Gose v. Monroe Auto Equipment Co.

*183Levin, J.

(dissenting). The doctrine of res judicata bars relitigation of a claim or issue previously adjudicated.

In a prior separate proceeding, in Gose, it was determined that he was not entitled to compensation for loss of the industrial use of his legs. The question now presented is whether this petition seeking compensation for incurable insanity is barred by the earlier determination because both efforts to obtain compensation seek to enforce the same claim of total and permanent disability.

In Sanders it was previously determined that she had not established permanent and total loss of the industrial use of her legs. The question is whether her present petition is within exceptions to the general principle precluding relitigation of a claim or issue previously adjudicated.

Although a reading of my colleagues’ opinions might leave one with the impression that the question that divides us is whether general principles of res judicata apply to workers’ compensation cases, my disagreement with their opinions is grounded in a belief that they have not applied those principles in deciding these cases.

The Court states that the doctrine of res judicata applies in workers’ compensation cases as it does in all other civil litigation and then concludes, without analysis of the doctrine of res judicata, its policies, the facts and circumstances of these cases, the history of the doctrine’s application in general civil litigation or the practice and procedure in workers’ compensation cases, that Gose’s and Sanders’ petitions are precluded.

The Court states as to Gose that "[t]here can be but one claim for total and permanent disability” and that he "was obligated to advance in a single proceeding every alternative basis which could *184support this claim”. Justice Williams would hold that the doctrine of res judicata applies in workers’ compensation cases only to "issues that were actually litigated as a matter of fact”, and since the question whether Gose was incurably insane was not litigated when it was decided that he was not entitled to compensation for loss of the industrial use of his legs, a determination on the merits of his petition for benefits on the ground of incurable insanity is not precluded.

I agree with the Court’s statement that in workers’ compensation cases as well as general litigation the doctrine of res judicata bars all issues adjudicated or adjudicable in respect to a single claim. But that does not decide Gose. Whether one endorses a "narrow” or a "broad” application of res judicata, the question presented is what constitutes the "claim”.

In Gose the Court states — in conclusory terms— that the seven alternative bases of compensation for total and permanent disability (two of which are incurable insanity and loss of industrial use of legs) are but one claim. I would hold that each alternative basis is a separate claim and therefore litigation of one does not preclude subsequent litigation of another.

In Sanders the Court states that it agrees with Justice Williams that Sanders’ second petition is barred because she is asserting the same claim previously adjudicated against her. It fails to respond to her contention that her petition is within exceptions to the preclusion which ordinarily results from previous adjudication. I would hold that Sanders’ case falls within recognized exceptions to the general rule.

I

In 1946 Gose suffered a cut below the left ankle *185and developed an ulceration. The cut never healed completely. In 1953, he fell and reinjured the same area. Thereafter, he was hospitalized several times and underwent skin graft operations. When able, he returned to work for short periods and was given sitting work. In 1960, Gose had to cease work completely. By 1961, he had developed circulatory complications in his right leg and was unable to stand or walk for more than ten minutes without suffering severe pain. In 1962, because of the persistence of the ulceration, his left leg was amputated below the knee. He was fitted with a prosthesis and at times experienced a breaking open of the stump.

Gose became depressed after the amputation and was admitted to Ypsilanti State Hospital. Thereafter he was released and readmitted several times, once for a three-year period ending in May, 1971. He was then placed in a room and board arrangement.

From 1953 Gose received 500 weeks’ general disability benefits. He then petitioned for further compensation and an additional 250 weeks were voluntarily paid. In 1968 he petitioned for total and permanent disability benefits describing the disability as "industrial loss of use of both legs, insanity, total and permanent disability and related injuries”.1

*186A hearing was held December 1, 1969. Gose’s lawyer began with the statement that he was "withdrawing that part of the claim which relates to the claim of insanity. We did not offer proofs in that regard, and we do not want a decision made in that regard. We would like instead for the case to proceed on the allegation of loss of both legs.”

The lawyer for the employer did not object to this withdrawal and request for reservation of decision on the issue of insanity.

The referee awarded benefits for total and permanent disability but the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board reversed because the impairment to Gose’s right leg did not result from the injury which caused loss of the left leg and "therefore such impairment is not the result of the employment relationship”.

Gose then petitioned for total and permanent disability benefits based on insanity.2 The referee *187found that Gose was "incurably insane” and "is permanently and totally disabled”, but that his claim was precluded by the doctrine of res judicata.3

The WCAB affirmed.4

The Court of Appeals reversed by order, citing Morgan v Freedman Artcraft.5

A

Gose’s petition based on incurable insanity is not barred by res judicata unless that petition and his previous petition based on loss of industrial use of both legs seek to enforce a single claim.

*188Before 1954 a worker could recover total and permanent disability benefits if he suffered certain specifically enumerated losses or if he was totally and permanently disabled in fact.6 Neither insanity nor loss of industrial use of legs was specifically enumerated.7 Since amendment of the workers’ compensation act in 1954, "the issue of total and permanent disability is not one of fact but whether plaintiffs injuries come within one of the enumerated losses set forth”8 in the act.

The single claim, based on total and permanent disability in fact, was abolished when the Legislature substituted seven specifically enumerated alternatives as the exclusive bases for recovery. While the seven alternative bases continue to be *189referred to collectively as "total and permanent disability”, those words are now only a shorthand expression of a category of entitlements. They have no operative effect and their deletion would not change the meaning of the act. With or without those words, the act provides that in the seven described situations the Second Injury Fund shall pay differential benefits and there is an 800-week conclusive presumption of disability. To continue to give meaning to the words "total and permanent disability” is contrary to the amendment’s purpose of discontinuing compensation for total and permanent disability in fact and providing compensation where any of the seven distinct statutory bases is established.

Since the operative effect of the words "total and permanent disability” has been eliminated, all that links the seven alternative bases for the 800-week conclusive presumption and differential benefits are that they are enumerated in the same subsection of the act.

Although I disagree with Justice Williams’ statement that in workers’ compensation cases the doctrine of res judicata is limited to issues actually litigated as a matter of fact, the tendency of his statement may be more accurate than the majority’s statement. In disassociating itself from his statement, the majority states that all matters "arising out of the same transaction” must be presented at one time to avoid "piecemeal compensation for an injury.”

If what is meant by "issues actually litigated” is "claim actually litigated”, rather than the facts presented in support of or opposition to the claim, then Justice Williams’ formulation would be more accurate than the Court’s statement that renewed litigation and "piecemeal compensation” are incon*190sistent with the proper administration of the workers’ compensation law. The Court does not explain why the "transaction” necessarily defines the scope of the claim, nor does it define the term "transaction” or what it means by "same transaction”.9 Further, the Court’s statement that requiring the worker to "present all of his available claims in a single proceeding is consistent with this purpose of adjudicating the worker’s needs” fails to consider the history of and present practice in the administration of the workers’ compensation law and overstates the scope of the preclusion resulting from prior litigation.

