DocketNumber: No. 619.
Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 12/12/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Jefferson county sustaining an award made by the Industrial Accident Board of Texas in cause No. C-10868, W. W. Orchard, Employé, v. B. H. Willis, Employer, and Home Life & Accident Insurance Company. On the 27th day of May, 1917, W. W. Orchard was injured in the state of Louisiana in the course of his employment by H. B. Willis. At that time Willis was operating both in Louisiana and in Texas. Under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Louisiana (Act No. 20 of 1914), he carried insurance with the Georgia Casualty Company, for the protection of his Louisiana employés, and he also carried with appellant, under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act (Laws 1913, c. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246h-5246-zzzz]), protection for his Texas employés.
Appellant’s first and second assignments of error present the following propositions:
On February 15,1917, when this policy was written, the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Texas contained no provision giving it extraterritorial effect, but by the terms of its policy appellant had contracted “to pay in the manner provided by the laws of such states or commonwealths of the United States as are in force at the time this policy takes effect, or any subsequent amendments thereto.” Before Orchard was injured, this act was amended in the following words:
“If an employé who has been hired in this state, sustain injury in the course of his employment, he shall be entitled to compensation according to law of this state even though such injury was received outside of the state.” Laws 1917, c. 103, pt. 1, § 19 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, art. 5246 — 38).
This amendment clearly gives the act extraterritorial effect, and at the time it went intd effect appellant’s policy was in force. On the 29th of March, Smelker & Maxon, appellant’s local agents at Beaumont, wrote Mr. Willis as follows:
“The Workmen’s Compensation Law of this state, heretofore set out as chapter 179, Acts of 1913, has been amended by the Thirty-Fifth Legislature, just adjourned, and the amended bill has now been signed by the Governor.
“We wish to advise you that your policy of insurance, delivered to you by us, protects you completely under the amended Law as heretofore, and should'any change or indorsement be necessary later same will have our prompt attention.”
At the time this letter was written, this amendment had gone into effect. As we construe appellant’s policy, this amendment comes within the terms above quoted, and, if we are right in this conclusion, then it gave extraterritorial effect to the policy at the time Orchard was injured. This construction follows both from .its terms as quoted above and from the letter of its local agents to Mr. Willis. To so hold does not amount “to an invasion of the right of contract,” nor is it “an effort to give retroactive effect to a statute inconsistent with a- preexisting contract between the parties,” as urged. Appellant had contracted in relation to future amendments, and, when these amendments took effect, they became as much a part of the policy as the provisions of the law at the time the policy was written.
According to the undisputed testimony, during all the years of his employment by Willis, Orchard had his general headquarters in Beaumont, Jefferson county, Tex. From the general nature of his employment, as stated by us above, his absence from time to time from Beaumont in the service of Willis was only temporary. Even while on the Oaddo oil field job, his home was in Texas and he • maintained two field headquarters in Texas. While it is true that his family was in Moor-ingsport, La., they were there temporarily while he was doing that work.
Under these facts, at the time Orchard was injured, we believe he was a Texas em-ployé of B. H. Willis, and was under the protection of appellant’s policy.
“The trial court erred, to the prejudice of the appellant, in rendering judgment in favor of the defendant for compensation under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act, because of the failure of defendant to comply with the requisites of the law as to claiming compensation within the six months’ period stipulated in the statute.”
„ This case was tried by the court without a jury, and on request of appellant the trial court filed conclusions of law and fact. No assignment of error, challenging these conclusions, is brought forward in the brief. This third assignment is against the judgment of the court, and does not attack the. conclusions of law and fact on which it was based. On this issue the trial court found:
“Owing to the confusion arising in this way and to assurances given to Orchard by persons claiming to be agents of one or the other companies that no proceedings would be necessary, the presentation of the claim to the plaintiff company was delayed, but same was presented and duly filed with the Industrial Accident Board within a year and finding thereon in Orchard’s favor by the Industrial Accident Board was made on August 30, 1918.
“The first question to be decided is whether or not the right of recovery was barred when the claim was presented to the Industrial Accident Board; the evidence is that the claim was presented to the Board some date between May 7th and June 15, 1918. That Board made its award in favor of Orchard in the month of August, 1918, and thereby hold that the delay in this case came within the following clause of section IY-A of the law, viz.:
“Provided that for good cause the Board may in meritorious cases waive the strict compliance with the foregoing limitations as to notice and the following of the claim before the Board.
“This discretion is vested in the Board and perhaps is not subject to review. If it is, the circumstances of this case aré sufficient to excuse the delay in filing, the claim having been presented within the year and the delay reasonably explained; and there being no doubt about the nature and extent of the injury suffered nor as to its having been sustained in the course of employment, the ease is clearly a meritorious one.”
It seems to us that this conclusion by the court is sufficient to sustain the judgment. But if we are in error in our construction of appellant’s assignment of error, it does not appear that the Industrial Accident Board, in wáiving the limitations as to notice and filing of the claim, has abused the discretion vested in it by law.
If appellant, was not bound by this judgment of the Industrial Accident Board, then we say it appears from the record in this case that this issue was tried de novo in th® district court, and a finding, was made against appellant’s contention. We believe, on the assignment presented, the facts sustain the court’s conclusion.
“As between the employé or his dependents and the company, the notice to or knowledge of the occurrence of an injury on the part of the employer shall be the notice or knowledge as the case may be on the part of the company.”
The amendment to this act in 1917 provided that notice to the employer was notice
It “had no information that Orchard ever sustained any such accident and had no opportunity to discharge any such obligation and was under no legal obligation to do so, no claim ever having been filed until approximately a year later.”
Our discussion of the other assignments disposes of this one.
Finding no error in this case, the judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.
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