The question here presented is whether the finding of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission should be sustained, the commission finding that the compensation statutes of Arkansas apply to an injury sustained by Jerry Peters, appellee herein, in the State of Oklahoma. Appellants, Missouri City Stone, Inc. and Hartford Insurance Group, are paying claimant under provisions of the Oklahoma Workmen’s Compensation Act, but controvert any payments, under the Arkansas act. The question of percentage of disability is not involved, it being recognized that the disability is permanent and total, irrespective of which state act applies. 1 Peters was injured in a rock quarry accident at Wilson’s Rock Oklahoma, located approximately 15 miles from Fort Smith, Arkansas. Peters suffered a crushed face and severed spine in the accident and is permanently paralyzed from the waist down. It might be here stated that payment of maximum benefits under the compensation law of one state does not bar an employee from asserting a subsequent claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Law of a sister state unless the law of the first state so declares. That situation does not exist in the claim at issue. McGehee Hatchery Co. v. Gunter, 234 Ark. 113, 350 S.W. 2d 608. Of course, there can be no double recovery; only the difference by which the second award is greater than the first may be recovered. McGehee Hatchery Co. v. Gunter, supra.
In International Paper Company v. Tidwell, 250 Ark. 623, 466 S.W. 2d 488, we pointed out, that whether the Arkansas Workmen’s Compensation Law can be applied where the claimant is injured in another state, is a mixed question of law and fact; that as to factual determinations, the findings of the commission are binding upon the courts if there is any substantial evidentiary support, and that we must accept that view of the facts which is most favorable to the commission’s findings. Still further, that where fair-minded men might honestly differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from facts, either controverted or uncontroverted, the drawing of inferences and reaching of conclusions are for the commission, and not the courts. In Tidwell, the commission found it had jurisdiction because appellee was a citizen and resident of Arkansas both prior to and at the time of his injuries, was paid in Arkansas under the supervision of appellant’s Arkansas office, and the contract of employment was entered into in this state._
The commission, in reaching its conclusions in the case now before us, quoted from Tidwell as follows:
“When we consider the interest that this state has in the welfare of its residents, in minimizing the likelihood of their becoming public charges or objects of local charity, in having a procedure for a remedy readily available to its residents, and in securing compensation to physicians and hospitals in Arkansas which might not otherwise be available to a claimant, we cannot say that reason and logic require a different approach to a liberal construction of our statute because of these limited dissimilarities, in spite of the fact that a different result has been reached in other jurisdictions, and the fact that the injury might be compensable under the laws of another state.”
The commission then proceeded to enumerate the facts upon which it predicated its decision and concluded:
“Arkansas has a legitimate interest in the welfare of the claimant and in minimizing the likelihood of his becoming a public charge or object of local charity, and in having a procedure for remedy readily available to him, and in securing compensation to physicians and hospitals in Arkansas which might not otherwise always be available to him.”
Peters was allowed compensation benefits at the rate of $49.00 per week, being the maximum benefit that he was eligible to receive under the Arkansas Workmen’s Compensation Law, appellants to receive credit for payments made under the Oklahoma Workmen’s Compensation Law. From such award, appellants appealed to the Circuit Court of Sebastian County, and that court affirming the commission award, appellants appealed to this court. For reversal, it is asserted that there is no substantial evidence to support the commission’s findings, and that the findings do not support the award, points of a similar nature which will be discussed together.
On August 28, 1970, Peters went to the Employment Security Office in Fort Smith, seeking employment and that office, having previously received an order from the Missouri City Stone Company for a truck driver on a river job at Wilson’s Rock in Oklahoma, referred Peters to the job. Peters went to the jobsite and was interviewed by Elmer Partain, Missouri Job Superintendent, who advised him that there were no jobs open at that time but to leave his name, address, and phone number with the head mechanic. A few days later, there was a vacancy for a water truck driver and Partain telephoned Peters that he had this job open.2 Peters received the telephone call in Alma around 8:00 P.M. at the home of a neighbor, accepted the employment, and reported to the job-site the next day. Thereafter, Peters continued to reside in Alma and commuted to and from the jobsite each day. In the meantime, Partain had made arrangements with Holt-Krock Clinic in Fort Smith to furnish ambulances and doctor services for anyone who might be injured on the job. After the explosion, and injury of Peters, the latter was taken to Sparks Hospital in Fort Smith, where, according to Partain, the company had “set up” with the doctors. Employees on the job were paid by check out of a Fort Smith bank.
