Boulevard Electric Sales v. Webb

428 A.2d 11, 1981 Del. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 11, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 428 A.2d 11 (Boulevard Electric Sales v. Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boulevard Electric Sales v. Webb, 428 A.2d 11, 1981 Del. LEXIS 297 (Del. 1981).

Opinion

*12 McNEILLY, Justice:

This Workmen’s Compensation case is before the Court a second time on an appeal by Boulevard Electric Sales (“employer”). Following an injury to his lower back during the course of his work for the employer, Thomas Webb (“claimant”) filed a petition for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board (“Board"). The Board held a hearing on the petition and issued an award of temporary total disability compensation to the claimant in July, 1975. The Superior Court affirmed the award on appeal, but this Court, 385 A.2d 144, remanded the case for supplementation of the record on the issue of “unusual exertion” in light of the then recently rendered opinion in General Motors Corporation v. Veasey, Del.Supr., 371 A.2d 1074 (1977). The Board held a remand hearing in June, 1978, and issued its supplemental findings of fact in July, 1978. In its second opinion, the Board essentially affirmed its prior award finding that the claimant had made a proper showing of “unusual exertion” under the Veasey standard. The Superior Court once again affirmed, and that decision is now before the Court for review. We affirm in part but must reluctantly remand the case for further proceedings.

I

The facts relating to the occurrence of the claimant’s injury are not seriously disputed by the parties. On the day of the incident, while working in his normal capacity as an appliance repairman, the claimant had gone to a residence to repair a customer’s washing machine. In order to gain access to the back of the machine the claimant found it necessary to first move an adjacent refrigerator-freezer (on coasters) away from the wall and then move the washer-dryer away from the wall. In the course of so doing the claimant also had to move a 50 lb. sack of potatoes from in front of the appliances. Upon inspecting the washing machine, the claimant found a defective transmission which he removed from the machine, intending to take the part back to his employer’s premises for repair. He then replaced the appliances against the wall and carried his 40-50 lb. tool box out to his truck. Upon returning to the house, the claimant bent over to pick up the transmission and felt a sudden painful stinging sensation in his lower back. He hesitated momentarily and then proceeded to pick up the transmission and carry it out to the truck. It is this occurrence upon which claimant’s application for compensation was based.

In its first decision the Board made three central findings of fact: that the claimant did not suffer from a back condition or weakness prior to the injury which was the subject of this action; that, assuming ar-guendo the claimant did suffer from a preexisting back problem, he was nonetheless entitled to compensation as the activities which led to the injury constituted “unusual exertion” under the decisional law of Delaware; and that the injury rendered the claimant physically incapable of working as of the time of the first hearing. In affirming on the first appeal, the Superior Court primarily focused on the latter two findings and held that there was sufficient evidence to support the award by the Board. When the first appeal reached this Court, we were concerned that an improper rule of law might have been applied below in the determination of “unusual exertion” and, therefore, remanded the case for supplementation of the record and application of the rule announced in the intervening case of General Motors Corporation v. Veasey, supra.

At the second hearing, held almost three years after the first hearing, the Board understandably but erroneously interpreted the remand order as limiting the scope of its inquiry solely to the issue of “unusual exertion.” The employer sought to introduce evidence tending to show that the claimant was no longer totally physically incapacitated from working, but the Board essentially ruled the matter irrelevant under the terms of the remand order. Thus, the evidence at this hearing was limited to testimony by the claimant concerning his normal employment activities and his activ *13 ities on the day of the injury, and testimony by the claimant’s supervisor concerning the activities normally required of appliance repairmen.

In its second decision the Board, apparently crediting the claimant’s testimony that he had never before had to move a sack of potatoes in order to gain access to an appliance which he was to repair, concluded “that the unusual exertion of moving the bag of potatoes preceded the moving of the refrigerator and the ‘clumsy’ washer and dryer causing the claimant’s back injury.” The Board believed this finding was sufficient to satisfy the Veasey rule and to support the award of compensation to the claimant.

On the second appeal, the Superior Court affirmed the Board’s finding of “unusual exertion” within the scope of the Veasey riile. The Superior Court implicitly recognized, however, that if the Board’s earlier finding of no pre-existing back condition was supported by the evidence, then the claimant was entitled to compensation upon showing an injury resulting from “unusual exertion” during the course of his employment, citing Veasey, 371 A.2d at 1076. The Superior Court further found at least arguable merit in the employer’s contention that the Board at the second hearing should have considered the state of the claimant’s disability through the date of that hearing, given the lengthy passage of time since the initial award. However, the Superior Court also construed this Court’s remand order as limiting the scope of inquiry solely to the Veasey “unusual exertion” issue.

Following this tortured history, the case is back before this Court for full appellate review.

II

As indicated, the Board in its first decision found as fact that the claimant was not suffering from a pre-existing back condition. “[Ujnder the law of this State, a showing of unusual exertion is a prerequisite of compensability where the injury is due, in part at least, to the aggravation of a pre-existing physical weakness.” Milowicki v. Post and Paddock, Inc., Del.Supr., 260 A.2d 430, 432 (1969). On the other hand, where “a claimant is not suffering from a pre-existing condition, ... a showing of ‘usual exertion’ is sufficient for recovery.” General Motors Corporation v. Veasey, supra, 371 A.2d at 1076. Therefore, if the instant record contains substantial evidence to support the Board’s finding of no pre-ex-isting back condition, then the claimant need not have proved “unusual exertion” leading to an injury in order to establish his entitlement to compensation.

Although the employer introduced documentary evidence, in the form of somewhat ambiguous hospital records, to show that the claimant had, in the past, suffered from back problems, the claimant vigorously disputed the accuracy of the information in those records and unequivocally denied ever having any notable problems with his lower back. Thus, a question as to the claimant’s credibility on this factual issue was presented, and it was for the Board as the trier of fact to resolve the credibility question.

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Bluebook (online)
428 A.2d 11, 1981 Del. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulevard-electric-sales-v-webb-del-1981.