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High Court of Australia |
ARNOTTS SNACK PRODUCTS PTY. LTD. v. YACOB [1985] HCA 2; (1985) 155 CLR 171
Workers' Compensation (N.S.W.)
High Court of Australia
Mason(1), Wilson(1), Brennan(2), Deane(1) and Dawson(1) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Workers' Compensation (N.S.W.) - Partial incapacity for work - Physical disability - Loss of earning power - Workers' Compensation Act 1926 (N.S.W.), s. 11.
HEARING
1984, September 20; 1985, February 5. 5:2:1985DECISION
MASON, WILSON, DEANE and DAWSON JJ. This appeal from the New South Wales Court of Appeal raises the important question whether the concept of incapacity for work in the Workers' Compensation Act 1926 (N.S.W.), as amended ("the Act"), especially as it is expressed in s.11, means (a) physical incapacity for actually doing work in the labour market in which the employee works or may reasonably be expected to work; or (b) physical incapacity resulting in actual economic loss.2. The respondent claimed compensation in the Workers' Compensation Commission of New South Wales ("the Commission") as for total incapacity under s.11(2) of the Act in circumstances which are set out in the judgment of Mahoney J.A. in the Court of Appeal. The respondent was employed by the appellant to do work that was, in the main, clerical, but which involved also, to a limited extent, the climbing of ladders and lifting and manipulation of moderately heavy boxes. On 5 February 1980, whilst so employed, he fell from a chair and aggravated an existing condition in his back. He now has pain and limitation of activities particularly in the lower back. This has an effect on the work which he can reasonably do. He cannot climb or lift boxes. He is unable to do the precise work which formerly he could and did do. However, he can do normal clerical work and, in particular, he can do that portion of his former duties which is purely clerical and does not involve climbing or lifting.
3. Section 11 provides:
"11.(1)(a) In the case of partial incapacity, the weekly payment
shall in no case exceed the difference between the weekly amount
which the worker would probably have been earning as a worker but
for the injury and had he continued to be employed in the same or
some comparable employment, and the average weekly amount he is
earning, or is able to earn, in some suitable employment or
business, after the injury, but shall bear such relation to the
amount of that difference as under the circumstances of the case
may appear proper.
(2) An employer shall provide suitable employment for his
injured worker during the worker's partial incapacity for work but,
if the employer fails to do so, the worker shall be compensated as
if his incapacity for work were total, unless-
(a) where the employer is an employer referred to in section
18C(2) - the Registrar;
(b) where the compensation is payable under Part 11A - the
Registrar; or
(c) in any other case - the insurer, provides, or arranges for,
such suitable employment having regard to the worker's incapacity
and place of abode."
4. On the hearing of the respondent's application to the Commission, O'Meally
J. found that the respondent failed to establish that
he had "a partial
incapacity for work, that is that his physical incapacity affects his ability
to earn on an open labour market."
The judge had earlier found that, though
the respondent's work was "essentially clerical", it involved "an amount of
climbing, lifting
and bending". The learned judge also found that the
respondent suffers "physical consequences of his injury." We agree with
Mahoney
J.A. that the effect of this finding is that the respondent was unable
to undertake the activities of lifting, climbing and bending
which had been
associated with his pre-injury clerical duties. It was because the judge
considered that the respondent was still
capable of performing clerical work
shorn of the additional activities already mentioned that he concluded that
the respondent's
ability to earn was not impaired.
5. It is not altogether clear how his Honour reached this conclusion. But, as we read his brief judgment, it seems that his Honour proceeded according to the second of the alternative meanings of "incapacity" which we expressed at the beginning of this judgment and considered that there was no impairment of the respondent's earning capacity because he could earn as much in the performance of duties which were only clerical as in duties which, though mainly clerical, involved some lifting, climbing and bending. This view of his Honour's findings is supported by his statement that he was not satisfied that the physical consequences of the injury "resulted in any reduced ability to earn on an open labour market", the later comment that there was no evidence of what the respondent would have earned had he remained in the appellant's employ and the concluding observation that the respondent had failed to establish that "his physical incapacity affects his ability to earn on an open labour market." The question is not a matter of present importance because the appellant's challenge is to the correctness of the interpretation which the Court of Appeal places on s.11(2). The appellant, as we understand its case, accepts that, if the Court of Appeal's interpretation be correct, then the Commission erred in law.
