UNITED STATES STEEL CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. The INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION of Utah and William Zele, Sr., Defendants.
No. 12452.
Supreme Court of Utah.
Feb. 8, 1972.
493 P.2d 986
There is no complaint made about the instructions given regarding the settlement issue, and if the verdict was given defendant because the jury did not believe thе settlement was only for injuries to plaintiff‘s hand, then any errors regarding liability would not be important.
By insisting that the two issues be tried together and decided by one general verdict, the plaintiff is in no position to complain because he cannot now show that the faulty instruction might have been the cause of an adversе verdict.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. The respondent is awarded costs.
CALLISTER, C. J., and TUCKETT, HENRIOD and CROCKETT, JJ., concur.
Vernon B. Romney, Atty. Gen., Robert D. Moore, Gary E. Atkin, Salt Lake City, for defendants.
CALLISTER, Chief Justice:
Applicant, William Zele, Sr., was injured November 5, 1948; some time in 1949, according to the findings, he received an award for 10% partial disability for loss of bodily function. The Commission, under statutory authority in
The Industrial Commission, in its Denial of Motion For Review, upheld the order for reimbursement and affirmed the finding of the referee that applicant had filed a claim within the time period provided in
While it may be true the Applicant has gone to sleep on his rights in not requesting payment before now, there is no Statute of Limitations in the section providing for medical payments. The requirements that the treatment be necessary and result from the industrial accident appear to have been met . . . .
In United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Co. v. Nielsen,1 this court rejected the position of the Industrial Commission that once a claim had bеen timely filed in accordance with
This court observed that such аn interpretation does give the applicant the advantage of being protected against loss of supplemental compensation. On thе other hand, it requires the employer (or his insurer) to remain vulnerable to further liability indefinitely, which, in turn, involves long-term obligations, such as, the maintenance of reсords and the setting up and carrying of reserves for such contingencies. This court continued:
. . . It is well to keep in mind that since time immemorial, and quite universally throughout other areas of the law, the policy has been that there should be some definite period of time within which adverse claims must be asserted, so that рossible controversies are sometime put at rest.
Returning attention to the language of the statutes in question: It will be noted that Section 78 is speaking somеwhat generally about the continuing jurisdiction of the Commission to deal with claims before it, but does not say any particular duration of time in which that can be dоne. There is nothing in that section inconsistent with the idea that it means that the Commission may “from time to time make such changes with respect to former orders” which are within limitations of time otherwise prescribed. To ascertain the limitation of time, we then look at the language of
Section 35-1-66 , which states that, “the employеe shall receive, during such disability and for a period of not to exceed six years from the date of the injury,” compensation as listed therein. This language does speak specifically about time and seems quite plain in its meaning . . . .
Defendants assert that there is no limitation period for medical paymеnts, since such period is not specified in the statute.
In addition to the compensation provided for in this title the employer or insurance carrier, . . . shаll in ordinary cases also be required to pay such reasonable sum for medical, nurse and hospital services, and for medicines, . . . as may be necеssary to treat the patient as in the judgment of the industrial commission may be just, . . . [Emphasis added]
By the express language of this statute, the legislature has designated medical expenses an additional item of compensation to be included in an award under the provisions of this title. Since applicant, in the instant сase, would be precluded from an award of any supplemental compensation under the Nielsen case2 because of the limitation period, it would be reаsonable to conclude that the same limitation would apply to the additional item of compensation, namely, medical expenses. I can find no rational basis to hold that applicant is foreclosed by the passage of the limitation period from an award of any supplemental compensation and at the same time affirm the order awarding a legislatively designated additional item of compensation, medical expenses. The order of the Industrial Commission is reversed on the ground that the six year statute of limitations applicable to applicant‘s award for partial disability has run.
HENRIOD, J., concurs.
CROCKETT, Justice (concurring).
I agree with the decision because, as it points out, the applicant, with knowledge of his rights, failed to assert them for a period of twenty years. Cоnsistent with the desirable and necessary policy of repose of controversies, he should now be precluded from asserting this claim. However, to make clear my view I add these further observations. It is true, as the defendant contends, that there appears to be no express time limitation on the medical coverage provided for
TUCKETT, Justice (dissenting).
I dissent. It appears to me that the only question of law we are called upon to decide is whether or not the claim of Zele is
I would affirm the decision of the commission.
ELLETT, J., concurs in the dissenting opinion of TUCKETT, J.
