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Toney v. Parker Drilling Co.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Feb 9, 1982
1982 OK 17 (Okla. 1982)

Summary

In Toney v. Parker Drilling Co., 1982 OK 17, 640 P.2d 1356, the Oklahoma Supreme Court was presented with the question of whether the denial of temporary total disability benefits presented a reviewable decision.

Summary of this case from Exterran Holdings, Inc. v. Abonza

Opinion

No. 56280.

February 9, 1982.

Petition for review from the Workers' Compensation Court, Mary Elizabeth Cox, J.

On Certiorari to the Court of Appeals, Div. 1.

Proceeding by claimant to review an order of the Workers' Compensation Court, Mary Elizabeth Cox, Trial Judge, denying an award for temporary total disability. Treating denial of temporary disability compensation as non-reviewable interlocutory action, the Court of Appeals dismissed the proceeding. This court granted certiorari.

OPINION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; PROCEEDING FOR REVIEW REINSTATED; TRIAL JUDGE'S ORDER SUSTAINED.

Jamie Pitts, Manners, Cathcart Lawter, Oklahoma City, for petitioner.

John N. MacKenzie and Richard G. Mason, Foliart, Mills Niemeyer, Oklahoma City, for respondents.


The primary issue on certiorari is whether the Court of Appeals erred when it dismissed this case upon concluding that denial of temporary total disability presents interlocutory judicial action of the Workers' Compensation Court which is not reviewable under the provisions of 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 § 3.6[ 85-3.6] B. We hold that this proceeding is prosecuted from a reviewable decision and should hence be reinstated.

Reviewability of judicial decisions in a compensation case is measured by statutory criteria quite different from those applicable to judgments or orders of the district court. Generally, a reviewable compensation decision is one which "makes or denies an award" or otherwise constitutes "a final determination of the rights of the parties". It is not critical to reviewability that the allowance or denial of an award put an end to the litigation. Every order granting or refusing compensation — no matter how far removed from the ultimate termination of the claim — is reviewable if failure to appeal from it, or to seek review of it, will make the decision impervious to reconsideration and hence "final". In this context finality does not mean a quality of being terminal. Rather, it describes an attribute of being no longer within the reach of the trial tribunal's power to re-examine.

McCallum Forber v. Owens, 184 Okla. 66, 85 P.2d 411 [1938]; Reid v. Phillips Petroleum Co., Okla., 531 P.2d 340, 341 [1975].

Marland Refining Co. v. Bivins, 135 Okla. 14, 273 P. 212, 213 [1928]; Royal Mining Co. v. Murray, 167 Okla. 460, 30 P.2d 185, 187 [1934]; Hughes Motor Co. v. Warner, 187 Okla. 255, 102 P.2d 594, 595 [1940].

The unmistakable terms of the Workers' Compensation Law command in 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 § 26[ 85-26] — as well as in all the versions of that section in force before the last amendment in 1977 — that the trial judge "make or deny an award". Ever since the original enactment of that section, its last sentence has made any decision so reached final unless appeal to the trial tribunal or review in this court be timely commenced. By so explicitly clothing with the attributes of finality every order allowing or denying compensation, the provisions of § 26 manifestly recognize that all such orders may be appealed to a three-judge panel under 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 § 3.6[ 85-3.6] A or be reviewed in this court under 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 § 3.6[ 85-3.6] B.

In pertinent part § 26 provides that ". . . [t]he Court . . . shall make or deny an award determining such claim for compensation. . ." [emphasis supplied].

Marland Refining Co. v. Bivins, supra note 2, 273 P. at 213; Royal Mining Co. v. Murray, supra note 2; Hughes Motor Co. v. Warner, supra note 2.

This time-honored concept of reviewability survives intact all the sweeping legislative revisions in our compensation law which were effected by the 1977 amendments. 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 §§ 1[ 85-1] et seq. Neither in the pertinent text of 85 O.S.Supp. 1977 § 3.6[ 85-3.6] — the section that replaced the provisions of 85 O.S. 1971 §§ 29[ 85-29] and 77(9) — nor elsewhere in the amendatory act is there any language modifying the pre-1977 case law test of reviewability.

A denial of temporary total disability — the decision tendered by this case for our corrective relief — is clearly "final". This is so because failure to appeal from it, or to have it reviewed, makes that decision "binding and conclusive" upon the parties.

Johnson v. L S Bearing Company, Okla., 463 P.2d 986, 988 [1969]; Guy James Construction Co. v. Harris, Okla., 434 P.2d 150 [1967]; Amerada Petroleum Corporation v. White, 179 Okla. 82, 64 P.2d 660 [1937]; Hannah v. Oklahoma State Highway Commission, 172 Okla. 221, 45 P.2d 53 [1935]; Hughes Motor Co. v. Thomas, 149 Okla. 16, 299 P. 176 [1931].

There was clearly error in the dismissal of this proceeding.

We have carefully reviewed the medical reports in the record and find that the trial tribunal's denial rests on competent expert evidence. The order is hence beyond our power to disturb.

Green Country Restaurant v. Carmen, Okla., 579 P.2d 1281 [1978].

Opinion of the Court of Appeals vacated; proceeding for review reinstated; and trial judge's order denying compensation sustained.

IRWIN, C.J., BARNES, V.C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS and DOOLIN, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Toney v. Parker Drilling Co.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Feb 9, 1982
1982 OK 17 (Okla. 1982)

In Toney v. Parker Drilling Co., 1982 OK 17, 640 P.2d 1356, the Oklahoma Supreme Court was presented with the question of whether the denial of temporary total disability benefits presented a reviewable decision.

Summary of this case from Exterran Holdings, Inc. v. Abonza
Case details for

Toney v. Parker Drilling Co.

Case Details

Full title:SAMMY J. TONEY, PETITIONER, v. PARKER DRILLING COMPANY, EMPLOYERS NATIONAL…

Court:Supreme Court of Oklahoma

Date published: Feb 9, 1982

Citations

1982 OK 17 (Okla. 1982)
1982 OK 17

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