Andrade v. Mintell

229 A.2d 50, 102 R.I. 148, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 660
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 28, 1967
DocketAppeal No. 85
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 229 A.2d 50 (Andrade v. Mintell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrade v. Mintell, 229 A.2d 50, 102 R.I. 148, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 660 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

*149 Roberts, C. J.

This is an employee’s original petition for compensation for incapacity resulting from an occupational disease as provided in G. L. 1956, §'28-<34-3. After a hearing thereon, a trial commissioner entered a decree ordering payment of compensation for partial incapacity; and from this decree both the petitioner and the respondent appealed to the full commission. The full commission *150 thereafter entered its decree sustaining the appeal of the petitioner in part and denying the appeal of .the respondent, and from this both the petitioner and the respondent have prosecuted appeals to this court.

The record discloses that petitioner had for some time prior to May 12, 1965 been employed (by respondent as a sewing machine operator. On that date, petitioner testified, she stopped working because of pain and swelling in her right wrist and did not work again except for a short period between June 1, 1965 and June 4, 1965. There is in the record medical evidence that the operation of the sewing machine involved movements of petitioner’s right hand and wrist which caused the development of tenosynovitis in her right wrist.

In the course of the hearing it was disclosed that petitioner had worked from February 13, 1965 to April 3, 1966 for another employer for as much as 20 hours a week doing exactly the same type of work that she was doing for respondent here. A medical witness testified that the doing of this extra work for another employer probably contributed to the development of the tenosynovitis. The trial commissioner, while commenting on her second job 'as a contributing factor, found that she had “* * * sustained a tenosynovitis of the right wrist due to the nature and conditions which are characteristic and peculiar to her work as a sewing machine operator * * and that such injury constituted an occupational disease that arose out of and was referable to her employment.

The full commission found that petitioner had developed tenosynovitis, an occupational disease, affecting her right wrist in the course of her employment and thereby became partially disabled as of May 12, 1965. They found also that petitioner’s average weekly wage was $90 and that as of May 12, 1965 petitioner “* * * has been able to earn wages at other occupations such as baby sitting, operating an *151 elevator, 'light 'housekeeping’ which are neither unhealthy nor injurious to her and to earn the sum of not less than $50.00 weekly * * The respondent was also ordered to pay for medical services according to the provisions of the statute and to pay expert witness fees and counsel fees in specified amounts.

The respondent argues, first, that it was error not to apportion the compensation for the incapacity established between the employers. He argues that uncontradieted and unimpeached evidence establishes that the disease resulting in her incapacity was caused in part by her employment with the second employer. In so arguing, respondent directs our attention to the reasoning in Hunt v. Builders Iron Foundry, 76 R. I. 152, and in Shurick v. Ames American Co., 96 R. I. 181. He rejects the case of Gehring v. Nottingham Lace Works, Inc., 82 R. I. 190, contending that the incapacity here resulted from an occupational disease, whereas in Gehring it was a petition for death benefits where the employee had died in an airplane disaster.

We are unable to agree that Gehring is not in point. There, just as in the instant case, a beneficiary claimed death benefits where the deceased employee had been employed by two distinct employers under concurrent but separate contracts of employment. In Gehring we concluded that because the statute made no provision for apportionment between such employers, we would not read a requirement for such apportionment into the act, commenting that the matter was one for legislative action. At page 195 of the opinion we said: “However, in our opinion the contracts of his employment with the instant respondents were concurring contracts, not joint, thus giving rise to a separate claim for compensation against each corporation. Clearly the terms as to wages and the time ’allotted to each corporation were distinct and different. Each corporation paid him independently for his services to it. In the cir *152 cumstanees each should -be held separately liable on its own contract of employment.” This applies with equal force to the present case. Gehring was decided in 1954, and to date the legislature has not acted to- provide for such an apportionment as between concurrent but separate employers. In the circumstances we see no valid reason for departing from the rule laid down in Gehring.

In both Builders Iron Foundry and in Shuriek, supra, this court was considering the proper application of a statute, now G. L. 1956, §28-34-7, which provides in express terms for an apportionment of compensation where the occupational disease is but one of two or more contributing causes of the incapacity, the others being noncompensable. What we decided in Builders Iron Foundry was that the statute establishes no formula for such an apportionment on the basis of the relative values of several contributing causes and, therefore, “* * * the gap in the statute must be filled, if reasonably possible, by a liberal interpretation and application of the pertinent provisions in order to give some effect to the express intent of the statute.” Clearly, the rule in Builders Iron Foundry applies a statute which requires such apportionment where the occupational disease is but one of the contributing causes to the incapacity.

In Shurick v. Ames American Co., supra, we considered that same statute and the manner in which it should be applied to an award for medical expenses. The statute makes no reference to medical expenses spciifically but only to compensation. However, this court, following the concept of applying the statute liberally in order to- give some effect to the express intent thereof, decided, sub silentio, that medical expenses were within the meaning of the word “compensation” as set out in the statute and that, therefore, such medical expenses would of necessity be- apportioned on the same basis as compensation.

The respondent further argues that the commission erred *153 in awarding petitioner counsel fees and fees for expert medical witnesses. He contends, as we understand him, that such fees, provided for in §28-35-32, as amended, apply only to proceedings brought under that 'chapter. Said §28-35-32, as amended, he points out, provides • that counsel fees and fees for medical experts shall be awarded “In proceedings under said chapter,” the reference being obviously to chap. 35, which is entitled “Workmen’s Compensation— Procedure.” This argument overlooks the fact that a petition to recover compensation for incapacity resulting from occupational disease is a proceeding under chap. 35 of title 28.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 A.2d 50, 102 R.I. 148, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrade-v-mintell-ri-1967.