Although the Court stresses that Gose’s second application, as did his first, seeks compensation for disability arising from injury to his left ankle, that is of little or no importance. Unlike a personal injury claimant, a workers’ compensation claimant is not obliged to present all claims arising out of a single injury in one proceeding. He may, for example, seek first to recover 162 weeks’ specific loss benefits for loss of a foot and, in a subsequent proceeding after payment of those benefits, seek general disability benefits arising out of the same injury; the applications seeking benefits for loss of the foot and for general disability assert separate claims for res judicata purposes although they arise out of the same transaction, there was no change in physical condition and the facts supporting both claims were known when the first pro*191ceeding was instituted.10 Similarly, a totally disabled worker suffering one of the seven enumerated losses may choose to seek general disability benefits first and to defer his specific loss claim. Often the hearing on a general disability claim takes place years before the worker applies for a hearing on a claim for loss of industrial use of legs arising out of the same injury. The hearing on loss of industrial use of legs is frequently deferred until the conclusion of the 500-week period. At the deferred hearing, there is no inquiry whether there has been a change of condition since the general disability hearing. Renewed litigation and piecemeal compensation are thus characteristics of workers’ compensation proceedings.

B

The Court states:

"There can be but one claim for total and permanent disability. Although the statute recognizes seven alternative bases for it, evidence establishing more than one basis would occasion only one award.”

One can agree that there can be only one award for total and permanent disability without concluding that there can be but one claim for such compensation arising from a single accident. Generally, there is but one right to compensation for a loss. A judgment successful in securing compensation will merge with the loss. This is so not because a plaintiff is entitled to only one chance to secure damages but because he is entitled to be compensated only once. A claim which would not have been barred had the plaintiff failed may *192nevertheless be merged in the judgment should he prevail.11 The question before us is whether a claim will be barred where the plaintiff has failed in a prior suit, and this requires that we determine if the second suit is based on the same claim.

The Court continues:

"Gose’s second petition, although upon a different basis (insanity instead of industriad loss of use of both legs), nonetheless seeks compensation for the same claim of total and permanent disability arising from injury to his left ankle. He was obligated to advance in a single proceeding every alternative basis which could support this claim.”

Gose was obligated to advance in a single pro*193ceeding every alternative basis which could support "this claim” only if there was truly one claim.

Under the workers’ compensation act a "cause of action” or "claim” is the sustaining of a compensable disability by the employee. Compensable disabilities are strictly and narrowly defined by the act and are the basis of any entitlement. An accident resulting in an injury gives rise to no right to compensation unless a compensable disability ensues.

The Court defines the claim as one "of total and permanent disability arising from injury to his left ankle”. (Emphasis supplied.) There is, however, no such claim. Gose suffered an injury to his left ankle, and may have been totally and permanently disabled in fact as a result, but he would have had no claim to differential/800-week conclusive presumption benefits for "total and permanent disability arising from injury to his left ankle” unless he sustained a disability specifically enumerated in the pertinent section of the act, e.g., loss of industrial use of both legs or incurable insanity.

Suppose a worker suffers a totally disabling occupational disease which also causes him to lose industrial use of both legs. He can, under the occupational disease section, petition for general total disability benefits; if he prevails he cannot by claiming total and permanent disability collect further compensation from his employer for the total disability (although such a claim may entitle him to differential benefits from the Second Injury Fund). He has suffered one total disability and can recover only one award for that loss. He has, however, suffered the disability under circumstances which give rise to two claims.

*194Because he makes claims asserting distinct statutory entitlements, his inability to prove one claim is no bar to his assertion of the other although he bases both claims on the same injury. In the one case he seeks to prove a total disability due to causes and conditions which are characteristic of and peculiar to the business of the employer and hence a right to compensation under ch 4 of the act. In the other he seeks to prove a work-related permanent and total loss of industrial use of both legs and thus a right to compensation under ch 3. If it is determined in his first suit that his disability is work-related but is not an occupational disease or disability, relitigation of those issues is precluded but that does not preclude the other claim — a claim for permanent and total loss of industrial use of both legs.

Gose’s claim based on insanity is no less a separate claim because it is derived from the same statutory section as his prior claim. In the one case he seeks to prove work-related loss of use of both legs, in the other work-related insanity.

Gose’s accident allegedly caused two compensable disabilities and, therefore, he had two claims. He was under no obligation to litigate them together.12

*195c

Although prior and present practice do not require presentation of all claims arising out of the same injury or transaction in one proceeding, the Court might promulgate such a requirement. Whether it should do so is a policy question which the Restatement suggests should be determined "pragmatically”.13 While no single factor is determinative, the Restatement provides and the cases indicate that trial convenience is often the determinative factor with the focus on "how far the witnesses or proofs in the second action would tend to overlap the witnesses or proofs relevant to the first”.14

Manifestly, Gose’s proofs tending to show incurable insanity do not overlap his proofs in the earlier proceeding attempting to show loss of industrial use of legs. The injury to the leg and its *196work connection are the only areas of overlap; an aspect of the doctrine of res judicata (collateral estoppel) bars relitigation of those issues. The proofs are so distinct and unrelated because Gose’s petitions, although both for differential/8Q0-week conclusive presumption benefits, seek to enforce separate claims under the act.

In contrast with a personal injury action, the inquiry in a workers’ compensation case is generally whether a disability compensable under the act has been established and not whether or how the injury occurred. It is the disability, rather than the injury or accident, which best defines the scope of a workers’ compensation claim.

The workers’ compensation act changed the nature of the remedies to which one injured in his employment is entitled. The worker need not prove that the employer was negligent or otherwise at fault. The focus is the disability and not the breach. The central point of litigation in ordinary negligence actions is thus absent from a workers’ compensation case. It is replaced by the employment nexus and the compensable disability.

There are three basic elements of proof: i) the worker must establish that he has suffered a disability compensable under the act — that he is, for example, incurably insane; ii) the compensable disability which he suffers must have been caused by the accident or exposure; iii) the accident or exposure which caused the compensable disability must have a sufficient employment nexus to be deemed to have occurred in the course of the employment.

The first and second elements focus exclusively on the specific compensable condition. Only the third looks to the circumstances of the accident or exposure. In most cases, as here, the worker will *197be injured on the premises and there will be no question that there is an adequate employment nexus. The contest will center on whether the worker suffers from the disability he alleges and whether that disability is due to the accident or exposure.

