Petitioner seeks review and annulment of an order of the commission (by decision after reconsideration) amending as against petitioner an award made more than five years after the date of the industrial injury.
Question Presented
Power of commission to act under section 5410, Labor Code, after having previously denied an application for an award against the Subsequent Injuries Fund.
Record
November 11, 1949, applicant suffered an industrial injury to his back and legs. October 8, 1953, findings and award, awarded applicant 72 per cent permanent disability against defendant carrier, but, on the ground that applicant was already totally disabled, it was held that applicant was not entitled to any benefits from the Subsequent Injuries Fund and his application was dismissed.
Thereafter in
Smith
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
(Cal.App.)
*608 October 11, 1954 (within the five-year period) applicant filed petition to reopen against Subsequent Injuries Fund.
November 1,1954, due to the fact that a hearing of Smith v. Industrial Acc. Com., supra, had been granted by the Supreme Court and not yet determined, an order was made taking the ease off the commission’s calendar to be reset upon request of any of the parties.
November 5, 1954, defendant carrier filed petition to reopen.
April 9, 1956 (beyond the five-year period). By this time
Smith
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
April 30, 1956, petitioner’s petition for reconsideration filed, raising question of commission’s jurisdiction.
December 4, 1956, decision after reconsideration was filed. This denied a motion by petitioner for leave to submit additional points and authorities, set aside the orders granting petitions to reopen and supplemental findings and award of April 9, 1956. The commission found that since on April 9, 1956, more than five years had elapsed since the injury, it was without jurisdiction to reduce the permanent disability awarded against defendant carrier and hence could not grant defendant carrier’s petition to reopen. It found, however, that good cause existed to reopen against petitioner, and amended the findings and award of October 8, 1953 (which had denied applicant any relief against petitioner) to impose an award against petitioner of 28 per cent permanent disability awarding him $2,739.52 and thereafter a lifetime pension of $12.92 per week. Petition for reconsideration was thereafter denied.
1. Jurisdiction.
Petitioner concedes that where an application for an award against the Fund is filed within the five-year period stated in section 5410 the commission has jurisdiction to continue the hearing of such application and make the award after the expiration of that period.
*
Petitioner contends, however, that
*609
the employee having made application previously to the commission for an award against petitioner, and the commission having acted thereon dismissing the employee’s application, the commission had no power to consider another application against the Fund even within the five-year period unless the application showed a new and further disability than the one considered by the commission on its previous action, Thus, says petitioner, the commission having on October 8, 1953, dismissed the employee’s petition for an award from the Fund, even though the commission then acted upon an erroneous view of the law, the employee’s only right to ask the commission to rescind, alter or amend that order would be under sections 5803 and 5804, Labor Code, and the courts have held that even though relief under said section is asked for within the five-year period, the commission loses jurisdiction to act at the expiration of the five-year period. (See
Westvaco etc. Corp.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra,
Section 5410 provides: “Nothing in this chapter shall bar the right of any injured employee to institute proceedings for the collection of compensation within five years after the date of the injury upon the ground that the original injury has caused new and further disability. The jurisdiction of the commission in such cases shall be a contimdng jurisdiction at all times withim such period. . . .” (Emphasis added.) The emphasized portion of section 5410 is important. The preceding portion of the section gives the employee the right to apply to the commission for the relief provided any time within five years from the injury. If the section means that once that application is acted upon the commission may not (as it may under section 5803 as to actions coming within *610 the purview of that section) rescind, amend or alter its decision as to actions coming within its purview, then the sentence “The jurisdiction of the commission in such cases shall be a continuing jurisdiction at all times within such period” has no meaning. To give that sentence meaning it must be construed to mean that, as in our case, when the protection of the workman requires it the commission’s jurisdiction is such that it may change its previous action, provided only that the application for the change is made within the five-year period.
The decision in
Subsequent Injuries Fund
v.
Industrial Ace. Com., supra,
Section 5410 is a more liberal section than sections 5803 and 5804. As pointed out in the Sutton ease, the latter sections do not deal with the time when applications thereunder
shall be made
but with the time within which they
must be acted upon.
Section 5410, on the contrary, deals with the time when an employee may “institute” proceedings to which the section applies. To apply the limited effect of sections 5803 and 5804 to proceedings as to which section 5410 applies, would be to deny that liberality of interpretation which the policy of
*611
Workmen’s Compensation Law requires. “The policy of the law, enjoined by both statute and precedent, directs that workmen’s compensation laws shall be liberally construed in favor of extending their benefits. (Lab. Code, § 3202;
Aetna Life Ins. Co.
v.
Industrial Ace. Com.
(1952),
The order is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 6, 1957.
Notes
Subsequent Injuries Fund
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