6. In the Court of Appeal Mahoney J.A. (with whom Hope and Samuels JJ.A.
agreed) held that the respondent was suffering from "partial
incapacity"
because he "was physically unable to do some of the things which he could do
before, e.g., climbing" and "this inability
affected him relevantly and in his
employment market." Mahoney J.A. specifically rejected the submission that if
the worker is able
to earn by work after the injury as much as he could earn
before, there is no incapacity for the purposes of the Act. His Honour
went
on to say:
"In the present case, the worker could no longer earn wages as aIn saying this, Mahoney J.A. was expressing the view which he subsequently stated in State Rail Authority of New South Wales v. Belgrove (1982) 2 N.S.W.L.R. 738, at p.745, in the proposition that "economic loss is not, as such, part of the concept of incapacity". This led Mahoney J.A. to the conclusion that O'Meally J. had acted on a wrong construction of the Act, that the appeal should be allowed and the proceeding returned to the Commission to be dealt with in such manner as, in the light of the decision of the Court of Appeal, was appropriate.
worker who must climb. The fact that he still could earn as a clerk
who need not climb does not, in my opinion, mean that he was not
partially incapacitated within the Act."
7. When the matter came before O'Meally J. again, he seems to have thought that the return of the matter to the Commission was an unnecessary exercise because the Court of Appeal might itself have made an award. However, it was not inappropriate for the Court of Appeal to return the matter to the Commission for the formal making of an award. O'Meally J. stated that he was unable to recall whether as a result of his injury the respondent could engage in climbing. His Honour's inability to recollect this matter is not material because the transcript of the first hearing shows that it was uncontradicted evidence that the respondent could not engage in climbing and it is not now in dispute that the respondent cannot carry out clerical work which involves climbing. O'Meally J. made an award in favour of the respondent on the footing that he was totally incapacitated, having regard to the provisions of s.11(2) of the Act. The Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from this award and the appellant now appeals from that dismissal.
8. The appellant argues in favour of the second of the alternative meanings of the concept of incapacity for work, contending that the Act distinguishes between the impairment of physical condition resulting from injury and the economic consequences of that impairment so that an applicant for compensation must establish a lost or diminished ability to earn wages for his work in the open market. The appellant then submits that in order to establish partial incapacity for work an applicant must prove that in consequence of the injury his ability to earn wages by working after the injury is less than his ability to earn by working before the injury.
9. Although the expression "incapacity for work" is not defined by the Act,
its meaning has been examined by this Court in Williams
v. Metropolitan Coal
Co. Ltd. [1948] HCA 8; (1948) 76 C.L.R. 431 and Thompson v. Armstrong and Royse Pty. Ltd.
[1950] HCA 46; (1950)
81 C.L.R. 585. In Williams
a majority of the Court (Starke, Dixon and
McTiernan JJ.) rejected the notion that incapacity
for work,
especially in
s.11(1) of
the Act, is limited to incapacity for work in the employment or in
the industry in which the injury
arose
(at p.444, per Starke J.;
p.449, per
Dixon J. with whom McTiernan J. agreed). Both Starke and Dixon JJ. made the
point that
compensation
is awarded for incapacity
for work resulting from
injury, compensation being awarded by reference to incapacity which
results in
a loss of earning power.
Starke J. said (at p.444):
"Compensation is not payable for the injury but for loss of powerAnd Dixon J. observed (at p.449):
to earn caused by the injury, that is, for incapacity for work which
results from the injury. The question is whether the injury has
left the worker in such a position that in the open labour market
his earning capacity in the future is less than it was before the
injury".
"It is a commonplace that incapacity is not total if some otherCentral to these statements especially that of Dixon J. is the view that incapacity for work denotes a physical incapacity for doing work in the labour market in which the employee was working or might reasonably be expected to work, though this incapacity may not necessarily attract compensation under s.11(1) because it results in no loss of earning power.
employment is reasonably open to the injured man. If he is disabled
from his former employment, that in itself implies some incapacity.
But s.11(1) says that in case of partial incapacity, the weekly
payment shall in no case exceed the difference between the amount of
his average weekly earnings before the injury and the average weekly
amount he is earning or able to earn in some suitable employment or
business after the injury. That means that his capacity for other
work is taken into account and in such a way that it may reduce the
compensation to nothing."
