On the 25th of August, 1921, George W. White, while working as' a brakeman for the defendant railway company, suffered an injury to his head, which incapacitated him for a month. He returned to work then and continued in the employment of the railway company, without any apparent ailment, until the 21st of September, 1929, when he was stricken with an epileptic fit, and a scientific examination revealed that the epilepsy was caused by the injury which had occurred on the 25th of August, 1921. White sued for compensation under the Employers’ Liability Act. The railway company pleaded that the action was barred by the prescription of one year, under the provisions of section 31 of Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended by Act No. 85 of 1926, p. 124. The plea of prescription was overruled, and, the case being heard on its merits, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for compensation at the rate of $18 per week for 400 weeks. The railway company appealed, and the court of appeal affirmed the judgment.
According to section 31 of Act No.
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of 1914, before it was amended, a claim for compensation was barred unless within one year after the injury or death the parties agreed upon the payments to be made, or unless within one year after the injury proceedings were begun as provided in the act. In the case of Guderian v. Sterling Sugar & Railway Co.,
The district judge in this case held that the action would be barred if governed by the act of 1926, but that, inasmuch .as the contract of emifioyment was governed by the act of 1914, it would impair the obligation of the contract to apply to this case the act of 1920. The court of appeal did not subscribe to that view, or find it necessary to go that far, but, on the authority of West v. Industrial Lumber Co.,
We agree with thq district judge, however, in his opinion that to apply Act No. 85 of 1926, in so far as it amends section 31 of Act No. 20 of 1914, to this case, would impair the obligation of the contract of employment made under the provisions of the act of 1914. The third paragraph of section 3 of the'act of 1914 declares: “Every contract of hiring *313 * * * made subsequent to the time provided for this act to take effect, shall be presumed to have been made subject to the provisions of this act, unless there be as a part of said contract an express statement in writing not less than thirty days prior to the accident, * * * that the provisions of this act other than Sections 4 and 5 are not intended to apply, and it shall be presumed that the parties have elected to be subject to the provisions of this act and to be bound thereby.” Under the provisions of section 31 of the act, as construed in Guderian v. Sterling Sugar & Railway Company, the contract of employment gave White a right of action for compensation for any injury that might result from the accident which happened in 1921, and gave him the right to exercise that right of action at any time within a year after the discovery'of such injury.
The fact that White did not bring hisl suit within a year after the act of 1926 went into effect would be important if section 31 of the act were merely a statute of limitation, or prescription, but it is not so, because the section, as amended, declares, in' effect, that there shall be no right or cause of action at all unless the injury results within a year after the accident. White could not have sued within the year after the act of 1926 went into effect, because no injury had manifested itself, and perhaps none had come into existence during the year. Therefore the rule that statutes of limitation or prescription affect fights of action already in existence,' from the time such statutes go into effect, is not applicable to this case. The doctrine which is applicable was well expressed by Mr. Justice Rost, for the court, in Third Municipality v. Ursuline Nuns,
The judgment is affirmed.
