Colli v. Crown Piece Dye Works

182 A. 496, 55 R.I. 494, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 A. 496 (Colli v. Crown Piece Dye Works) 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
Colli v. Crown Piece Dye Works, 182 A. 496, 55 R.I. 494, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 1 (R.I. 1936).

Opinion

*495 Capotosto, J.

This is a petition for relief under general laws 1923, chapter 347, filed in this court within one year after the entry of a final decree in the superior court in a proceeding under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The petitioner prays for a new trial on the ground that he is aggrieved by a decree of the superior court entered July 28, 1933, from which he failed to appeal on account of accident, mistake and unforeseen cause.

The petitioner, a laborer of Italian extraction, was employed by the respondent at its mill in the city of Woonsocket. On July 3, 1931, he suffered a hernia as the result of lifting heavy rolls of cloth while in the performance of his duties. A preliminary agreement for compensation under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act was approved by the commissioner of labor on February 16, 1932, and an agreement of final adjustment was approved by him on April 4, 1932.

By the middle of March, 1932, the petitioner resumed his regular occupation in the respondent’s employ and continued at his work until January 3, 1933, when he claims to have suffered a recurrence of the hernia from lifting a truck laden with wet cloth. On June 20, 1933, he filed a petition in the superior court to review the preliminary and final agreements above described and' prayed for further compensation in accordance with the terms of the act. The respondent in its answer to this petition for review contended that if the petitioner was suffering from any incapacity it did not result from the injury of July 3, 1931, but was *496 due to a new accident. The matter was heard by a justice of the superior court on July 12, 1933. The respondent introduced no testimony at this hearing. It strongly urged, however, that the evidence of the petitioner and his doctor established that the incapacity then under consideration was due to a new accident and was not a recurrence of the original injury. The trial justice found in favor of the petitioner and awarded him extra compensation in the sum of $216. A decree was accordingly entered in the superior court on July 28, 1933, and the petitioner received that sum. It is this decree that the petitioner seeks to open by his present petition. A short time later the petitioner, who claimed that he was still totally incapacitated, changed counsel and engaged an attorney who understood and spoke Italian. On November 14, 1933, this attorney filed an original petition with the commissioner of labor alleging that the injury of January, 1933, was due to a new accident.

The testimony taken thereon at a hearing before the commissioner of labor is a part of the record before us. We have carefully examined this testimony in order to be sure that the petitioner had not intentionally and for improper purposes changed his testimony as previously given by him in the superior court. We find nothing that impugns his good faith. The petition was dismissed by the commissioner of labor on the strength of the decree entered July 28, 1933. From this ruling an appeal was taken to the superior court where it was subsequently heard and decision was reserved by the trial justice. The transcript of the testimony in the superior court is not before us, due to the fact that the petition there pending was discontinued before decision upon the filing of the present petition in this court.

In the instant cause the sworn petition alleges that on July 3, 1931, the day when the petitioner was first injured, the respondent was insured by the Employers’ Liability Insurance Company and that on January 3, 1933, it was insured by the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company; that when the petitioner claimed further relief under *497 the act for his injury of January 3, 1933, a dispute arose between these two insurance companies as to which one was liable for any compensation that might be due him; and that while this dispute was in progress, the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company, without prejudice to any of its rights in the premises, procured Dr. E. L. Myers to operate upon the petitioner.

The petition further alleges that prior to the operation by Dr. Myers, a Mr. Murdock, who represented the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company, suggested to the petitioner that, as his company was undertaking the financing of the operation, the petitioner should go to an attorney whom Murdock named, with a view of reopening the agreements for compensation that had been entered into with the Employers’ Liability Insurance Company in 1932; that at the time, the petitioner informed Murdock that if he were to engage a lawyer, he wanted to engage one who spoke the Italian language so that he could better explain his difficulties; and that after the operation was performed, Murdock went to the petitioner’s home, gave him the name and address of the attorney, again urged him to file his petition through that attorney, and told him that he would have nothing to worry about, because the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company would pay the attorney for his sendees.

The petition then sets forth that the petitioner, “being assured by said Murdock that he had nothing to lose since he would receive compensation from one company or the other” went to the attorney that Murdock suggested with the result that a petition to reopen the agreements with the Employers’ Liability Insurance Company was filed and, on July 12, 1933, was heard by a justice of the superior court.

The instant petition further states that at this hearing, the testimony was confined only to the facts surrounding the alleged first and second accidents and that no questions were asked the petitioner “concerning his condition at the time of the trial;” that, although the petitioner informed *498 the attorney that Dr. Virgilio M. Bertone had attended him between the time of the operation and the hearing, Dr. Bertone was not called as a witness through some mistake and misunderstanding; that no inquiry was made of Dr. Myers, who was the only medical witness at the hearing, as to whether the petitioner had fully recovered and was then able to follow his usual occupation.

Affidavits of Dr. Myers and Dr. Bertone were filed in support of the petition before us. That part of Dr. Myers affidavit which refers, to the petitioner’s present condition, or to what his testimony would have been at the hearing in July, 1933, had he been asked, is without force and effect in determining the question here. A retrospective view of testimony or of the conduct of a trial that reveals omissions, which could have been supplied to advantage, can not make such omissions the basis of a claim for a new trial on the ground of accident, mistake, or unforeseen cause.

We will consider Dr. Myer’s affidavit, however, only in so far as it tends to establish the fact stated in the petition that the petitioner continued to treat with Dr. Bertone shortly after he, Dr. Myers, had performed the operation.

The affidavit of Dr. Bertone stands on a different footing. He was not a witness at the hearing in July, 1933, although he had attended the petitioner from shortly after the operation by Dr. Myers to the time of the hearing. His affidavit sets forth that “on July 12, 1933, the petitioner was totally incapacitated and unable to work at his usual occupation . . .”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 A. 496, 55 R.I. 494, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colli-v-crown-piece-dye-works-ri-1936.