Partain, a permanent resident of Little Rock, testified that upon completion of the Oklahoma job, the company had a job to do in Little Rock; that the services of Peters being satisfactory, the latter was offered a job when the crew moved to Arkansas.3 The company had no permanent offices in Oklahoma (only a portable field office being maintained at the jobsite), but does have an office at Sweet Home, Arkansas, near Little Rock, the company purchasing the property there in 1968. It does not appear that this office is maintained the year-round, and while there is an office phone, there is no answering service. A shop on the property is used to maintain equipment and trucks. Partain testified that there were three employees on the Oklahoma job from Arkansas. Some other findings considered favorable to appellee were made by the commission, but inasmuch as evidence is not entirely clear on such points, we omit them from this discussion.
Of course, the underlying question is whether the Arkansas Workmen’s Compensation Commission had jurisdiction to make any finding or award. Appellant company is foreign to both Oklahoma and Arkansas, being a Missouri corporation. The commission found that Arkansas did have sufficient contacts with the claimant in order to apply its compensation laws, and in accordance with the principles set out in Tidwell, it must be remembered that where fair-minded men may honestly differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from facts, the drawing of inferences and reaching of conclusions are within the province of the commission. When viewed in this light, we think the evidence substantial that there was a significant relationship with Arkansas.
Professor Arthur Larson presents an excellent discussion of Workmen’s Compensation Laws as they are involved in Conflicts of Laws in 6 Duke Law Journal 1037 (1971), the article being entitled “Constitutional Law Conflicts and Workmen’s Compensation.” Therein, Professor Larson states:
“The conflicts problem in compensation law, as stressed at the outset, is normally not a choice-of-law question at all, since the forum can apply only one statute, that of its own state, and there is thus no occasion or opportunity to engage in a choice of law. The only ‘choice’ the forum has is to grant relief under its own statute or to deny relief altogether. With that pair of alternatives, it is easy to see why some substantial interest should suffice, without worrying about its relative weight when compared with the interests of foreign states.”
He further points out that working uniformity could not be achieved without a simultaneous amendment of all state statutes so that each is a perfect complement of the other, and then says:
“The achievement of such statutory coordination is, of course, entirely improbable; but even if it were possible, there is serious doubt whether the states would find it desirable. The low-benefit states might fear that the operation of a uniform rule would put unpredictable high-benefit burdens on its employers, while the high-benefit states might fear that in certain combinations of facts employees in whom they have an interest would get an unacceptably low level of compensation.
“The only uniformity to be looked for, then, is the uniform right of all states having a legitimate interest in the injury to apply their own diverse rules and standards - separately, simultaneously or successively.”
While some of the items heretofore enumerated bear no particular weight, we think that the overall evidence reflected ample facts to support the award. Of course, there are factual differences between this case and Tidwell, but that itself is of no great moment since the factual background of this type of case will rarely be the same. The most important fact of all is that Peters was a resident of Alma, Arkansas at the time he became employed by Missouri City Stone, Inc. and is still a resident of this state. His ties to Arkansas were demonstrated by the fact that he daily commuted to and from the jobsite. It might also be mentioned that any unemployment benefit to which Peters might be entitled, prior to his injury, because of lack of employment, would have been administered in Arkansas. And, of course, this state is interested in minimizing the likelihood of one of its citizens becoming a public charge or an object of local charity. It is obvious, if Peters should become devoid of financial resources, which state, or its citizens would have the responsibility of taking care of him.
Affirmed.
Fogleman and Jones, JJ., concur. Byrd, J., dissents.At that time, the Arkansas act provided for a maximum weekly payment of 549.00, while the Oklahoma act only provided for payments of 543.00 per week; also, the Oklahoma act has a ceiling, while Arkansas has no ceiling in cases of permanent disability.
It is not entirely clear whether Partain made this call from Wilson’s Rock or Fort Smith, but we do not consider this fact as being particularly pertinent to the issue at hand.
Peters testified that he had intended to go to Little Rock on the job offered.