10. In Thompson, where the concept of "incapacity for work" in the context of s.9 of the Act - the principal provision providing for payment of weekly compensation - arose for consideration, the majority of the Court (Latham C.J., McTiernan, Fullagar and Kitto JJ.) decisively rejected the proposition that the receipt post-injury of the same or higher wages than those received pre-injury denied the existence of partial incapacity for work.
11. That "incapacity for work" means a physical incapacity for actually doing
work, resulting from injury (or disease) and that,
subject to ss.11 and 13,
compensation is awarded for that incapacity where it reduces the employee's
ability to sell his labour in
the open market, is brought out in the judgments
of the majority, especially those of Latham C.J. and Fullagar J. Latham C.J.
said
(at p.595):
"The phrase 'where total or partial incapacity for work resultsFullagar J. said (at p.613):
from the injury' must refer to physical injury resulting in physical
incapacity for actually doing work. That incapacity is relevant
where it produces an incapacity to earn his living as he did before
the injury (per Evershed L.J. in Ruocco v. Surrey County Council
(1947) 177 L.T. 613, at p.616) in a market for his labour which was
reasonably accessible to him...".
"A man is totally incapacitated for work when he is, by reasonThe same point was made, though less directly, by Kitto J. who remarked (at p.621):
of his injury, physically unable to work. The words in their
natural and primary sense mean that. When their meaning has been
expounded by reference to inability to earn wages, the purpose has
been to make the meaning more specific, and the result has been to
extend rather than restrict the meaning."
"Loss of wages is in most cases a result of, but it does notSee also McTiernan J. (at pp.602-603).
itself constitute, the relevant economic fact. That fact is the
inability, or the reduced ability, by reason of a physical
deficiency, to sell work for wages."
12. The judgments in Thompson were discussed by Jacobs J. (with whom Gibbs,
Stephen and Aickin JJ. agreed) in The Commonwealth v.
Muratore [1978] HCA 47; (1978) 141
C.L.R. 296, at pp.300-301, which related to the Compensation (Commonwealth
Government Employees)
Act 1971 (Cth).
His
Honour said (at p.300):
"It has always been recognized that 'incapacity for work', thoseHe was speaking, as the passage at the foot of p.301 makes plain, of compensable incapacity for work, so that the employee's incapacity is:
words being taken to refer to physical incapacity, is only relevant
where it produces an economic incapacity."
"... measured by the extent that the amount per week that he is
able to earn in some suitable employment or business is less than
his average weekly earnings before his injury."
13. It follows that the concept of partial incapacity for work is that of reduced physical capacity, by reason of physical disability, for actually doing work in the labour market in which the employee was working or might reasonably be expected to work. Under s.11(1), an applicant's entitlement to compensation will depend on his loss of earning power. This flows, not from the concept of partial incapacity for work, but from the nature of the express limitation which the subsection places on the amount of compensation payable. On the other hand, the words "partial incapacity for work" in sub-s.(2) must be given their natural and established meaning, there being no limitation or other restricting context which confines the employer's obligation to offer suitable employment to an injured employee who is suffering actual economic loss.
14. As Fullagar J. indicated in Thompson, the references in the judgments to an incapacity for work which reduces the employee's ability to sell work for wages on the open market have had as their purpose the rejection of the erroneous view that a worker is not partially incapacitated if he can do all the things that he could do before the injury. So, in Ball v. William Hunt & Sons, Limited (1912) A.C. 496, the worker, who had been blind in the left eye, sustained an injury requiring removal of the eye. Although he was able to do all that he had done before the injury, employers were unwilling to employ him. It was held that he was partially incapacitated by injury. It is illegitimate therefore to use the references to reduced ability to sell work for wages as an argument for diminishing the content of incapacity for work.
15. The concept is well illustrated by the example given by Mahoney J.A. of the violinist and the barrister who lose a finger - the violinist suffers a relevant incapacity for work, the barrister does not. This example, instructive though it is for the purposes of this case, is not a comprehensive illustration. The employee may as a result of injury sustain an incapacity for a particular class of work, work in which he was not engaged at the time he sustained injury, being work in which he might reasonably be expected to engage in the future. The problems, especially in the operation of s.11(2), created by incapacity for work of this kind, inherent in the conception of incapacity recognized by Dixon J. in Williams (at p.449), need not be explored here, where the incapacity is for part of the work actually undertaken by the respondent immediately before his injury.
