Court Opinion

ID: 1760912
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 07:20:18.544931+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:50:08.206575
License: Public Domain

380 Mich. 492 (1968)
157 N.W.2d 204
SCHENKEL
v.
TOWER BUILDERS COMPANY, INC.
Calendar No. 3, Docket No. 51,587.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided April 1, 1968.
*493 Running & Wise (Patrick J. Wilson, of counsel), for plaintiff.
Smith, Haughey & Rice, for defendant.
PER CURIAM:
The defendant employer, Tower Builders Company, Inc., was incorporated under the laws of Indiana. Its principal business was that of constructing and repairing radio towers and other high metal structures. In 1961-1962 plaintiff, a resident of Indiana, was one of Tower Builders' employees. He, with other Indiana employees of Tower Builders and certain Michigan-hired employees, was engaged in November of 1962 in erecting a radio tower at Interlochen. The partially constructed tower collapsed, leaving plaintiff a permanent paraplegic. It is unquestioned that the accident and resultant disability arose in the course and out of plaintiff's employment.
Plaintiff sought and obtained, pursuant to the workmen's compensation law of Indiana,[*] all benefits that law provided, including payment of hospital and medical expenses in the amount of $45,258.23. He applied then, under Michigan's workmen's compensation law, for further compensation and payment of continuing hospital and medical expenses. The referee awarded compensation for total disability and directed payment of additional past due *494 medical and hospital expenses. The appeal board affirmed, with modification to "provide all future medical and hospital benefits, as reasonable and necessary." The board stipulated specially "that defendant is to receive credit for weekly benefits heretofore paid under the Indiana workmen's compensation act."
The insurer applied to the Court of Appeals for leave to review. That Court denied the application August 1, 1966. The Federal question considered infra having been duly raised and saved, this Court granted, October 21, 1966, a subsequent application by the insurer for leave to appeal. 378 Mich. 737.
The Federal question, stated by appellant:
"Does the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution[**] bar further action for workmen's compensation benefits under the workmen's compensation act of another State after a valid award of benefits has been rendered under an act so construed as to be exclusive in its application?"
A preliminary question calls for treatment. Appellant claimed below that the Michigan workmen's compensation department has no "jurisdiction over a workmen's compensation claim by a foreign employee employed under a foreign contract of employment who is injured in the State, after he has accepted workmen's compensation benefits under an award in his home State."
The contention is opposed directly by the compulsory feature of part 1, § 2 of our statute, as amended in 1943, which amendment was in force on the date of plaintiff's injury and disablement (CL 1948, § 411.2 [Stat Ann 1960 Rev § 17.142]). It is overcome also by the fact of timely filing with our department of the appellant insurer's required certificate of Michigan coverage. The certificate, filed *495 October 31, 1961, recites that Tower Builders Company, Inc., located in the Republican Building at Angola, Indiana, "has been issued a policy" (by appellant) "covering all the liability imposed upon that employer by the provisions of the Michigan workmen's compensation act for all his employees in any and all of his businesses." The coverage effected by that certificate remained in force, so far as concerns compensable claims arising out of disablements occurring in Michigan, until March 11, 1963.
Our cited statute and the mentioned certificate considered, Crider v. Zurich Insurance Co. (1965), 380 U.S. 39 (85 S. Ct. 769, 13 L ed 2d 641) and the immediate antecedents thereof (Alaska Packers Association v. Industrial Accident Commission of California [1935], 294 U.S. 532 [55 S. Ct. 518, 79 L ed 1044]; Pacific Employers Insurance Co. v. Industrial Accident Commission [1939], 306 U.S. 493 [59 S. Ct. 629, 83 L ed 940]; Carroll v. Lanza [1955], 349 U.S. 408 [75 S. Ct. 804, 99 L ed 1183]) are dispositive of the stated Federal question. As Crider said of Carroll at 41 (85 S. Ct. 769, 13 L ed 2d 641, 643) (bracketing  for illustrative purposes  "Indiana" after "Missouri" and "Michigan" after "Arkansas"):
"Missouri [Indiana] can make her compensation act exclusive, if she chooses, and enforce it as she pleases within her borders. Once that policy is extended into other States, different considerations come into play. Arkansas [Michigan] can adopt Missouri's [Indiana's] policy if she likes. Or, as the Pacific Employers Insurance Co. Case teaches, she may supplement it or displace it with another, insofar as remedies for acts occurring within her boundaries are concerned. Were it otherwise, the State where the injury occurred would be powerless to provide any remedies or safeguards to nonresident employees working within its borders. We do not *496 think the full faith and credit clause demands that subserviency from the State of the injury."
The appeal board's award is affirmed. Costs to plaintiff-appellee.
DETHMERS, C.J., and KELLY, BLACK, T.M. KAVANAGH, SOURIS, O'HARA, ADAMS, and BRENNAN, JJ., concurred.
NOTES
[*]  See 8 Burns Indiana Stat § 40-1201 et seq.  REPORTER.
[**]  US Const, art 4, § 1.  REPORTER.