One of the goals of res judicata — trial convenience and the efficient use of adjudicative resources — would be defeated by requiring that claims for separate compensable disabilities be joined.

The disability question is ordinarily presented through expert testimony, often difficult and, for both sides, costly to assemble. It is unnecessarily burdensome to require a worker who seeks differential/800-week conclusive presumption benefits on alternative bases — "total and permanent loss of sight”, "incurable insanity”, "permanent and total loss of industrial use of legs” — to present expert testimony on all three grounds when he anticipates prevailing on one. Requiring the worker to do so also obliges the employer to assemble expert testimony on all grounds.

Adjudication in one proceeding of multiple bases for recovery would be unruly, for all the various claims would have in common is that they all involve injury to the same worker. For each compensable disability alleged, the compensable condition — loss of sight, insanity, loss of industrial use— would have to be proved as would its work-relatedness. The result would be a series of essentially separate cases all being heard together.

If the worker prevails on what he perceived to be his strongest claim, the additional investment of time and money will prove to have been unnecessary. If the worker were not required to bring all ripe claims together, he may have petitioned on *198his strongest claim alone, secured benefits and never put himself or his employer to proofs on the other claims. Adjudication in one proceeding of multiple bases for recovery will not promote trial convenience. It will needlessly extend workers’ compensation proceedings.15 Because the common area of contest is so small when compared to the areas of separate issues and proofs, the common origin of disabilities in a single injury or accident should not be the measure of a "claim” for res judicata purposes.16

Lawyers and judges familiar with personal injury cases, seeing the parallel between a negligence action and a workers’ compensation proceed*199ing in that both are grounded in a personal injury, may be inclined to think in terms of the simplicity of one trial and the finality resulting from a lump-sum verdict and, in an effort to achieve the same neatness, to overlook the differences between the legislative scheme for compensating work-related injury and the common-law system for compensating other personal injury.

In a negligence action the trial unit is the accident. Usually that an accident occurred is undisputed — two cars collided, a person tripped. The contest centers on the cause of the accident (which car failed to yield, whether the floor was slippery) and whether the cause was attributable to a breach of duty (whether it was negligent to have failed to yield, whether a reasonable person would have mopped the floor). Litigation is focused on the facts of the accident and all claims relating to it must be joined. The effort is to determine who is at fault. Once that is determined the innocent or less culpable party is entitled to damages. He need not fit his injuries into pigeonholes.

In a negligence action, the trier is required to predict the likely future complications and damages and to ascertain a lump sum to compensate for past, present and future damages. There is no modification of the verdict even where the passage of time proves the prediction erroneous, and a second suit for damages resulting from the same breach is not permitted even if there has been a change in physical condition or other circumstance. In this context, the defendant is entitled to rely on the plaintiffs having presented all claims arising from the breach. He only expects to have to defend one suit.

In a workers’ compensation proceeding that an accident occurred will also likely be undisputed. *200But this is where the similarity ends. There is no door-opening issue similar to the determination of fault in a negligence action. No rights or liabilities can be determined by examining the accident All that needs to be known about the accident is that it is work-related, and this is usually capable of ready determination. A worker who proves that he was injured in his employment must still prove that he suffers a compensable disability. The trier does not award a lump sum; awards are subject to modification as circumstances change. The employer does not expect that one hearing will finally resolve the claim; there may be, on the application of either party, countless hearings over the years.

Nevertheless, when a worker alleges a compensable disability, he is required to present all issues related to that claim. If he claims loss of industrial use of both legs, he must present all theories which support that claim. The employer may justifiably expect that his liability for the condition of the worker’s legs will finally be determined unless circumstances change. But where the worker has suffered two compensable disabilities, he need not seek compensation in a single petition, even when the disabilities originate in a single accident or occurrence.

The two hearings in Gose seem like hearings in separate cases because two distinct claims were heard. In one the question was whether Gose had suffered loss of the industrial use of his right leg as well as his left, and whether that loss of the use of his right leg was traceable to his accident. In the other, the inquiry was whether Gose was insane and whether that insanity was due to his leg amputation or to the death of his brother or a physiological disorder.17

*201Although the Court asserts that application of civil litigation res judicata principles compels the result in this case, it does not consider how those principles have been applied in civil litigation. Recent cases in Michigan and elsewhere have placed great weight on differing factual bases for the two claims said to be one and on the extent of duplication of evidence in determining whether an action is barred by res judicata.18 Application of *202civil litigation res judicata principles supports the conclusion that Gose has two distinct claims, separately litigable.

D

For still another reason, Gose’s claim is not barred. His claim that he is incurably insane was not adjudicated in the first hearing, nor was it abandoned. It was withdrawn with the specific request that no "decision [be] made in that regard”. Had Gose wished to abandon that claim he would have had no need to withdraw it from consideration because he would have been indifferent to a ruling in the employer’s favor. A lawyer for the employer was present when the claim was withdrawn. He could then have objected. Instead, he remained silent and thereby waived any right to assert prejudice in the future.

The defense of res judicata may be waived by the defendant. It is for his protection and he will *203not be heard to assert it where he has failed to make proper objection to the splitting of a claim.19 A similar principle applies under the General Court Rules in civil litigation.20

Had the employer voiced objection to Gose’s withdrawing his insanity claim, Gose might have submitted the issue for a decision on the merits, or secured an adjournment in order to gather more proofs. He would have been warned that he might, by withdrawing the matter from adjudication, be said to be abandoning it altogether. Instead he was made to believe that there would be no barrier to his submitting the insanity claim at a later date should he so choose. The employer waived any defense based on res judicata.

II

Louise Sanders injured her back on November 10, 1960. Her back condition forced her to cease working in April, 1963. During the next three years she underwent several operations. From April, 1963 to October, 1965 she received workers’ compensation benefits voluntarily paid.

In September, 1967 she petitioned for benefits alleging permanent and total loss of industrial use *204of both legs. Testimony at the hearing showed that Sanders suffered a back injury in the course of her employment, had several operations as a result, and at the time of the hearing in 1968 could not stand for more than five minutes or walk significant distances without experiencing severe back pain and leg spasms.

The hearing referee found that Sanders’ "back problem” was an "occupational disease disability” and awarded 500 weeks’ benefits. He further found that she "failed to sustain the burden of proof to establish total and permanent disability as defined by the statute”. She did not appeal.

Sanders’ 500-week general disability benefits ran out November 11, 1972. On December 6, 1972, she petitioned for further benefits, claiming total and permanent disability due to the loss of industrial use of both legs.

The hearing referee found her to be "totally and permanently disabled through the industrial loss of use of both legs”.

The WCAB held that the issue of total and permanent disability was litigated in 1968 and, absent a change in Sanders’ physical condition, the issue could not be relitigated. It found no change in her condition from 1968 to 1974. It also rejected her claim that a change in the law, like a change in facts, precludes operation of the doctrine of res judicata and therefore reversed.