16. The consequences produced by this interpretation of s.11 are far-reaching. They are demonstrated by the illustration provided by Mahoney J.A. of the employer who employs only clerks who can climb. A clerk is injured and can no longer climb. The employer, having no employment for a non-climbing clerk, cannot himself offer suitable employment. Yet the worker is entitled to compensation as for total incapacity under s.11(2) notwithstanding his ability to undertake clerical work which involves no climbing, that such work is available and that he neglected unreasonably to avail himself of it, unless suitable employment is arranged in accordance with the subsection. However, the interpretation which we favour gives effect to the natural and primary sense of the words and to the meaning which has been consistently given to them in this Court and in recent decisions of the Court of Appeal.
17. In the present case because the Commission found that the respondent's injury disabled him from performing part of his pre-injury work, it followed that he was partially incapacitated for work - he was unable to undertake clerical duties which involved climbing, lifting and bending. His incapacity for work, due to injury, was clearly relevant to his pre-injury employment and to his ability to sell his labour on the open market. Potential employers, like the appellant, who have jobs for clerks who are required to climb, lift and bend, would not employ him.
18. Accordingly, the Court of Appeal was correct in holding that the Commission erred in the interpretation which it placed on s.11. The correct interpretation, when applied to the undisputed facts of the case, sustain the award which has been made in favour of the respondent.
19. The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
BRENNAN J. The respondent suffered an injury in the course of his employment
on 5 February 1980. He injured his back. He was employed
at the time by the
appellant, doing clerical work which included the supervising of a store and
the checking of products for despatch.
Some climbing, lifting and bending
were involved in his work. While he was off work recuperating from his injury
somebody else
was employed in his place. Later, he sought other employment
but he was not successful. In reliance upon s.11(2) of the Workers'
Compensation Act 1926 (N.S.W.) ("the Act"), he sought compensation as if he
were totally incapacitated for work. Section 11 reads:
" 11. (1) (a) In the case of partial incapacity, the weekly
payment shall in no case exceed the difference between the weekly
amount which the worker would probably have been earning as a worker
but for the injury and had he continued to be employed in the same
or some comparable employment, and the average weekly amount he is
earning, or is able to earn, in some suitable employment or
business, after the injury, but shall bear such relation to the
amount of that difference as under the circumstances of the case
may appear proper.
(2) An employer shall provide suitable employment for his
injured worker during the worker's partial incapacity for work but,
if the employer fails to do so, the worker shall be compensated as
if his incapacity for work were total, unless -
(a) where the employer is an employer referred to in section
18C (2) - the Registrar;
(b) where the compensation is payable under
Part IIA -
the Registrar; or
(c) in any other case - the insurer, provides, or arranges
for, such suitable employment having regard to the worker's
incapacity and place of abode."
2. The claim was heard by the Workers' Compensation Commission constituted by
O'Meally J. The only issue in contest was whether
the respondent was
partially incapacitated for work. His Honour addressed himself to the
question whether "his physical incapacity
affects his ability to earn on an
open labour market". His Honour found:
" I am not satisfied that (the respondent's condition) hasThe claim was rejected and an award in favour of the appellant was made. The respondent appealed to the Supreme Court. Section 37(4)(a) of the Act confers a right of appeal upon a party to proceedings before the Commission who "is aggrieved by any award ... of the Commission in point of law or in relation to the admission or rejection of any evidence". The decision of the Supreme Court upon the hearing of an appeal is binding upon the Commission and upon all the parties to the proceedings before the Commission (s.37(4)(d)).
resulted in any reduced ability to earn on an open labour market.
The (respondent) is relatively well educated and though he gave his
evidence with a moderately heavy accent, he was nevertheless
articulate and comprehensible. He said that it was his view that he
could carry out clerical work providing he could sit or stand, one
assumes as comfort demands, every couple of hours or so. There is
no evidence before me of what the (respondent) would have earned had
he remained in the (appellant's) employ. But the work he was doing
there was essentially clerical. It is his own view that he is still
capable of performing clerical work and therefore he has, in my
view, failed to demonstrate that he has a partial incapacity for
work as that phrase is understood in the Workers Compensation Act."
