Where, after an award of the Industrial Board finding as a matter of fact that the claimant received an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, but denying compensation because the claimant was not then suffering any disability or incapacity and had not as a result of the injury suffered any disability, and had not been *Page 345 incapacitated from work a sufficient length of time to entitle him to compensation, the claimant sought a hearing on the ground of a change in condition since the award, and on the hearing the director, on motion of counsel for the employer and the insurance carrier, dismissed the application for a hearing on the ground that no appeal having been taken from the original award it became final, conclusive, and binding upon the parties, and that the board was without jurisdiction to entertain the application for a hearing on the ground of a change in condition, and where on appeal the superior court reversed the ruling of the board and remanded the case to take testimony with reference to the alleged change in condition of the claimant since the original award, and the employer and the insurance carrier excepted to the judgment and brought the case to this court, and the claimant thereupon made application for a hearing in pursuance of the judgment rendered by the superior court, the director did not err in denying the application on the ground that, during the pendency in this court of the appeal involving the question raised by the application for a hearing, the Industrial Board was without jurisdiction to entertain the application and grant a hearing.
The ruling of the Industrial Board on May 4, 1939, on the motion to dismiss the claimant's application for a hearing on his alleged right to compensation because of a change in condition since *Page 347
the award of October 11, 1937, was based on the ground that the board was without jurisdiction to grant a hearing, inasmuch as the former award denying compensation was not appealed from, and became conclusive and binding upon the parties. This ruling of May 4, 1939, was appealed from to the superior court; and consequently the jurisdiction of the board became suspended as to the claimant's right to a hearing because of a change of condition since the award of October 11, 1937. The issue involved the question, however, not whether a claimant could be granted a hearing upon an application based upon a change in condition after there had been an adjudication that theclaimant was not entitled to compensation because hisdisability was not due to an injury arising in thecourse of and out of his employment, and where there had been no appeal from the award, as in cases like AEtnaLife Insurance Co. v. Davis,
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J.,concur.
