exchange or association authоrized to transact the business of workmen‘s compensation insurance in the state of Kansas; or, second, by showing to the commissioner that said employer carries his own risk and is what is known as a self-insurer and by furnishing proof to the commissioner of his or its financial ability to pay such compensation fоr himself or it.’
“Admittedly, Gibraltar in this case did not take the steps to become a self-insurer within the contemplation of 44-532.
“What is the situation of an employer who is neither an insured, nor a self-insurer within the contemplation of 44-532? Either he has to be in a third category, different from either the insured group or the group of self-insurers. Or else it must be said that anyone without insurance is automatically a self-insurer.
“On the basis of section 44-532, my answer to the question posed is that Gibraltar is neither an insured nor a self-insurer and is not entitled to the benefits of the 1961 amendment to section 44-556.”
”Provided, That no compensation shall be due or payable until the expiration of such twenty (20) day period and then the payment of past due compensation awarded by the director shall not be payable, if within such twenty (20) day period notice of appeal to the district court has been filed and the right to appeal shall include the right to make no payments of such compensation until the appeal has been decided by the district court if the employer is insured for workmen‘s compensation liability with an insurance cоmpany authorized to do business in this state or, if the employer is a self-insurer, and has filed a bond with the district court in accordance with section 44-530 of the General Statutes of 1949: Provided, however, That the perfection of an appeal to the district court shall not stay the payment of compensation duе for the ten-week period next preceding the director‘s decision, and for the period of time after the director‘s decision and prior to the decision of the district court in such appeal . . .”
In the same enactment that amended
Likewise, it is оbvious the legislature intended by its amendment to
Generally speaking, the legislature has classified “every employer” under the Workmen‘s Compensation Act who shall secure compensation to his employees, into two broad categories—those who are insured by workmen‘s cоmpensation liability, and those who carry their own risk and are known as self-insurers and are financially able to pay all compensation allowed. (
From the foregoing, we conclude that when Gibraltar tendered all medical payments due to the plaintiff, which he accepted, and also tendered the payment of compensation due for the ten-week period next preceding the director‘s decision, and made weekly tenders of the amount of compensation due him in accordance with the terms of the award, which he refused, there was no compensation due and payable to him within the meaning of
It follows that the judgment of the district court must be reversed.
FATZER, J., dissenting: The legislature has provided in
WERTZ, J., joins in the foregoing dissent.
