OPINION OF THE COURT
A claimant who applies for, is awarded and accepts *349 workers’ compensation death benefits is barred by the exclusive remedy and finality provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Law from maintaining a wrongful death action against the deceased worker’s former employer for intentional assault. The order of the Appellate Division granting the State’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint should, therefore, be affirmed.
Ronald Werner was employed as a guard at the Attica Correctional Facility. Taken hostage at the beginning of the prisoner insurrection now generally referred to as the Attica uprising, Werner was killed by a gun shot wound to the chest during the September 13, 1971 retaking of the prison by State troopers and correction officers. On October 1, 1971 his widow, Juanita, filed a claim for compensation on behalf of herself and her three daughters with the Workers’ Compensation Board, and on February 8,1972 she was notified that at a hearing held January 26, 1972 an award had been made requiring payment of funeral expenses and a weekly stipend commencing September 13, 1971. It is not disputed that the compensation payments were received and accepted by Juanita Werner on behalf of herself and her children until she remarried, that upon her remarriage she received a remarriage award at the expiration of which the payments for the benefit of the children were increased, and that the latter payments continued thereafter. Claimant’s brief states that she was advised by State officials that benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Law were her exclusive remedy, but there is nothing in the record to support the statement.
Whatever be the fact with respect to the filing of the compensation claim, claimant concedes in her brief that in December, 1971, after conferring with an attorney, she filed a notice of intention to file claim against the State and on December 23, 1972 filed her notice of claim against the State and certain State employees with the Court of Claims. Two claims were stated: the first for the negligent failure to warn Ronald Werner of the impending riot and to protect him against imprisonment and physical injury by the rioting inmates during the period September 9, 1971 through September 13,1971; the second for his death which *350 it was alleged occurred when “a State Police Officer * * * while acting in the course of his employment by the State and for the purpose of forwarding the State’s interest, without just cause or provocation and with great force and violence, wilfully and intentionally assaulted and battered the Claimant’s decedent by firing several shots of a gun at Claimant’s decedent, one or more of which shot and struck him in the head, chest and back, thereby causing his death.”
The State moved to dismiss as to the individual defendants for lack of Court of Claims jurisdiction and as to the claims against the State for failure to state a cause of action and because claimant having received compensation payments had elected her remedy. As to the individual defendants the motion was granted; as to the State it was granted as to the claim based on negligence but otherwise denied. The State appealed but that appeal has never been perfected. Thereafter, the State moved for summary judgment on the basis of claimant’s continued receipt of compensation benefits. The Court of Claims denied that motion on the basis of our decision in
Jones v State of New York
(
Claimant presents the threshold argument that trial of the action in the Court of Claims having begun, the court should not have entertained and the Appellate Division could not grant a motion for summary judgment. We perceive no abuse of discretion in the courts below having entertained the motion, which if granted would dispose of the action. The State urges us to dismiss the intentional assault claim on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action, because it does not plead the nonexclusivity of compensation (see
O’Rourke v Long,
*351
City of New York,
We come, then, to the primary issue on this appeal: whether acceptance of compensation benefits forecloses the action against the State for intentional assault held permissible in
Jones v State of New York
(
The combination of those provisions requires affirmance of the Appellate Division’s order. Had claimant not chosen to accept benefits, she would under our decision in
Jones v State of New York (supra),
have been free to maintain her wrongful death action for intentional assault. In that action she would have faced a heavy burden of proof in attempting to establish the use of excessive force by the State
(id.,
Thus, the board has determined that Ronald Werner’s
*353
death was accidental and occurred in the course of his employment, both issues clearly within its jurisdiction. That finding of accidental death is binding between the parties, not only because of section 23 of the Workers’ Compensation Law, but also on settled principles of
res judicata
which apply to administrative hearings and 'determinations when the agency involved is acting, as does the compensation board, in a quasi-judicial capacity
(Matter of Evans v Monaghan,
While there are a number of cases supporting that conclusion,
4
the clearest exposition is that contained in
Legault v Brown
(
“It appears without contradiction that not only had the defendants-appellants effected workmen’s compensation insurance which was in full force but that the plaintiff-respondent had availed himself of the benefits of such insurance. He had the right to do so since it is unquestioned that the accident arose out of and during the course of his employment. There is a distinction between ‘being entitled to take compensation’ and ‘having taken compensation.’
(Grossman
v.
Consolidated Edison Co.,
* * *
“The respondent elected to stand upon the employer and employee relationship and the theory of ‘accidental injury’ and take the statutory benefits. By this present action, he repudiates the relationship of employer and employee and the theory of ‘accidental injury’ and seeks to recover against the defendants, not as his employers, but because, as he claims he was willfully and wantonly assaulted by them. He must be held to his election.”
For the reasons set forth above, claimant, when she accepted compensation benefits for her husband’s death forfeited the right to maintain an action at law for his wrongful death, however unwittingly. That does not necessarily mean that she is without recourse if she was, in fact, mislead into filing the compensation claims by representations of a State employee (cf.
Hotaling v General Elec. Co.,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, without costs.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler and Fuchsberg concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. While it is clear that subdivision 6 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law does not bar an employee who has accepted compensation benefits from suing a coemployee who has committed an intentional assault upon him
(Moines v Cronomer Vol. Fire Dept.,
. Though not expressly so provided in section 23, an award or decision is subject to modification not only on appeal but, under section 123, pursuant to the board’s continuing power and jurisdiction to “make such modification. or change with respect to former findings, awards, decisions, or orders relating thereto, as in its opinion may be just.” Claimant is not without an avenue of redress, therefore, if in fact she was misled by advice of State officials that compensation benefits were her exclusive remedy. Until the board exercises its powers under section 123, however, its decision and award to Juanita Werner is, under section 23, final and conclusive, provided only the question decided was within its jurisdiction
(Friedl v Hennard,
. The generally more substantial recovery in a common-law action is the price that statute requires of the employee or his dependents for the “swift and sure source of benefits to the injured employee or to the dependents of [a] deceased employee”
(O’Rourke v Long,
.
(Matter of Martin v C. A. Prods. Co.,