3. The appeal was heard by the Court of Appeal. Mahoney J.A., with the
concurrence of Hope and Samuels JJ.A., said:
" In the present case, the worker could no longer earn wagesAn order was made allowing the appeal, setting aside the award and remitting the proceedings to the Commission "to be dealt with in accordance with the decision of this Court". When the matter again came before O'Meally J., his Honour expressed surprise that the Court "did not itself enter the award under s.11(2) which, as I read the judgment, is what I am obliged to do". His Honour made an award in favour of the respondent, apparently in the belief that he was bound to do so. The Court of Appeal had no jurisdiction to make findings of fact that had not been made by the Commission and it had no power to direct the Commission to make an award in favour of the respondent unless the Commission had made or was bound to make the necessary findings of fact. The Court could not substitute a finding of its own for a finding made by the Commission, though it had jurisdiction to set aside a finding made by the Commission if that finding was affected by an error of law. The judgment of Mahoney J.A. may have been thought by O'Meally J. to contain a finding of fact that he was bound to accept. Mahoney J.A. had said, inter alia:
as a clerk who must climb. The fact that he still could earn as a
clerk who need not climb does not, in my opinion, mean that he was
not partially incapacitated within the Act."
" In the present case, the result of the injury was that theBefore O'Meally J. made the award in favour of the respondent, he said that he was unable to remember from the facts of the case whether or not the respondent could engage in climbing, but he said that the respondent was "excluded from work of a heavy labouring nature which would require him to lift heavy weights and engage in repeated flexion of his spine".
worker was physically unable to do some of the things which he could
do before, e.g., climbing. And, in my opinion, this inability
affected him relevantly and in his employment market."
4. An appeal from the award made in favour of the respondent was dismissed by the Court of Appeal without argument. The appellant wished to obtain the ruling of this Court on the meaning of s.11(2). Counsel for the appellant conceded here that the respondent cannot engage in the climbing and lifting activities in which he had engaged immediately prior to his injuries. That concession cannot supply what the Commission alone must have found if the award is to be upheld. On the other hand, it is reasonable to construe the findings first made by O'Meally J. as having been made in a context where the facts which are now conceded were then common ground. His Honour, having recounted the present respondent's evidence that his work involved "an amount of climbing, lifting and bending", found as a fact what had been in contest, namely, that his work "was as he described it". Having regard to that finding and the passage earlier cited from his Honour's judgment, I construe his Honour's findings to mean this: before the injury the plaintiff was doing clerical work that involved some climbing and lifting; after the injury the plaintiff was still able to do clerical work, sitting or standing from time to time for the sake of comfort, but he was unable to do climbing and lifting as he had done before he was injured. But O'Meally J. did not find, on either of the occasions when the proceedings were before the Commission, that the respondent's physical incapacity "affected him relevantly and in his employment market". That was an inference drawn by Mahoney J.A., albeit an inference that is easily drawn once it is found that the respondent's capacity to climb and lift had been used by him in doing his work before the accident.
5. In Ball v. William Hunt & Sons, Limited (1912) A.C.496 Lord Macnaghten
said, at p.501, that incapacity for work means "loss
or
diminution of the
capacity to earn wages in the employment in which the injured workman was
engaged". Perhaps that is too narrow
a test. Regard must be had not only to
the employment in which the injured worker was employed before his injury but
also to other
fields of employment in which he was accustomed to work or in
which he might have been expected to seek and find work in the course
of his
working life. Accordingly, the appropriate question to pose in order to
determine whether or not there is incapacity for
work is "whether the injury
has left the worker in such a position that in the open labour market his
earning capacity in the future
is less than it was before the injury":
Williams v. Metropolitan Coal Co.Ltd. (1948) 76 C.L.R.431, per Starke J. at
p.444. Earning
capacity is not affected if the impaired physical capacity of
the injured worker is irrelevant in the open labour market. Where
a physical
capacity has been exercised by a worker in doing his work, however, an
impairment of that physical capacity would usually
occasion some diminution of
his earning capacity. In competition in the labour market with others whose
capacities are unimpaired,
the injured worker is disadvantaged: his physical
capacity is less than the capacity of an uninjured worker. A diminution in
earning
capacity is not necessarily disproved if the injured worker gains
employment at the same remuneration as he would have received if
he had not
been injured, for diminution of earning capacity is not necessarily productive
at all times of diminished earnings (cf.
