Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Leckie

ON MOTION ROE REHEARING.

Jenkins, P. J.

As stated in the original opinion, the employer and the insurance company, apparently ignoring the adjudication by the Department of Industrial Relations as to the total loss of use of the arm for a period of 12 weeks from May 1 to July 24, contend that the claimant was entitled only to $3 a week for the *594entire 200 weeks, based upon a one-tliird partial loss of use of his arm, which the department found was the fact subsequent to July 24. On the admitted $600 paid or to be paid, what they now claim is apparently an additional credit of $6 weekly as for alleged overpayment for 23 weeks from May 1, 1934, to October 8, 1934. By the original opinion provision was made, subject to the approval of the department, for the allowance of $6 weekly excess advancement from July 24, to October 8, amounting to $60, October 8 being the date on which the $9 payments were discontinued, and July 24 being the date on which the department adjudged that the total loss of use of the arm ceased, and the $3 payments as for one-third loss of use of the arm commenced. What movants insist on is, that, in view of the adjudication that the total loss of use of the arm ceased on July 24, they should be recompensed for having made payments as for such total loss of use prior to that date, even though such total loss of use did then in fact exist, and was so adjudicated. Their position seems to be that, because their payments became lessened by virtue of the adjudication that what once amounted to a' total lack of use of the arm had become only a, partial lack of use, even the payments made while lack of use was in fact total, and so declared, should be scaled down and adjusted to the level of the subsequent payments as for partial lack of use. This contention was embodied in the original brief of counsel in the following language: “The Department of Industrial Relations found that the employee had sustained only a 33%%' loss of use of his arm; and so, excluding compensation for ten-weeks total disability, the employee would be entitled to 33%% of the maximum amount of $9, as allowed under section 30; that is to say, on such a finding he would be entitled to $3 per week for. a period of 200 weeks, less any payments made subject to credit in the meantime. In order that the court may have the figures which will result from an application of the ruling made in the Clay case to the facts in this case, we submit the following calculations:

“Weekly wages of employee, $18 maximum amount allowed under section 30 for temporary total disability, $9 maximum amount allowed for 33%% partial loss of use of arm, % of $9; or $3.00 per week for a period of 200 weeks, $600 less compensation paid from May 1, 1934 (beginning at the expiration of 10 weeks covering temporary total disability), to October 8, 1934, 23 weeks *595at $9 per week, $207 leaving balance of compensation which could be awarded, $393.”