The Court of Appeals vacated the WCAB’s order and remanded for reconsideration.21

*205A

Justice Williams states that only a change in Sanders’ physical condition would permit reopening the question whether she lost the industrial use of her legs and that since the WCAB found there was no such change it cannot be reopened. The Court states that it agrees with his result.

The Restatement provides that where the issue is one of law and a new determination is warranted in order to take account of an intervening change in the applicable legal context or otherwise to avoid inequitable administration of the laws there is an exception to the general preclusion resulting from prior litigation:

"Although an issue is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment, relitigation of the issue in a subsequent action between the parties is not precluded in the following circumstances:
♦ * *
"(b) The issue is one of law and * * * (ü) a new determination is warranted in order to take account of an intervening change in the applicable legal context or otherwise to avoid inequitable administration of the laws.” Restatement 2d, Judgments (Tentative Draft No. 1), § 68.1, p 170.

*206Neither the Court nor Justice Williams indicates why this general exception22 to the rule of preclusion should not be given operative effect in workers’ compensation cases.

Justice Williams relies on Hlady23 where a majority of the Court concluded in dictum that a change in law does not eliminate the bar of res judicata. In a concurring opinion I responded to that dictum.24 Hlady did not reflect any consideration of the authorities which recognize exceptions to the general rule of preclusion. It is therefore not a persuasive basis for dismissing, without further discussion, Sanders’ claim. The cases relied on in Hlady held only that the general doctrine of res judicata precludes relitigation of issues of law as well as issues of fact and do not consider or purport to decide whether an exception may be justified if there is a change of law. Those cases do not address the question whether the exceptions to the general rule of preclusion apply to issues of law as they do to issues of fact.

Justice Williams writes that "[a]bsent a change in claimant’s physical condition, these [1968] findings are res judicata”. (Emphasis supplied.) In Theodore v Packing Materials, Inc,25 decided after Hlady, this Court recognized that a change of *207circumstances other than a change in physical condition could be a proper basis for reopening and modifying an award and held that the doctrine of res judicata did not bar reopening where there had been a change in the status of a dependent: "Just as one’s physical condition may change with the passage of time, so too can one’s status vary from one day to the next.” (Emphasis in original.)

I said in Hlady:

"Workmen’s compensation disability benefits, like social security and unemployment compensation benefits, are a form of income maintenance for persons whose wage-earning capacity has been suspended or terminated. A claimant’s entitlement to such benefits depends on the circumstances at the time of application and payment.
"A change in law, statutory or judge-made, like a change in fact, can effect a change in circumstances justifying, upon application of worker or employer, an award of benefits or termination or suspension of benefits previously awarded.
"The right to workmen’s compensation disability benefits depends on whether, at a given point in time, the claimant is within the statutory intendment. The scope of that intendment is subject to change. A determination that a claimant is not today entitled to disability benefits does not preclude reexamination of his entitlement should the facts or the law, by legislative amendment or court decision, change tomorrow.”26

Recognizing an exception for a change in law would not be a one-way street favoring workers alone. This Court, in Red fern,27 recently overruled *208the Court of Appeals Sprute28 test which had been applied by the WCAB in a number of cases both to award and to deny benefits for incurable insanity or imbecility. An employer or its insurance carrier should not be required, to continue to pay benefits after an intervening decision establishes that an erroneous rule of law was applied in making an award. Like a change in physical condition or status, such a decision should relieve the employer of the further obligation to pay benefits.

B

The testimony offered in support of the first petition for compensation indicated that Sanders injured her back at work in 1960, that the injury was aggravated by twisting and turning at work, that she had to cease working in 1963 and undergo several operations, and that at the time of the hearing in 1968 she could not stand, walk, or sit for long periods of time. The referee found that although she was totally disabled she did not prove a loss of industrial use of both legs.

In 1963 this Court decided Paulson.29 Paulson could not walk without experiencing severe pain in his lower abdomen. This Court held that he could recover for loss of industrial use of both legs although there was no proof of direct injury to the legs.30

Sanders’ injuries were not squarely within the perceived holding of Paulson.31 The WCAB confined Paulson to cases where the disability was *209traceable to the use of the legs per se. In Lockwood,32 the WCAB had found that Lockwood, who, through industrial related hearing loss, suffered disabling vertigo whenever he moved or walked, was not within Paulson because his disabling symptoms were not traceable to use of the lower limbs per se but "[were] due to an impairment of the balance mechanism in his inner ear which [was] aggravated by any movement and/or noise”.

The Court of Appeals reversed the WCAB in 1970 and that decision was approved by this Court in 1974 in Burke, which amplified and consolidated the tests in Paulson and Lockwood to include as a loss of industrial use of both legs a case where the use of a leg or legs triggers an employment-related injury or malady in another part of the body that causes pain or other condition that prevents use of both legs in industry.33 Thus, Paul-son had not fully evolved to include Sanders’ asserted condition at least until 1970; a change in law occurred after the initial 1968 determination.

C

The instant case is distinguishable from Hlady *210and should not be governed by the majority dictum of that case.

Hlady lost four fingers and recovered schedule benefits for 100 weeks. When those benefits ran out she further petitioned for benefits due to loss of industrial use of her hand and for general disability. She was denied benefits because she failed to establish "any further disability over and beyond the natural consequences of the loss of her four fingers on the right hand”. The Workmen’s Compensation Commission reversed, finding "that the plaintiff has lost the industrial use of her right hand as the result of her amputations”. This Court reversed because, "[notwithstanding plaintiff claimed that the amputation of her fingers resulted in disabling 'sequelae’ and 'general disability’, the commission found none except disability which normally follows such amputations”.34 Hlady did not challenge the legal principle that compensation beyond the schedule benefits could only be had where the loss was greater than normally follows loss of the fingers.

In 1967, 18 years later, Hlady again petitioned for benefits. There was no change in her physical condition, only a change in the law — in 1957 this Court had decided Van Dorpel35 which allowed compensation for loss of use or general disability even where the disability normally follows such amputations.

This Court held Hlady’s second petition barred by res judicata:

"Plaintiff may not concede an issue, necessarily determinative of and included in the judgment of this Court, and then, after another has successfully raised the issue *211she did not wish to contest, ask the Court again for relief. The doctrine of res judicata bars this from happening. Mary Hlady could have as easily raised this issue as Peter Van Dorpel. It was, in fact, incumbent upon her to do so if she wished to avail herself of that interpretation.”36

It is one thing to say that a claimant may not frame a factual issue so as to concede a point of law, litigate that factual issue through the courts without contesting the law, lose on the factual issue which determination necessarily included the conceded point of law, and then attempt to relitigate almost two decades later when another party has succeeded in changing the law. It is quite another thing to hold that a claimant who petitioned for benefits advancing a legal interpretation later accepted by the courts, whose petition was awarded upon another theory and who chose not to appeal that favorable award, is barred from later petitioning for further benefits when the interpretation previously advanced becomes law.