Commissioner for Railways (N.S.W.) v.
Agalianos (1955) 92 C.L.R.390, at p.394). In Hawkins v. Australasian United
Steam Navigation
Company Limited (1938) W.C.R.(N.S.W.) 99, at p.112, Jordan
C.J. said:
" The facts, if they are facts, that he is at present able at
times to earn as much as, or more than, he could earn before his
injury, and could now earn on an average more than before his
injury, but for a general shortage of work, are ... evidentiary
facts assisting an inference as to the existence or non-existence of
partial incapacity ... but they supply no conclusion of law
necessarily requiring the inference to be drawn in a particular way
..."
6. Although s.11(1) excludes entitlement to weekly amounts where a partially incapacitated worker earns or is able to earn the amount which he would probably have been earning but for the injury, it is clear that the circumstance that no earnings are lost during a period is not inconsistent with the existence of partial incapacity. The provisions of s.11(1) envisage that a worker may be partially incapacitated for work during a period, though he does not suffer a loss of earnings during that period. Unless one can predicate of a physical incapacity that it is unlikely to cause the injured worker any diminution of earnings during his future working life in comparison with what he would probably have earned if he had not been injured, one cannot say that the injured worker has not suffered a diminution in his earning capacity.
7. Whether a partial incapacity for work entitles the worker to payments of compensation during a period is, of course, a further question. It is true that s.11(2) entitles a partially incapacitated worker who satisfies the conditions of the subsection to be treated as totally incapacitated and to be compensated on that footing, and that loss of earnings is not one of the conditions expressed by the subsection. But a partially incapacitated worker who is fully employed during a period can obtain compensation in respect of that period only under s.11(1), if at all - not under s.11(2). A fully-employed worker does not attract the benefit of s.11(2), either because one of the persons mentioned in pars.(a) (b) and (c) has arranged his employment or because, being in other employment during the period, the worker cannot show a failure by those persons to provide him with employment: see R.J. Brodie (Holdings) Pty.Ltd. v. Pennell (1968) 117 C.L.R.665, at p.669; Dowell Australia Ltd v. Archdeacon (1975) 132 C.L.R.417. A partially incapacitated worker who is not in full employment may be entitled to compensation under s.11(2) or under s.12. In the present case, we are not concerned with the conditions expressed in s.11(2) other than partial incapacity. The case turns on the answer to only one question: did the respondent's incapacity to climb or lift make him partially incapacitated for work? O'Meally J. must be taken to have found that the respondent's injury deprived him of the capacity to perform clerical work of the kind which he was performing before he suffered his injury and that he can perform clerical work, but not clerical work that involves climbing or lifting.
8. The issue of fact that remains to be answered by the Commission is whether it can be said that the respondent's physical incapacity to climb or lift is unlikely to cause the respondent any diminution of earnings during his future working life. Though there is much to be said for the inference drawn by Mahoney J.A., the function of finding that the impairment of physical capacity has diminished the respondent's earning capacity must be left to the Commission. O'Meally J. was wrong to conclude when the proceedings were first before him that, because the respondent retained his capacity to work as a clerk, he had not suffered any diminution of his capacity to earn. Had he found any diminution in his capacity to earn, however small, the operation of s.11(2) would have been attracted. But it was not open to the Court of Appeal to make the finding that the respondent had suffered a diminution of his capacity to earn. The finding of partial incapacity which is necessary to support an award in favour of the worker under s.11(2) is a finding of fact that only the Commission has jurisdiction to make. Although the reasonableness of the inference drawn by Mahoney J.A. was not attacked and was not open to attack, O'Meally J. was not bound to adopt it and was bound to decide whether he drew the same inference. The question whether an impairment of physical capacity has diminished the respondent's capacity to earn awaits determination by the Commission. If the answer is affirmative, the respondent was partially incapacitated and he is entitled to an award. To obtain an answer to the question it is unfortunately necessary to remit the proceedings once more to the Commission.
9. The appeal must be allowed, the second judgment of the Court of Appeal must be set aside and in lieu thereof the second appeal to that Court must be allowed, the award of the Commission set aside and the proceedings remitted to the Commission to be determined according to law.
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
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