Bryan v. Sheraton-Hartford Hotel

774 A.2d 1009, 62 Conn. App. 733, 2001 Conn. App. LEXIS 177
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedApril 17, 2001
DocketAC 19615
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 774 A.2d 1009 (Bryan v. Sheraton-Hartford Hotel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan v. Sheraton-Hartford Hotel, 774 A.2d 1009, 62 Conn. App. 733, 2001 Conn. App. LEXIS 177 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

CALLAHAN, J.

The defendants, the Sheraton-Hartford Hotel and the Insurance Company of North America, appeal from the decision of the compensation review board (board) affirming an award by the workers’ compensation commissioner for the first district (commissioner) to the plaintiff, Benita Bryan, which attributed a 10 percent permanent impairment of her left shoulder to an injury incurred while she was working for the defendant Sheraton-Hartford Hotel. On appeal, the defendants claim that (1) the board improperly affirmed the commissioner’s decision because the record lacks evidence supporting the award and (2) the commissioner and, in turn, the board, violated the defendants’ due process rights to be heard and to pres[735]*735ent evidence. We agree with the defendants and reverse the decision of the board.1

The following undisputed facts are relevant to this appeal.2 On or about December 23, 1989, while employed by the defendant Sheraton-Hartford Hotel, the plaintiff fell at work and suffered compensable lower back injuries.3 As a result, from 1989 through 1991, she received various temporary total and partial disability benefits. Subsequently, the parties entered into a voluntary agreement regarding the plaintiffs work-related injury, which the commissioner approved on February 18, 1992. The voluntary agreement stipulated that the plaintiff’s December 23,1989 fall resulted in a 7.25 percent permanent partial disability to her lower back. There was no reference to any disability of her left shoulder in the stipulation.

After the parties entered into the voluntary agreement, the plaintiff allegedly began to suffer from additional medical problems, including pain in her left shoulder. Claiming that those additional infirmities resulted from her December 23, 1989 fall at work, and thus should be accounted for in the amount of her disability benefits, the plaintiff sought a formal hearing before the commissioner.

[736]*736A hearing addressing the plaintiffs claims was held on June 21, 1995. At the hearing, one of her treating physicians testified that certain gynecological and gastrointestinal disorders alleged by the plaintiff were unrelated to her fall at work. Further, the defendants submitted several medical reports from the plaintiffs treating orthopedist, Steven E. Selden. Selden’s several reports, which were dated as late as April, 1994, stated that the plaintiffs left shoulder injury was not a result of her fall at work on December 23, 1989. Rather, it was his opinion that her left shoulder injury was attributable to a fall that had occurred in December, 1993, or to two separate automobile accidents in which she was involved, those having occurred in March, 1989, and September, 1991.

The commissioner dismissed the plaintiffs case on March 28,1996, finding that her gynecological, gastrointestinal problems and her left shoulder injury were unrelated to her December 23, 1989 work-related fall. The commissioner specifically concluded that the plaintiff had failed to “sustain her burden of proof that her shoulder complaints are related to the December 23, 1989 work-related injury . . . .”

On December 16, 1996, the plaintiff appealed to the board from the commissioner’s decision and filed a motion to submit additional evidence. Specifically, the plaintiff sought to submit a medical report from Selden, dated April 12, 1996, and a report dated November 25, 1996, from another physician, Susan Levine, who had treated the plaintiff for chronic fatigue syndrome. Selden’s medical report of April 12, 1996 stated: “Patient had previously been assigned a 12% permanency to her left shoulder. Patient’s records are currently in storage. Ten percent of the patient’s permanency should be considered attributable to her Workmans’ Compensation injury of December, 1989.”

[737]*737On March 12, 1997, the board denied the plaintiffs motion as to Levine’s report,4 but permitted her to submit Selden’s report because it contradicted the commissioner’s previous finding concerning the plaintiffs left shoulder. In granting, in part, the plaintiffs motion, the board stated: “We, therefore, grant the [plaintiffs] motion to submit additional evidence limited to the report from Dr. Selden dated April 12,1996, and remand this matter to the trial commissioner.”

At the hearing on the remand, the defendants introduced an additional report from Selden, dated April 11, 1997, to rebut his report of April 12, 1996. In his 1997 report, Selden rescinded the opinion expressed in his 1996 report. His April 11,1997 report stated: “I am sorry for any confusion my reports may have caused. . . . A careful review of my records indicates that there was an injury when [the plaintiff] fell in December, 1993.1 am attributing her left shoulder impairment to that fall. ... I had not previously assigned any permanency of her shoulder to the December 23, 1989 injury. My records of April 12, 1996, are in error when I assigned a portion of that permanency to the December, 1989 accident. Her records had been in storage, and I had not been able to fully review the situation when I prepared that report and I apologize.”

On November 13, 1997, the commissioner nevertheless entered a finding and award in favor of the plaintiff and concluded that “the [plaintiff] . . . injured her left shoulder in a December, 1989, accident which . . . arose out of and in the course of her employment at the [defendant] Sheraton-Hartford Hotel . . . [and consequently] sustained ... a 10 percent permanent partial disability to the left shoulder.” The commissioner ordered the defendants to pay to the plaintiff [738]*73829.1 weeks of compensation at her basic compensation rate representing 10 percent permanency to the left nonmaster shoulder. Declining to consider Selden’s April 11, 1997 report, the commissioner stated that “[although the parties seek to have the undersigned consider other evidence which may have some bearing on Dr. Selden’s report of April 12, 1996, the remand of the [board] is clear and unequivocal. The remand specifically restricts the consideration of evidence to that [April 12, 1996] report of Dr. Selden .... The undersigned will not permit this trial to be expanded beyond the limits as set forth by the [board’s] remand.”

The defendants appealed to the board from the commissioner’s finding and award pursuant to General Statutes (Rev. to 1989) § 31-301 (a).5 On May 7, 1999, the board affirmed the commissioner’s finding and award, and concluded that the commissioner properly considered the 1996 report from Selden in light of all of the prior evidence in the record. The board further concluded that the commissioner appropriately had refused to consider Selden’s 1997 report because the report was only cumulative of evidence already on the record. This appeal followed.

On appeal, the defendants claim that the board improperly affirmed the commissioner’s findings because the commissioner’s decision lacks sufficient evidence to support its conclusion. Further, the defendants claim that the board improperly affirmed the commissioner’s decision because the commissioner’s refusal to consider Selden’s 1997 report, which was offered to rebut the plaintiffs evidence, violated the defendants’ due process rights to be heard and to present evidence. We agree.

[739]

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Bluebook (online)
774 A.2d 1009, 62 Conn. App. 733, 2001 Conn. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-sheraton-hartford-hotel-connappct-2001.