The rationale of Hlady, that a plaintiff should not be able to concede a point of law in one litigation and later obtain relief when another has successfully challenged and worked a change in the law, has no place in this case. Sanders’ original petition alleged total and permanent disability attributable to her legs, back and nervous system. She offered evidence that any significant sitting, standing or walking caused her leg spasms and disabling back pain. Thus, implicitly, she made the claim, later accepted by the Court of Appeals in Lockwood and this Court in Burke, that a leg-related disability associated with another part of the body can constitute loss of industrial use of both legs even though the disability is also aggra*212vated by activities other than walking and even though it is not related to the legs per se.

Hlady’s claim was barred because she failed to raise the issue. Sanders’ claim is to be barred because she did raise the issue. Had Sanders initially petitioned for and been granted total disability benefits due to general disability and thereafter, as is often done, petitioned for continued benefits based on the loss of industrial use of both legs, she would not have been required to show a change in physical condition since the award of general disability benefits.

The doctrine announced in Hlady should not be extended to this case. When Sanders’ 500 weeks’ benefits for total disability ran out and she re-petitioned for benefits based on her original claim for loss of industrial use of both legs, her claim should have been judged by the legal standard operative at the time of her second petition and she should not have been penalized because an earlier petition upon the same claim failed under a different and more restrictive legal standard.

D

The referee at the first hearing determined that Sanders’ evidence did not establish loss of industrial use of both legs. He did, however, find total disability due to an occupational back disability. Sanders did not appeal this determination.

It might be argued that, having raised the issue of total and permanent disability, Sanders was obliged to appeal an unfavorable determination on that issue. However, it is unrealistic to expect a worker advancing one theory, rejected by the referee, who secures benefits on a different theory to appeal that favorable determination of a compensable disability and entitlement to compensation.

The Restatement provides that an issue resolved *213in a previous litigation should not be foreclosed in a subsequent litigation where "the party sought to be bound did not have an adequate opportunity or incentive to obtain a full and fair adjudication in the first proceeding”.37 "The lack of incentive to appeal is a factor to be considered in determining whether the party sought to be bound had a 'full, fair opportunity to litigate.’ ’,38 An example given by the Restatement is where "the amount in controversy in the first action may have been so small in relation to. the amount in controversy in the second that preclusion would be plainly unfair. * * * [C]onfined within proper limits, discretion to deny preclusive effect to a determination under the circumstances stated is central to the fair administration of preclusion doctrine.”39

The first decision denying Sanders benefits for total and permanent loss of industrial use awarded her general disability benefits. Thus, in holding that she had not established entitlement to total and permanent disability benefits, the referee denied her no current compensation other than differential benefits payable by the Second Injury Fund.

*214If Sanders had appealed she would have risked reversal of the award and, at the very least, would have been further delayed in receiving general disability benefits.40 Appellate litigation is costly, time-consuming and uncertain. Sanders may have urgently needed the weekly general disability benefits awarded. She may not then have had the fortitude or the wherewithal to carry the battle forward to the Court of Appeals and this Court.41 Foreclosing her from relying on subsequent appellate decisions because she did not do so ignores that she may not have prevailed on appeal simply because both the Court of Appeals and this Court may not then have seen the merits as they were to be ultimately seen in Lockwood and Burke and may have denied leave to appeal.42

There is still another factor which should be weighed in deciding whether the second petition should be barred. Although it does appear, as Justice Williams points out, that the primary focus at the first hearing was on the seriousness of her incapacity — whether she had suffered a "total loss” — rather than its permanence, the referee did not identify what led him to conclude that Sanders had failed to establish permanent and total loss of industrial use. Having in mind the practice of frequently making that decision as of the expira*215tion of the 500-week period and that the first decision in Sanders’ case on the issue of total and permanent loss of use was made earlier than it is often made, there is no reason to suppose that the referee recognized that his decision might be final and preclusive.

As a result of his decision, Sanders would receive as general disability benefits precisely what she would receive had she prevailed on the larger question, except that she would not receive differential benefits from the Second Injury Fund. The referee may have seen his decision as interlocutory and may, despite what appears, to be the focus of the inquiry, have had doubts about permanence, which is a prediction more readily made after the passage of time.

The factual determination of permanency is a prediction of the likely duration of a disability. One who is found to have lost the industrial use of both legs is conclusively presumed to be totally and permanently disabled for 800 weeks. It is understandable that a referee would make such a finding cautiously.

In predicting the duration of a disability, a lengthy period of past disability is a fact to be considered and may be persuasive. A disability of four years presents a different factual circumstance than a disability of nine years. The later assessment is of a disability which has persisted. Thus, passage of time is itself a change of circumstances justifying a redetermination. Unless one can say with greater certainty than appears on this record that in finding against Sanders the referee found that she had not suffered a total loss, she is entitled to reassessment of her claim under the doctrine which permits relitigation where circumstances have changed.

The doctrine of res judicata expresses a policy which is best served by consideration of the partic*216ular circumstances of the case at hand. Having in mind

—that the first determination occurred earlier than might be expected and that because general disability benefits were awarded all that was then at stake was differential benefits,

—the disincentives to appeal: delay, possible reversal of award, need for the money,

—the likelihood there would have been no appeal because leave would have been denied,

—the possibility that the referee viewed his decision as interlocutory and not final,

—the referee’s failure to indicate whether his decision was because of insufficient proofs on permanency or on total loss,

—that if on permanency the passage of time is itself a change of circumstance,

—that if on total loss an intervening decision of this Court changed the legal climate in which that decision should be made,

I would hold that in this case the policies which the doctrine of res judicata seeks to serve do not require that Sanders be denied benefits which the testimony and the referee’s finding at the second hearing indicate she is entitled to receive.

Finality is desirable, but the nature of workers’ compensation is such that it is not a controlling consideration. Employers, their insurance carriers, employees, and their dependents necessarily live in a world of non-finality. Except possibly for compensation payable for a fixed number of weeks for a specific loss, an award or denial of benefits may always be reopened if there has been a change in physical condition, status or other circumstances. Workers’ compensation is income maintenance payable periodically, and when the factors giving rise to the entitlement or justifying denial change, the result, too, should change.

I would affirm both Gose and Sanders.

