296 N.W. 78 | Wis. | 1941
Action begun September 9, 1939, by Otto Wichman against the Industrial Commission, town of Niagara, Marinette county, and the Wisconsin Conservation Commission to review the action of the Industrial Commission in dismissing plaintiff's application for compensation for permanent partial disability. From an order dismissing the action, plaintiff appeals. *14
While engaged in work for the Wisconsin Conservation Commission to improve a trail in the town of Niagara, Marinette county, plaintiff sustained an injury. Claim for compensation was duly made, but on July 31, 1939, after a hearing, the Industrial Commission examiner entered an order dismissing the claim. The plaintiff received a copy of the findings and award on August 2, 1939. A petition to review was filed with the commission on August 23, 1939, and the commission wrote the attorney for plaintiff that since the petition to review was not filed within twenty days after receipt by the petitioner of the examiner's findings and order, the commission was "without power to review the examiner's order and the order as made becomes the order of the commission as a body."
Review of the Industrial Commission's orders or awards may be had in those instances and in the manner provided by statute. The statute in force at the time this review was sought provided that an action would lie to review an order or award "originally made by the commission as a body" and in one other instance, namely when the order or award is made by the commission "following the filing of a petition for review" under sec.
". . . Within thirty days from the date of the order or award of the commission as a body any party aggrieved thereby may commence, . . . an action. . . ."
After the amendment that section read:
". . . Within thirty days from the date of the order or award originally made by the commission as a body or followingthe filing of a petition for review with the commission under section
Sec.
The claim that because no clear legislative intent to change the rule for review appears and because the proceedings are in the nature of an appeal, a liberal construction should be adopted, is unfounded. It would in effect give a different meaning to the words "originally made by the commission as a body" from that which the legislature expressed by the language it used. The statute plainly says that the order or award may be reviewed by the commission at the instance of the aggrieved party who files a petition for review under sec.
We see no escape from the conclusion that a petition for review of an examiner's order or award addressed to the commission must precede the commencement of an action in the circuit court. We therefore hold that the jurisdiction of the circuit court to review the order in this case must be based upon an order entered by the commission following a review of the examiner's order. The lower court properly dismissed the action for want of jurisdiction.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.