In their motion for rehearing they now again insist “that the court has overlooked the second portion of the opinion in the Clay case [180 Ga. 294, supra], and has overlooked the fact that'plaintiffs in error are entitled to have this court give force and effect to the second portion of the Supreme Court’s decision, and also allow them credit for $72 [in addition to the $60 already provided for], the excess of $6 per week which was paid the claimant between May 1, 1934 and July 24, 1934, a period of 12 weeks.” In other words, counsel endeavor to get this court to hold in'effect that, upon a finding by the Department of Industrial Delations of a changed and improved condition of an injured employee, the department should not content itself with setting up and establishing a new and reduced benefit for the remainder of the unpaid weekly benefits, but should go further and make such' reduced payments retroactive so as to cover the entire period of disability. Their contention is that this should be done, despite the-fact that the payments were made in accordance with the solemn adjudication, as to a stated period of total disability which, unless and until set aside remains effective and binding, and despite the additional fact that the section of the act providing for additional hearings' as to any subsequent change in condition expressly stipulates that no subsequent review should affect the previous award as regards any moneys paid thereunder. This question has already been adjudicated in principle by this court as -far back as South v. Indemnity Insurance Co., 39 Ga. App. 47 (146 S. E. 45). In Home Accident Insurance Co. v. McNair, 173 Ga. 566, 570 (161 S. E. 131), the Supreme Court expressly approved this ruling '■as made in the South case, in the following language: “It is not the purpose of section 45 of this act to abolish entirely the doctrine of res adjudicata; but it was intended to -relieve the parties from this doctrine in the particular instances named therein. The ruling of the Court of Appeals in South v. Indemnity Insurance Co., supra, states the true applicable principle of law.” This ruling as made in the McNair case was approved and followed by the Supreme Court in General Accident &c. Assurance Cor. v. Beatty, 174 Ga. 314 (162 S. E. 66), wherein it was held as follows': “On review, the industrial commission can not make a retroactive award to be *596effective as of the date of the original award, and can not treat monies paid under the original award as compensating the employee for compensation awarded to him on review, upon the theory that the compensation received under the original award was sufficient to pay the compensation which would be due the employee for a permanent partial loss of capacity from the date of the original award to the date of the rendition of the award on review.” It is true that in the instant case, owing to a delayed adjudication by the department, the award as finally made adjudicated the fact of total disuse of the member and the period thereof, and the fact of subsequent partial disuse and the period thereof, all in one and the same judgment, instead of, as in the South case, altering the original judgment of total disuse by a subsequent judgment setting up an improved condition. We do not think, however, that because of such deferred and delayed adjudication the plaintiff should be deprived of what the department has solemnly adjudged to be his due, because in another portion of the judgment it is held that such total disuse ceased on a named date, and that after such date the claimant was entitled to payments as for only a reduced and partial disuse of his arm. In other words, we think that the principle announced in the South case would protect the claimant in this case just as completely as if there had been two judgments, the original judgment setting up total disuse and the subsequent judgment a reduced or partial disuse. In neither form of precedure should the claimant be deprived of that to which the department has solemnly adjudicated that he was entitled. It might not be amiss to quote here the syllabus in the South ease. It was there held: “Under section 45 of the workmen’s compensation act, on application of any party at interest bn the ground of a change in condition, the industrial commission may at any time review any award or any settlement made between the parties and filed with the commission, and, on such review, may make an award ending, diminishing, or increasing the compensation previously awarded.’ Upon an application for such review, the essentials leading up to the award are to be taken as res judicata, but the physical condition of the employee remains open to inquiry. Gravitt v. Georgia Casualty Co., 158 Ga. 613 (123 S. E. 897); Globe Indemnity Co. v. Lankford, 35 Ga. App. 599 (134 S. E. 357); Workmen’s Compensation Acts, C. J. Appendix; 40 Cyc. 131, 132; L. R. A. 1916A, 163, 164. *597Thus, where the evidence before the industrial commission upon such review authorizes a finding that there has been a change in the condition of the claimant, a new award of compensation, based upon such changed condition, may be entered, although the original award may have been based upon a disability found by the commission, at the time of making such original award, to be permanent. . . However, under section 45 of the workmen’s compensation act, no review by the commission of an award of compensation previously made ‘shall effect such award as regards any monies paid.’ Accordingly, while the commission may, upon reviewing an award previously made, make a new award ‘ending, diminishing, or increasing the compensation previously awarded,’ such an award can not be made retroactive so as to be made effective as of the date of the original award, since to do so would ‘affect the award previously made as regards’ monies paid, but the new award can only become effective as of the time it is entered, and the claimant can not be required to account for monies already paid him under the previous award. . . Under the foregoing rulings, when the industrial commission found on review that the condition of the claimant in the instant case had changed, he was subsequently entitled only to compensation as for a permanent partial loss, instead of as for a permanent total loss, of the use of the injured member. But the commission was not authorized to impair its previous judgment by discontinuing his compensation entirely on the theory that he had already'received, as for a total loss of the impaired member, more than he would be entitled to if the new finding had been made to begin with. He could not thus be required to account for monies already legally paid under the previous award; and the commission should have entered a new award allowing him subsequent diminished compensation for the continuing permanent partial loss of the use of such member in the proportion that such partial loss bears to such total loss.”

With reference to the case of Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Clay, 180 Ga. 294 (supra), now relied on by movants, we are unable to see any relevancy to the question now at issue. In the instant case the employee was earning $18 a week. The finding of the department was that there was a total loss of the use of claimant’s arm for 12 weeks, for which period one half of his weekly wage ($9) was allowed. It was further adjudicated that there was there*598'after only a one third partial loss of the nse of the arm, beginning July 24, for which period a weekly benefit of $3 for the remainder of the designated period was allowed. No attack is made on the correctness of this final award, except that the minimum award should have been made to relate to the date of the injury, so that the reduced weekly payments would obtain throughout the entire fem — that is, both for the period while there is a binding adjudication that a total loss of use of the arm existed, as well as for the period covered by the adjudication as to a one-third loss of its use. In the Clay case it was held that the employer would be entitled to a credit for “the amount of any payments made subject to credit in the meantime.” And so would the employer be entitled in this case if any overpayments were made subject to credit pending a final award. The only advancements which, subject to the approval of the department, could be taken as in excess of the award as made, were those amounting to $60, and these have been specifically provided for in the original opinion.

Rehean'ing denied.