100 Kan. 40 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by Charles C. Smith against the Solvay Process Company to recover compensation for an injury to his eye. A demurrer to his petition was sustained and he appeals.
In support of the ruling the defendant insists that the failure of plaintiff to give notice of the injury, or to make a claim for compensation within the time fixed by the compensation act, bars a recovery. That act provides that a recovery of compensation can not be had unless written notice of the accident shall be given within ten days after the accident, nor unless a claim for compensation shall be made within three •months after the accident, or in case of death, within six months thereafter. It is then provided:
“The want of, or any defect in such notice, or in its service, shall not be a bar unless the employer proves that he has, in fact, been thereby prejudiced, or if such want or defect was occasioned by mistake, physical or mental incapacity or other reasonable cause, and the failure to make a claim within the period above specified shall be a bar.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 5916.)
Under the statute it will be observed that two steps are essential to a recovery by the workman: (1) he must give the employer notice of his injury within the brief period of ten days after it occurs, and (2) he must in addition make a claim
However, no such exceptions are made as to the demand for compensation. Instead of providing that the nonobservance of the requirement to claim compensation within the fixed period would be excused if there was reasonable cause for the failure and if there was.no prejudice to the employer, it specifically declares that the failure shall constitute a bar. It is not easy to find the reason which actuated the legislature in making the distinction that was made between notices of injury arid claims for compensation, but the language employed is plain and mandatory that the failure shall operate as a bar to a recovery. The statute is entitled to, and has been given a liberal interpretation by the court. It has been decided that the claim need not be in writing nor in any particular form. Any. statement, oral or written, made within the statutory time by the injured employee which informs the employer that hé is claiming compensation is enough. (Gailey v. Manufacturing Co., 98 Kan. 53, 157 Pac. 431; Knoll v. City of Salina, 98 Kan. 428, 157 Pac. 1167.) The statute is not open to any reasonable interpretation that would warrant the court in holding that a recovery may be had where a claim is not made within the period fixed in the act.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.