Gose’s deposition was taken. He testified to the 1946 and 1953 injuries to his left leg and the treatment and amputation. He also testified to problems with his right leg beginning in 1961. He could not stand or walk on the right leg without experiencing pain. He was unable to use his right leg for more than ten minutes and had to rest for significant periods between uses.

The deposition of Dr. Lipton was also taken. He testified that Gose’s left leg was amputated below the knee due to a skin ulceration caused by the injuries suffered in 1946 and 1953. In addition, he diagnosed obliterative arterial circulatory disease of the right limb. This was evidenced by a swollen and tender calf, the absence of a pulse in the right foot, and severe pain in that area. *186Dr. Lipton testified to a third diagnosis — chronic psychosis. This was not further developed on direct. On cross-examination it was revealed that his diagnosis was based on the diagnosis of the doctors at Ypsilanti State Hospital, the slowing of Gose’s mental processes observed by him in an interview and Gose’s impaired memory. He was questioned regarding the possibility that Gose suffered from some form of epilepsy.

At the hearing, the depositions of Gose and Dr. Lipton were offered in evidence. The employer offered a letter from a doctor at Ypsilanti State Hospital who confirmed Dr. Lipton’s diagnosis of Gose’s right leg problem but expressed his opinion that it was not related to the industrial injury to his left leg.

At the hearing, Gose offered the deposition of a psychiatrist who testified in part:

"Diagnostically I felt that he was suffering from a depressive reaction associated with anxiety. His condition arises or is caused by his industrial accident. He has a history of schizophrenic reaction, paranoid type which, apparently, at the time I saw him was in remission. Although his brother’s death worsened his depression, I feel that its primary cause was the accident and amputation loss of his leg. I felt that his prognosis was poor due to aging, and that he may require psychiatric hospitalization again in the future.”

Defendants also offered the deposition of a psychiatrist. In his opinion, Gose suffered from organic brain syndrome which was due to *187a circulatory deficiency. He did not feel that Gose’s mental illness was related to his injury at work.

Gose testified to the events of his injury and leg amputation and to the severe depression he felt afterwards. He could not get a job, felt useless and felt like killing himself. He was cross-examined about possible seizures he might have had in 1964 and 1966.

"Plaintiff is incurably insane as determined by court decisions and is permanently and totally disabled. (Sprute v Herlihy Mid-Continent Co [32 Mich App 574; 189 NW2d 89 (1971)].) The concept of a triable issue has been raised as part of the defense of res judicata. This has been rejected by the court on many occasions, but I find that it has application to the instant case. The prior order of the Appeal Board shall therefore control.”

"In the brief on appeal, the plaintiff construes the quote in the prior board opinion as an exclusion, by the board, of the issue of insanity and reservation thereof for future trial. We reject that construction.

"It is not unusual for the parties, at trial before the referee, to drop various injury dates, add new ones and sometimes either augment or delete claims made in the petition. Often a board decision will simply note these alterations in the pleadings.

"Plaintiffs petition sought the designation of total and permanent disability on the basis of alleged qualification under certain definitive provisions of the statute. The claim for total and permanent designation was pursued to a conclusion even though one of the issues, insanity, was abandoned by plaintiff.

"The referee correctly concluded that the concept of triable issue has application to the instant case.”

Morgan v Freedman Artcraft, 401 Mich 54; 257 NW2d 85 (1977). This CouVt held that where "[t]he evidence available to the referee prior to his first decision was incomplete on” the issues, the first decision was not res judicata.

See Springer v Seed Foundry & Machine Co, 346 Mich 11; 77 NW2d 252 (1956); Edwards v Michigan Light Alloys Corp, 346 Mich 169; 77 NW2d 567 (1956). See fn 7, infra, for the statutory language as it read before the 1954 amendment.

The 1954 amendatory language replaced the following provision:

"The loss of both hands, or both arms, or both feet, or both legs, or both eyes, or any 2 thereof, shall constitute total and permanent disability, to be compensated according to the provisions of section 9.” 1949 PA 238.

The following is the text of the relevant portion of the act as amended in 1954 and further amended in 1956, adding clause 7:

"Sec. 10. * * * Total and permanent disability, compensation for which is provided in section 9 hereof, means:

"(1) Total and permanent loss of sight of both eyes.

"(2) Loss of both legs or both feet at or above the ankle.

"(3) Loss of both arms or both hands at or above the wrist.

"(4) Loss of any 2 of the members or faculties enumerated in (1), (2) or (3).

"(5) Permanent and complete paralysis of both legs or both arms or of 1 leg and 1 arm.

"(6) Incurable insanity or imbecility.

"(7) Permanent and total loss of industrial use of both legs or both hands or both arms or 1 leg and 1 arm; for the purpose of this subsection (7) such permanency to be determined not less than 30 days before the expiration of 500 weeks from the date of injury.” MCL 412.10; MSA 17.160, as amended by 1956 PA 195.

Hier v Boichot Concrete Products Corp, 379 Mich 605, 612; 153 NW2d 753 (1967). See Verberg v Simplicity Pattern Co, 357 Mich 636; 99 NW2d 508 (1959); Liesinger v Owen-Ames-Kimball Co, 377 Mich 158, 164, fn 5; 139 NW2d 706 (1966).

See Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 5, 1978), pp 142-143:

“The expression 'transaction, or series of connected transactions,’ is not capable of a mathematically precise definition; it invokes a pragmatic standard to be applied with attention to the facts of the cases. And underlying the standard is the need to strike a delicate balance between, on the one hand, the interests of the defendant and of the courts in bringing litigation to a close and, on the other, the interest of the plaintiff in the vindication of a just claim.”

See fn 15, infra, and accompanying text.

See Kubiak v Briggs Manufacturing Co, 286 Mich 329; 282 NW 427 (1938).

In Herendeen v Champion International Corp, 525 F2d 130 (CA 2, 1975), plaintiffs previous suit seeking pension benefits under an oral agreement was held no bar to a subsequent suit for benefits under a theory that he had acquired vested rights during his years of employment. While acknowledging that the same alleged right to receive benefits was involved in both cases, the court found that res judicata did not apply because the judgment in the second action would not conflict with the first, there was no "measure of identity” between the facts and issues in the two cases, and substantially different evidence was required for proof of the separate theories of liability. Surely, had the plaintiff prevailed in his first suit, he could not again seek the same pension benefits on a different theory.

In Casey v Musgrave, 72 Nev 31, 34; 292 P2d 1066 (1956), res judicata was not found to bar a suit by plaintiff for the value of his services on a ranch though he had earlier tried and failed to establish a partnership in the ranch based on the same services. The court stated "it is not enough, however, that the same circumstances and transactions have, in general, given rise to both cases”. Certainly his claim for the value of his services would have merged with a favorable judgment of a partnership based on the same services.

