120 A. 503 | Conn. | 1923
On May 26th, 1922, the Compensation Commissioner for the fifth district, in proceedings for compensation duly brought before him, awarded and adjudged that the defendant pay the plaintiff compensation at the rate of $11 per week for thirteen weeks.
It appeared on the hearing that the plaintiff did not give his employer an opportunity by notice to provide medical, surgical and hospital services for him, but that he provided them himself to the extent of $100 for medical services, and $36.38 for hospital care and treatment. The Commissioner ruled, as all the Commissioners were then ruling, that because the plaintiff did not give his employer an opportunity to provide *740 the medical and hospital services, he could not be allowed in the award reimbursement for such expenses as he had incurred.
No appeal was taken from the finding and award, and the time allowed for an appeal under § 5366 expired.
On July 7th, 1922, the case of Bongialatte v. H. WalesLines Co.,
It was thus authoritatively settled that the Commissioners were entertaining an erroneous opinion and ruling accordingly, as to the effect of the failure of an injured employee to give notice to his employer of his injury, in so far as it affected the employee's right to reimbursement for expenditures for medical care made by him before his employer had notice of his injury.
In the original hearing before the Commissioner in the instant case, the finding as to the employee's expenditures for medical and hospital care, established the fact that his employer had not been prejudiced by his failure to give the required notice before the expenditures were made, and consequently that he was lawfully entitled to reimbursement for such expenditures. The Commissioner in his original award denied such reimbursement. The attention of counsel for the plaintiff was called by the Commissioner in July, 1922, to the decision inBongialatte v. H. Wales Lines Co.,
The defendants claim that when the time for an appeal passed after the first award, the award became a matter in the nature of a res judicata between the parties, which could not be reopened by the Commissioner, and that the supplemental award was unlawfully made.
General Statutes, § 5355, provides a wide latitude for the reopening and revision of awards. It provides, among other things, that "the compensation commissioner shall retain jurisdiction over claims for compensation, awards and voluntary agreements, for any proper action thereon, during the whole compensation period applicable to the injury in question." After an award and during the whole compensable period applicable to the injury in question, the relation of the Commissioner to the award is similar to that of a court to a judgment during the term at which it is rendered. This relation is well stated in Bronson v. Schulten,
In Fair v. Hartford Rubber Works Co.,
The Superior Court is advised to affirm the