and was not totally incapacitated for work by reason of the injury. From this decision B. applied to the High Court for enlargement of time for making application for special leave to appeal and for special leave to appeal.
Held, by Dixon C.J. and Kitto J. that the certificate of the medical board concluded only SO much of the issue as concerned the condition of B. at the time of the medical examination and his fitness for employment and whatever was specified " as the kind of employment for which he was fitted, but did not necessarily conclude the issue as to whether B. was totally incapacitated for work, an issue which had to be decided upon a review of the concomitant circumstances in which B. might exercise his residual capacity.
Held further, by Dixon C.J. and Kitto J. (Webb J. dissenting), that B. having a residual capacity for work to the extent of thirty per cent, he must establish that he was totally incapacitated for work in the sense that he was an " odd lot" for whom no work was available and this he had failed to do.
APPLICATION for enlargement of time to apply for special leave to appeal and for special leave to appeal from an order of the Local Court of Western Australia at Fremantle.
This was an application by Marian Fedilio Bavcevie for enlarge- ment of time for making application for special leave to appeal and for special leave to appeal from an order of the Local Court of Western Australia held at Fremantle dismissing an appeal by the applicant from the determination of the delegate of the commis- sioner under the Commonwealth Employees' Compensation Act 1930- 1954.
The facts appear sufficiently in the judgments of the Court hereunder.
F. T. P. Burt (with him L. Davies), for the applicant. The applicant is out of time and this as a result of his having appealed in the first instance to the Supreme Court of Western Australia. That court held that no appeal lay, and, in SO doing, followed its previous decision in Dickie v. The Commonwealth 1-a decision which the applicant unsuccessfully submitted should in the light of The Commonwealth v. Matheson 2 be reconsidered. If he were wrong in this then it was an error of his professional advisers for which he should not suffer. The Commonwealth will not be pre- judiced by the time being enlarged. The application raises important and difficult questions as to the conclusiveness of certifi- cates of medical boards to whom questions are referred under S. 19 of the Commonwealth Employees' Compensation Act 1930-1954.
1(1938) W.A.L.R. 79.
2(1955) 93 C.L.R. 403.