Fairwood Bluffs Conservancy Dist v Imel, 146 Ind App 352; 255 NE2d 674 (1970), concerned an easement for a sanitary sewer which overflowed onto the Imels’ property. After failing in an action alleging fraudulent inducement and seeking rescission of the easement and damages, the Imels commenced a second action claiming that the sewer was a nuisance and asking for abatement and damages. The court found that the common factual predicate of the sewer overflow did not call for application of res judicata because the evidence necessary to sustain the two suits substantially differed. But had plaintiffs succeeded in their first suit for rescission and damages, they could not have maintained another action based on nuisance seeking additional damages.

"It has been held that an award of compensation for an injury to one member or one portion of the anatomy is not a bar to a subsequent application for an injury to another member or portion of the anatomy, sustained in the same accident, out of which the original award arose.

"* * * [I]n Skelly Oil Co v Gage, 167 Okla 329; 29 P2d 616 (1934), the court said: 'Where a claim is made for compensation for certain specified injuries, and the commission awards for some of these injuries and does not award for others, we will not apply the rule of res judicata to those injuries not mentioned in the award, but will presume that the commission did not intend to adjudicate upon them at the time.’ ” Anno: Workmen’s Compensation Awards — Res Judicata, 122 ALR 550, 589.

In Spencer’s Case, 123 Me 46; 121 A 236 (1923), it was held that where the original agreement for compensation specified the injury as *195"amputation first and second fingers left hand”, the order approving such agreement was not res judicata, in a later petition for benefits for permanent impairment of the left thumb. The injury apparently existed at the time of the first petition. See Anno: Workmen’s Compensation: time and jurisdiction for review, reopening, modiffcation, or reinstatement of award or agreement, 165 ALR 9, 48.

In Hill v Conroy Brothers Co, 306 Minn 358; 237 NW2d 606 (1975), the employee sustained lower back injuries in April and October of 1966. He was awarded benefits for temporary toted disability and 30% permanent partial disability. At hearing, the employee’s lawyer requested that the question of his toted and permanent disability due to the back injury aggravating a pre-existing emotional condition be reserved and no findings were made on that issue.

The employer claimed that the later petition for total and permanent disability was barred by an earlier determination that the disability was not related to the employment. The court held that the issue was reserved and not passed upon by the referee and that address of the subject by two workers’ compensation commissioners in the mistaken belief that the claim had been presented and litigated did not make the claim for total and permanent disability res judicata. See, also, Westendorf v Campbell Soup Co, 309 Minn 550; 243 NW2d 157 (1976).

Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 5, 1978), §61, comment b, pp 142-143.

Id.

Vestal endorses the view that pragmatic considerations, especially trial convenience, should govern the determination of a "single claim”:

"Another approach might be to analyze the facts in terms of trial convenience and the best use of the time of the judiciary. Judge Clark suggests the use of such a pragmatic test, stating:

“ 'The extent of the cause is to be determined pragmatically by the court, having in mind the facts and circumstances of the particular case. Such extent may be settled by past precedents; but the controlling factor will be the matter of trial convenience, for that is the general purpose to be subserved by these procedural rules. Such purpose should be considered not from the vantage point of the study, but from the courtroom, looking at the facts as they will be presented at the actual trial.’ [Clark, Code Pleading (2d ed), p 137.]” Vestal, Res Judicata/Preclusion (included as an appendix to Personal Injury Annual — 1969 [NY: Matthew Bender]), pp V-46 — V-47.

James and Hazard note that a narrow definition of what constitutes a single claim may well be advantageous:

"Where, however, claims are factually quite distinct so that there will be no overlap in presenting evidence to support them, much less is to be saved by trying them together, or including them in a single lawsuit to be tried separately. Indeed, trying them together may cause confusion and prejudice. And an insistence that factually distinct claims should all be included in the action may have other disadvantages. For one thing it will tend to make the parties scrape the bottom of the barrel to find and include possible claims which they are not willing to have altogether cut off as a result of their own affirmative conduct (in bringing suit), although the same parties may be willing to let these claims drift if their hand is not forced. This kind of compulsion, in other words, may tend to make parties litigate their potential claims to the utmost.” James & Hazard, Civil Procedure (2d ed), p 543.

No doubt Gose himself, or his lawyers, saw two distinct claims. This is relevant to proper application of the doctrine:

*201"By examining the motive of the plaintiff and the reasonable expectations of the parties, it may be possible to decide whether or not the second action should be allowed — stated in a different way, whether or not the plaintiff is guilty of proscribed repetitious litigation.

"It may be discovered that the plaintiff who was successful in Suit I is bringing the second suit because (1) he did not get the extent of recovery which he felt he was entitled to, (2) he is seeking different relief, (3) he believes that the second suit involves a factually different claim. If the motivation of the plaintiff is either (1) or (2) then it would seem that he is suing on the same claim. Only if he believes that this is a different factual situation, is there some ground for saying, under this approach, that he may be allowed to maintain the second suit.” Vestal, fn 15 supra, pp V-47 — V-48.

In Sheridan Drive Ass’n v Woodlawn Backproperty Owners Ass’n, 29 Mich App 64; 185 NW2d 107 (1970), plaintiffs, whose property was contiguous to a road which in turn was contiguous to a lake, sought a determination of their riparian rights. The Court held that res judicata did not bar the suit though the question of backlot owners’ rights of access to the road had previously been litigated:

"The evidence that established the existence of rights in Sheridan Drive is not the same that determines plaintiffs’ riparian rights in the lake.” Id., pp 68r69.

The Court utilized the test adopted in Rose v Rose, 10 Mich App 233, 236, 237; 157 NW2d 16 (1968):

"The test for determining identity of claims is set forth in 30A Am Jur, Judgments, § 365 [p 407]:

" 'In the application of the doctrine of res judicata, if it is doubtful whether a second action is for the same cause of action as the first, the test generally applied is to consider the identity of facts essential to their maintenance, or whether the same evidence would sustain both. If the same facts or evidence would sustain both, the two actions are considered the same within the rule that the judgment in the former is a bar to the subsequent action. If, however, the two actions rest upon different states of facts, or if different proofs would be required to sustain the two actions, a judgment in one is no bar to the maintenance of the other.’ ”

In Mango v Plymouth Twp, 33 Mich App 715; 190 NW2d 285 (1971), *202plaintiffs brought a mandamus action contending that a residential zoning ordinance was unconstitutional and seeking a permit to construct new commercial buildings on their property. In the alternative, plaintiffs sought a permit under the ordinance to repair the existing commercial buildings on their property. At a pretrial conference, plaintiffs abandoned their request for a permit for repairs. The ordinance’s constitutionality was upheld. Plaintiffs’ subsequent suit seeking a permit for repairs was held not barred by res judicata, despite plaintiffs’ previous opportunity to litigate the total effect of the ordinance on their commercial property, because "it is clear that the facts and evidence necessary to attack the constitutionality of the ordinance are different from those necessary to establish plaintiffs’ rights thereunder”. Id., p 718.

