Industrial Commission v. Sternat
Industrial Commission v. Sternat
Opinion of the Court
Tlie defendant in error, Prank Sternat, was injured on the 5th day of July, 1916,
It appears that The American Steel & Wire Company elected to compensate its employes for injuries, as provided by Section 1465-69, General Code, and that after the accident it compensated Sternat at the rate of $12 per week until January, 1917, when it refused to give him further compensation. He then applied to the Industrial Commission of Ohio for an order for the payment of compensation by said company, which application was refused. He then appealed to the court of common pleas for this county, as provided by statute (Section 1465-90), and in that court, by the verdict of a jury, he was awarded compensation for the period of 287 weeks at the rate of $12 per week. These proceedings are prosecuted here to reverse that award and judgment upon several assignments of alleged error.
It is urged, first, that there was error in the trial below in the admission and rejection of evidence. We regard the case of Roma v. Industrial Commission, 97 Ohio St., 247, as definitely limiting the right of reviewing courts to reverse awards and judgments of the character before us to such errors as manifestly affect some substantial right of the party complaining. This limitation, by that decision, is particularly directed to questions of evidence and the rules which obtain in respect thereto. It is there said by the court, speaking through Chief Justice Nichols, that the provisions of Section 1465-91,
It is further contended that the verdict of the jury and its award are contrary to law and are not supported by sufficient evidence. This contention presents a more serious question. The jury allowed the plaintiff the maximum sum of $12 per week for a period of 287 weeks, which amount, in addition to that which the plaintiff- had theretofore received under said agreement with the company, made his aggregate compensation the -sum of $3,750. This amount likewise is also the full limit allowed by Section 1465-80, General Code. The evidence discloses that the proximate result of the injuries received by Sternat was the loss of the use of his right arm; and the evidence, considered under the most favorable aspect to him, tends to show that this condition will continue and is permanent. Upon the other hand, very respectable and equally credible medical testimony is to the effect that in time, if not now, he may regain the use of his arm. At any rate, it is clear, we think, from the evidence, that the impair, ment of his ability to earn a living as a result of this injury is no greater than it would be from the loss of the arm by severance from the body, while there
It is said in Roma v. The Industrial Commission, supra, that juries, in cases of this kind, sit as appellate boards of award. They therefore should regard and consider, in making their award, all the statutory law and the rules of the Industrial Commission pertaining to the. particular disability of the party whose case they consider. Further, we conceive it to be the duty of courts to direct and supervise the deliberations of juries in making such awards so as to prevent, so far as possible, any great difference between the amount they determine and the amount which would be allowed by the Industrial Commission under similar conditions and circumstances. An applicant whose claim has been rejected by the commission should not be permitted, by the award of a jury, to receive more than the maximum sum he would receive by an award of the commission for the same injury. If the Workmen’s Compensation Law is administered in any other way, and juries are permitted to make awards unreasonably greater than that which the commission would allow, a condition of affairs would arise that would not be in harmony with the purposes of the law or its efficiency as a medium through which the rights of injured employes may be determined and substantial justice done them. Such conditions would breed contempt for the whole procedure and create dissatisfaction with the work of the commission.
We think this instruction, without any qualification, was misleading and erroneous. The jury should have been informed in this connection that if they found the plaintiff’s injuries had resulted in the loss of the use of his arm, and that such condition was permanent, but would not impair his ability to earn a living to any greater degree than the loss of said member by severance from his body, they ought not to allow a greater sum than that fixed by law for the latter injury, which would be the sum of $12 per week for two hundred weeks. Moreover, the jury should have been instructed further that if his ability to use his arm was not wholly destroyed, but that it could be employed by him in some degree in making a living, they would be justified in allowing even a correspondingly less sum than that allowed for the loss of the arm entirely.
We are, therefore, constrained to hold that the award in this case is not supported by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law, and that the trial court erred in the instructions aforesaid.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.
Reference
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- The Industrial Commission of Ohio v. Sternat
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