Askew v. S. C. Loveland Co.

Taulane, J.,

This is an appeal from an order of the Workmen’s Compensation Board.

James Askew, while in the employ of S. C. Loveland Co., Inc., as a stevedore, as injured on Oct. 22, 1923.

*636On Nov. 7, 1923, Askew and his employer entered into a compensatior agreement, which was filed with and approved by the Workmen’s Compensation Board, wherein the employer agreed to pay Askew compensation at ths rate of $12 a week, beginning Nov. 1, 1923, for an indefinite period. Askew’s injuries were caused by a bag of sugar falling on his left foot, fracturing thi second row of tarsal bones.

No question of jurisdiction was raised or suggested at that time. The com pensation agreement does not show lack of jurisdiction in the board; i' recites, among other things:

“1. Business of employer: General stevedoring.
“2. Occupation of employee: Stevedore.
“3. Place of accident: Pier 46 No.
“4. Date when disability began: Oct. 22, 1923.
“5. Describe accident and resulting injury: Bag of sugar fell off pile in th< hold, landing on injured man’s left foot, causing fracture of all second row o: tarsals.”

The mere fact that Askew’s occupation is described as that of a stevedori does not imply that his occupation was necessarily maritime. The work of : stevedore may be performed on the wharf as well as on the ship. It is nov well settled that the Workmen’s Compensation Board has no jurisdictioj where a stevedore is injured while at work on a shoip in a navigable rive (Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U. S. 52; Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U. S. 205; and Chelentis v. Luckenbach, 247 U. S. 372).

Here, the compensation agreement states the accident happened on th pier; such an averment is sufficient to show jurisdiction in the board.

Compensation was paid under the agreement until some time in 1925. 0) May 19, 1925, the employer petitioned the board to terminate the agreemen because Askew was able to resume his work.

No answer was filed to the petition, but when the matter was referred t the referee, the parties, without taking any testimony, entered into a supple mental compensation agreement which is not in the record, and we do no know its terms or provisions.

On Feb. 3, 1927, Askew presented a petition for review under section 413 o the Workmen’s Compensation Act of June 26, 1919, P. L. 642, 661, allegin. that his injuries had become permanent, to which an answer was filed, denyin that his condition prevented him from resuming work, and averring that h had returned to work on Jan. 2, 1925. The referee to whom the petition an answer were referred, instead of investigating the matter, on his own motio: made the following order: “At the time of the hearing, the claimant admitte that the accident of Oct. 22, 1923, was sustained while working in Hold No. of the Steamship St. Andrew that was docked at Pier 46 N. Delaware Rive: and, therefore, the claimant was engaged at the time of the accident in mar: time employment, and consequently your referee is without jurisdiction t pass on the petition to review compensation agreement No. 1527220. Th petition is, therefore, dismissed.”

On appeal, the Workmen’s Compensation Board affirmed the order of th referee.

The question for decision is whether the referee could reinvestigate, moi than four years after the accident, the question of jurisdiction. If he ha such authority, the conclusion of the board is sound.

It is true, as the board says, jurisdiction as to the subject-matter cannot I conferred by consent. Where, however, the jurisdiction of a court or board s to the subject-matter depends upon a finding of fact, it is well settled that th *637court’s finding of the fact in favor of its jurisdiction is conclusive unless appealed from; it cannot be attacked collaterally or questioned in the subsequent proceedings in the case. In Taylor v. Robert Ramsay Co., 139 Md. 113, this rule was applied in sustaining the jurisdiction of a Workmen’s Compensation Board where it was attempted to show, after the time for appeal had expired, that the employee’s occupation was maritime.

The compensation agreement in this case, though voluntary, was filed with and approved by the board, and it should have the force and effect of an award made by the board. If Askew’s compensation had been fixed by the board after hearing and the facts as to jurisdiction were the same as those stated in the compensation agreement, no one would seriously contend that the question of jurisdiction was not foreclosed unless an appeal was taken within ten days.

There is no reason why the same conclusion should not follow where a vol-antary agreement for compensation is filed with and approved by the board.

It may be urged that Askew’s petition is an appeal to the board to exercise its jurisdiction; that is, in the nature of a new proceeding calling for affirmative relief. There is no merit in this. Askew’s petition is one of review only, and this right the act gives him. It is founded upon the original agreement for compensation.

It may be we are interpreting rather strictly the recital of jurisdictional facts in the agreement, but we are fully justified in doing this where the amployer is questioning jurisdiction for the first time more than four years after the accident.

Probably there is little merit in Askew’s petition, but he is entitled, nevertheless, to a hearing. There is little authority on the point involved. In Wooley v. Wickert Co., 275 Pa. 167, the Supreme Court, in passing on an attempt to terminate a compensation award long after the award on the ground of jurisdiction similar to the one involved in this case, said: “The defendant contends the amendment to section 256 of the Judicial Code of the United States, which saved to claimants rights and remedies under the Workmen’s Compensation Acts of the several states, having been declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court since the award was made in this case, that action worked a change in the status of the parties. We cannot accept that view of the law. It was the duty of defendants to raise the jurisdictional question at the time the case was heard and not at this late day, which is after the time allowed by the statute for appeal. To sustain the petition would, in effect, be to grant a new trial after the time fixed by the statute, which we are not authorized to do.”

In view of the fact that the Supreme Court held the employee’s employment was not maritime, it may be the statement as to jurisdiction was mere obiter dictum,; nevertheless, the court’s view of jurisdiction is particularly applicable in this case where the question was not raised in the first instance and che facts agreed upon in the compensation agreement do not show want of jurisdiction.

When the jurisdictional question was raised, Askew was then barred by the statute of limitations of all redress except under the Compensation Act.

The case of Matter of Doey v. Howland Co., 224 N. Y. 30, apparently supports the board’s conclusion. In that case, the employer was permitted to terminate an award for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law more than a year after the award on the ground that the employment was maritime and not within the jurisdiction of the Workmen’s Compensation Board. \

*638The report of the case does not show whether the award on its face dis closed want of jurisdiction.

Our Workmen’s Compensation Board, in Voorhees v. Central R. R. of Nev Jersey, 2 Pa. Workmen’s Comp. Cases, 395, adopted our view of jurisdictioi and refused to permit the employer, some time after the award, to show tha the employee was injured in interstate employment, which would have oustec the jurisdiction of the board. Commissioner Scott said: “Since the hearin; and disposition of the case by Referee Houck, the Supreme Court of th< United States has handed down certain opinions announcing that where th( employment is interstate, the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States i: paramount. These opinions, however, are only declaratory of the law as i existed at the time the compensation agreement was entered into in this case If the defendant by mistake waived this defence and voluntarily made ai agreement to pay compensation, and later, at the time of the hearing befor< the referee, failed to urge this defence, this was not a mistake in fact, but i mistake in law. Therefore, this board will not set aside the agreement no: reverse the award made by the referee.”

The judgment of the Workmen’s Compensation Board is reversed, and thi record is remitted to the board for further proceedings in accordance wit! this opinion.