In Collins v Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp, 106 F2d 83, 86 (CA 2, 1939) (Clark, J., concurring), claims that a movie entitled "Test Pilot” infringed upon the copyright of a book entitled Test Pilot and constituted unfair competition by use of the same name, were found to be distinct and independent because of "the severability of the issues”. Judge Clark in concurrence emphasized the differing factual bases of the claims and the different evidence needed to support the claims despite the fact that they both related to the release of the one movie.

See cases in fn 11, supra.

"When any of the following circumstances exists, the general rule of § 61 does not apply to extinguish the claim, and part or all of the claim subsists as a possible basis for a second action by the plaintiff against the defendant:

"(a) The parties have agreed in terms or in effect that the plaintiff may split his claim, or the defendant has acquiesced therein.” Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 5, 1978), § 61.2(1), p 184.

"The parties to a pending action may agree that some of the claim shall be withdrawn from the action with the understanding that the plaintiff shall not be precluded from subsequently maintaining an action based upon it. The agreement will normally be given effect.” Id., comment a, p 186.

See Mango v Plymouth Twp, supra, fn 18.

See Rogers v Colonial Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n of Grosse Pointe Woods, 405 Mich 607; 275 NW2d 499 (1979).

Sanders v General Motors Corp, 80 Mich App 190; 263 NW2d 329 (1977).

The Court of Appeals assumed the WCAB’s finding of no change in condition was correct, but held the WCAB nevertheless misapplied the doctrine. It saw two possible interpretations of the original compensation award. The referee might have found that Sanders was totally disabled but that a determination of permanency was premature. The fact that the disability persisted through 1972 was further *205evidence of permanency and might have satisfied the second referee on the issue.

Another possible interpretation of the decision explaining the first award is that the referee found a total disability but did not find a "loss of industrial use of both legs” as he conceived of that statutory phrase. At the time of Sanders’ first hearing, the principle that a back injury which prevents use of the legs could qualify as a "loss of industrial use of both legs” had not been fully accepted nor consistently applied. If this were the basis of decision, the majority opinion in Hlady v Wolverine Bolt Co, 393 Mich 368; 224 NW2d 856 (1975), would bar relitigation of the identical claim under a new legal standard.

The Court of Appeals could not determine which was the actual basis of decision and so adopted the interpretation most favorable to Sanders. It reversed and remanded to the WCAB.

Casad, Res Judicata, § 5-4, p 130; Vestal, supra, pp 247, 413. Christian v Jemison, 303 F2d 52, 55 (CA 5, 1962), where it was claimed that the suit was barred by res judicata because of an earlier identical suit brought by one of the plaintiffs:

"The Supreme Court has many times declared 'the general rule that res judicata is no defense where between the time of the first judgment and the second there has been an intervening decision or a change in the law creating an altered situation.’ State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins Co v Duel, 324 US 154, 162; 65 S Ct 573; 89 L Ed 812 (1945); Blair v Comm’r, 300 US 5; 57 S Ct 330; 81 L Ed 465 (1937).”

Hlady v Wolverine Bolt Co, fn 21 supra.

id., p 384.

Theodore v Packing Materials, Inc, 396 Mich 152, 158; 240 NW2d 255 (1976).

Hlady v Wolverine Bolt Co, fn 21 supra, p 391.

Redfern v Sparks-Withington Co, 403 Mich 63; 268 NW2d 28 (1978).

Sprute v Herlihy Mid-Continent Co, 32 Mich App 574; 189 NW2d 89 (1971).

Paulson v Muskegon Heights Tile Co, 371 Mich 312; 123 NW2d 715 (1963).

Id., p 319.

Paulson’s disability was intimately related to the use of his legs:

"Testimony of the treating physician * * * assigned the disability to the presence of a fistula tract, with pain resulting from any pressure being borne by either leg.” Id.

*209Also, his right leg became numb when he attempted to walk.

Sanders suffers pain in her hack when she sits as well as when she stands and walks. The muscle spasms which she suffers in her legs do not cause her pain.

Lockwood v Continental Motors Corp, 27 Mich App 597; 183 NW2d 807 (1970).

Burke v Ontonagon County Road Comm, 391 Mich 103, 114; 214 NW2d 797 (1974). This Court said:

"There is permanent and total loss of industrial use of both legs where, inter alia,

"1. An employment-related injury in one or both legs causes pain or other condition that prevents use of both legs in industry.

"2. The use of one or both legs, whether or not injured, triggers an employment-related injury or malady in any part of the body, including one or both legs, that causes pain or other condition that prevents use of both legs in industry.”

Hlady v Wolverine Bolt Co, 325 Mich 23, 25; 37 NW2d 576 (1949).

Van Dorpel v Haven-Busch Co, 350 Mich 135; 85 NW2d 97 (1957).

Hlady v Wolverine Bolt Co, 393 Mich 368, 380; 224 NW2d 856 (1975).

Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 1, 1973), § 68.1, Comment j, p 183.

Casad, supra, § 5-58, p 226.

"Although an issue is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment, relitigation of the issue in a subsequent action between the parties is not precluded in the following circumstances:

"(a) The party against whom preclusion is sought could not, as a matter of law, have obtained review of the judgment by an appellate court in the initial action.” Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 1), § 68.1(a), p 170.

"As noted in § 68, Comments h and i, the availability of appellate review for .the correction of errors has become critical to the application of preclusion doctrine. If appellate review is unavailable because the party who lost on the issue obtained a judgment in his favor, the general rule of § 68 is inapplicable by its own terms.” Id., Comment (a), p 171. See fn 42.

Restatement Judgments, 2d (Tentative Draft No. 1, 1973), § 68.1, Comment j, p 183.

The statute (MCL 418.862; MSA 17.237[862]) requiring an employer to pay 70% of benefits awarded pending completion of any appeal had not then been enacted.

The restrictive interpretation given by the WCAB to Paulson (see fns 31 and 32 and accompanying text) made it unlikely that a more favorable decision would have been obtained except from the Court of Appeals or this Court.

I can readily visualize Court of Appeals judges or Justices of this Court declining to review because the referee had awarded all the benefits that the claimant could currently obtain (other than differential benefits) without considering a possible preclusionary effect after expiration of the 500 weeks. This case is thus analogous to the situation where a party cannot as a matter of law obtain review of an adverse judgment by an appellate court — another exception to the general rule of preclusion recognized by the Restatement. See fn 38.