124 A. 813 | Conn. | 1924
Upon the foregoing reasons of appeal the claimants contend in the first place, upon the authority of Thompson v. Towle,
In the second place, claimants contend that since the decedent left a widow totally dependent upon him for support, they had no claim upon the respondents until she died or remarried, and that, therefore, if the statute limiting a two year term within which written notice of claim must be given did not begin to run until the remarriage of the widow, their notice given within one year from such remarriage was timely. This contention is based upon the case of Esposito v. Marlin-RockwellCorporation,
We now pass to the third point of claimants' brief, which embodies the main question involved in the case, and upon which the commissioner based his decision. In this regard they press the claim that they are within the exceptions of General Statutes, § 5360, which dispenses with the prerequisite of a notice of a claim within a year (now extendible in the discretion of the commissioner to two years) in four classes of cases, one of which is where there has been a hearing within one year. In answering this claim respondents insist that the question involved is jurisdictional and that this court has held that in matters of jurisdiction the statute is to be strictly construed, citing Simmons v. Holcomb,
In the other case cited to this point, we held that jurisdiction could not be conferred upon one commissioner to act by the request of another commissioner except in cases expressly provided in the Act, and that a jurisdiction not given by statute cannot be conferred by agreement of the parties, waiver or conduct. In so holding we were applying familiar rules prevailing whenever jurisdictional questions arise. Such rules and others of like nature must of course be recognized in the present case. But here we have a somewhat different question, one of pure interpretation or construction of the meaning of the word "hearing" as employed in the statute. At first blush it would seem that this word might include any investigation by the commissioner relating to the time, fact and cause of the injury, its extent, the persons having an interest in compensation, and their dependence respectively upon the labor of the injured person. It clearly is incumbent upon any litigant desiring to limit the general and inclusive import of the word to show something in the context of the statute or some general course of interpretation in like matters, sufficient logically to justify a restriction in the meaning of the term.
We naturally turn to the object of the four exceptions to the necessity of notice as prescribed in this *116 section, and especially to that concerning a hearing in determining the intent of the statute. It is clearly intended by the Act in general, that a speedy determination of the rights of the contending parties should be had by a procedure simple and easily understood.
"It intended that the employee should know what compensation he or his dependents would receive in the event of injury, and that payment should be made speedily by a procedure at once simple and inexpensive. It is intended that the employer should know his liability in this regard, and so might include it among the items charged to operation." Kennerson v. ThamesTowboat Co.,
The notice to the employer serves the purpose of informing him of the condition with which he is confronted, and the hearing is intended to further fix and make certain that condition as regards his liability, if any. The hearing presents a complete opportunity fully to develop the situation as regards the nature, extent and compensability of the injury, and incidentally to ascertain all possible dependents, present and prospective. It is difficult to conceive an employer having so little comprehension of a law by which he is bound, and the provisions of which he is presumed to know, or so ill advised professionally, as not to be aware that not only is there a dependent first compensable in any given case, but that the law also provides for other dependents in order after the one first preferred. The notice therefore given afterward that the person first compensable — in the present case, a widow — has ceased to be entitled to further compensation, merely informs the employer that a revision of the award should be made for one of the reasons stated in General Statutes, § 5355, that is, "that the measure of dependence, on account of which compensation is paid, has changed," and as applied to the instant case, that another set of *117 dependents was entitled to the benefits of the law. The section just referred to concludes with a provision 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."
The claim that respondents stood at the second hearing, two and one half years after the event, less able to defend their rights, through no laches of their own, is not meritorious. They were not foreclosed at that hearing from making any proper and legal claim, as the case then stood.
If the claimants are to be denied relief, it must be by narrowing the import of the word "hearing" as used in § 5360, to a hearing had by the action of the present claimants based upon a notice of claim given by them, rather than giving the word an ordinary and inclusive interpretation.
A case might easily be supposed in which during the period of three hundred and twelve weeks for which compensation had been awarded to a widow, the latter might die or remarry, and a daughter entirely dependent on the employee father and after his death upon the compensated mother come forward as a dependent, and again the latter might die leaving dependent minor children, within the compensation period, and all entitled to compensation when the facts arose bringing them within the provisions of the law. The construction of the word "hearing" claimed by the respondents, would constrain us to hold that the daughter and the minor children above supposed must severally give notices of injury in order to protect their possible and contingent claims within one year, or at the most two years from the date of the injury. Such a narrow and strained construction cannot be given to the word *118
"hearing" as contained in the section of the statute which we are considering. It is entirely out of accord with our treatment of forms and methods of procedure under the Act as illustrated in Saddlemire v. AmericanBridge Co.,
The Superior Court is advised to sustain the appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.