Cabral v. Perry's Express Co.

125 A.2d 221, 85 R.I. 47, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 30, 1956
DocketEq. No. 2519
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 A.2d 221 (Cabral v. Perry's Express Co.) 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
Cabral v. Perry's Express Co., 125 A.2d 221, 85 R.I. 47, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 120 (R.I. 1956).

Opinion

*48 Paolino, J.

This is an original petition for workmen’s compensation under general laws 1938, chapter 300, as amended by public laws 1954, chap. 3297. It is here on the *49 respondent’s appeal from a decree of the workmen’s compensation commission.

The case was heard first before a single commissioner who entered a decree incorporating certain findings of fact and awarding compensation for total disability from December 6, 1954 until a suggested operation was performed and the compensation was terminated in accordance with the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act. The decree also ordered that if within twenty days after the entry thereof the petitioner did not undergo said operation, then all compensation was to cease until the operation was performed. It also provided that respondent should pay all reasonable medical expenses incurred by petitioner to date and all reasonable hospital and medical expenses for the above-mentioned operation. This decree was appealed by respondent to the full commission which after consideration entered a decree on January 27, 1956, affirming the decree of the single commissioner and amending it only to provide that petitioner have the suggested operation performed within twenty days from the entry thereof. The instant appeal is from such decree.

Although respondent has filed twenty-nine reasons of appeal, it has briefed and argued its appeal mainly on the contention that the compensation award is not supported by legal evidence and therefore is contrary to law. In this respect it expressly contends: (1) There is no legal evidence that petitioner was at any time unable to do any kind of work. (2) There is no legal evidence of any incapacity prior to January 19, 1955. (3) There is no legal evidence that petitioner had any incapacity after March 1955. (4) There is no legal evidence that the disability found by Dr. Savastano in January 1955 resulted from the June 30, 1954 accident. (5) The commission should have suspended compensation payments on June 3, 1955, when respondent during the hearing offered to pay for the operation which had been recommended by Dr. Savastano.

*50 In our judgment these contentions in substance raise two main issues for our determination, namely, whether there was legal evidence to support the findings of fact as to the extent of the incapacity and the causal relation between the incapacity and the injury, and whether the commission was warranted in refusing to suspend compensation payments upon the refusal of petitioner during the hearing to accept respondent’s offer to pay the expenses for the operation recommended by the petitioner’s doctor. Before we discuss those contentions, it may be helpful to briefly discuss some of the evidence pertinent to the points raised.

The petitioner testified that on June 30, 1954, while employed by respondent as a rigger in moving machinery and other heavy objects, he caught his left foot under the wheel of a fork-lift truck and was injured. He was paid three months’ compensation from June 30, 1954, under a nonprejudicial agreement and returned to work for respondent about September 13, and continued to' work until December 3, 1954. The petitioner also testified that, although he reported for work during this period, he was unable to' earn his regular weekly wages because of the injury to' his left foot; that he did not return to work for respondent after December 3, 1954 because his foot was getting worse; and that he was still limping and had performed no work of any kind since December 3, 1954. He stated his only work experience was as a rigger, a construction laborer and a truck driver’s helper, and that his work as a rigger was done in a standing position.

The petitioner further testified that on July 13, 1954 the respondent sent him to Dr. John H. Gordon, an orthopedic specialist, who treated him once or twice a week until December 9, 1954; that he went back to work around September 13, 1954 because the doctor advised him to return to work and “try it out”; that this doctor had never discharged him but in early December 1954 he went to a Dr. Serbst because his office was closer to petitioner’s home; and that *51 thereafter he had been going to Dr. Serbst twice a week. He also testified that since December 3, 1954 he could do no work because he could not stand on his foot; that he had suffered no other injury since June 30, 1954; and that the injury happened while he was working for respondent and “has been like that since.”

The medical testimony is conflicting. Doctor Vincent J. Zeechino, who was respondent’s witness, testified that he examined petitioner on March 18,1955 in his office and also on June 3, 1955, during a recess at the hearing before the trial commissioner; that there was no doubt in his mind that petitioner had internal injuries to his foot, but there was no external evidence to denote that he had not fully recovered from the alleged injury which he sustained in June 1954; that as a result of his examination of June 3, 1954, he was of the opinion that petitioner was able to resume his former occupation as a rigger; and that he had the same opinion when he examined him on March 18, 1955.

Doctor Gordon was called as a witness by petitioner. He testified that he first treated petitioner on July 13, 1954 and that his injury was severe enough to cause him to refer petitioner to the Pawtucket Memorial Hospital for whirlpool treatments; that he treated petitioner at his office eleven times; and that the last office visit was on December 9, 1954. His diagnosis was that petitioner had a contusion of the left foot and strain of the left ankle, but he found no cyst in any of his examinations. In his opinion the injury was caused by the accident in question, and after his December 9, 1954 examination he felt petitioner was able to return to work. He expressed the same opinion after he examined petitioner during a recess at the hearing on June 3, 1955.

Doctor A. A. Savastano, an orthopedic specialist, testified that he had examined petitioner on January 19, 1955 and on March 18, 1955; that his diagnosis of the injury was that petitioner had a cystic formation of the dorsum of the *52 left foot which could cause considerable discomfort; and that in his opinion petitioner was totally disabled for work as a rigger as of March 18, 1955. He further testified that, based on the absence of any other injury either before or after the accident in question and on his findings of January 19, 1955, it was his opinion that petitioner’s injury and total incapacity were due to the accident of June 30, 1954; that he recommended surgical removal of the cystic formation; and that if there were no complications after such operation petitioner could probably resume his regular work as a rigger in about four weeks. He also stated that petitioner was a suitable prospect for such an operation.

The issue thus resolves itself into whether such evidence is sufficient in law to establish a causal connection between the injury and the finding of total disability by the trial commissioner as affirmed by the decree of the full commission. The record discloses a mass of conflicting evidence relative to the main issues.

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Bluebook (online)
125 A.2d 221, 85 R.I. 47, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabral-v-perrys-express-co-ri-1956.