Costa v. Cars, Inc.

192 A.2d 1, 96 R.I. 396, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 20, 1963
DocketEq. No. 3076
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 192 A.2d 1 (Costa v. Cars, Inc.) 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
Costa v. Cars, Inc., 192 A.2d 1, 96 R.I. 396, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 98 (R.I. 1963).

Opinion

*397 Joslin, J.

This is an employee’s original petition for compensation under the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act. The case is ¡before us on the respondent’s appeal from a decree of the full commission affirming the decree of the trial commissioner.

The trial commissioner entered a decree finding, inter alia, that petitioner on April 23, 1959 sustained a neck sprain and low back strain while using a long wrench in the performance of his usual work as an automobile repairman in the employ of respondent; that on account of such injuries petitioner was totally incapacitated during three periods, namely April 24 to June 5, 1959, August 9 to September 1, 1959, and April 17 to June 16, 1961, which periods will hereinafter be referred to as the first, second and third periods respectively; and that he was not incapacitated to do his regular work other than during the above-stated periods.

The respondent contends in substance that the commission’s findings that petitioner suffered a low back injury on April 23, 1959 and that he was totally incapacitated subsequent to May 19, 1959, are not supported by any legal evidence and are contrary to law. To the extent that respondent has not briefed and argued all of its reasons of appeal, they are deemed to be waived.

The applicable rules to ¡be followed by us in cases of this sort have long been well established. The petitioner has the burden of proof to establish his case by credible evi *398 dence of probative force. Spolidoro v. United States Rubber Co., 72 R. I. 269; Baccari v. W. T. Grant Co., 73 R. I. 376. On review we do not weigh the evidence' or :pass on questions of the credibility of witnesses, but are confined to whether there is any legal evidence direct or by way of reasonable inference to support the commission's findings of fact which in the absence of fraud are conclusive upon us. Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co. v. Campo, 83 R. I. 86.

The respondent's first contention is that the finding of the commission that petitioner sustained a low back strain is not supported by legal or credible evidence of probative force.

The petitioner testified that he immediately reported the accident to his superior and complained that his whole body bothered him. He was examined by a doctor on the day of the accident and shortly thereafter consulted Dr. Armand A. Bertini under whose care he remained until June 5, 1959. From April 25 to May 2 he was a patient at Pawtucket Memorial Hospital. While so hospitalized he was in traction and his testimony is that his neck and the lower right portion, of his back gave him the most trouble, the latter because of the traction. He also testified that he complained to Dr. Bertini that he was bothered by his back. He was readmitted to Pawtucket Memorial Hospital in August 1959 and he testified that while there he “complained constanto ly” about his back.

Doctor Joseph E. Pine, a chiropractor who' had treated him in 1954 for low back trouble, was again consulted by petitioner in October 1959. A case history of low back pain commencing with the date of his April accident and continuing to the time of the October examination was given to Dr. Pine. He treated petitioner until March 1960 for a myofascial low back strain.

The petitioner became a patient of Dr. Caroll M. Silver in April 1961. He told the -dootor that he had been injured *399 about three years previously while working for respondent, that he had treated with Dr. Pine who had given him physiotherapy treatments, and that he had been wearing a back brace. He was hospitalized by Dr. Silver at Miriam Hospital where a myelogram was done and a diagnosis was made that petitioner had a lumbosacral strain with right sciatic neuritis.

A careful examination of petitioner’s testimony reveals other complaints by him to- the effect that he was bothered by a low back injury during the relevant periods.

The respondent argues that the only evidence as to the low 'back strain is petitioner’s testimony which stands alone uncorroborated in any manner by the Pawtucket Memorial Hospital records, the report of Dr. Herbert E. Harris, or the testimony of Dr.- Bertini, Dr. Hannibal Hamlin who examined him during his first stay at Pawtucket Memorial Hospital, or Dr. Ernest D. Thompson who treated him in July 1959 for chest injuries sustained in an automobile accident in June 1959. Based on the foregoing, it asks us to conclude that petitioner’s testimony as to- low back strain is so inherently improbable as to prevent its being considered legal or credible evidence of probative force. With this contention we cannot agree.

There was some evidence as to a low back strain which even though uncorroborated could satisfy a rational mind and as such it constituted legal evidence. Jillson v. Ross, 38 R. I. 145. That petitioner alone gave such testimony does not render it inherently improbable. What respondent in effect is asking us to- do is to find either that petitioner is not worthy of belief or that the preponderance of the evidence is not supportive of a finding by the commission of a low back strain. This under our decisions we cannot do for in workmen’s compensation cases we do not weigh the evidence or pass on the credibility of witnesses.

The respondent also contends that the case histories of *400 a prior back injury given by petitioner to Drs. Pine and Silver are not evidence upon which a legal finding could be made by the commission that petitioner sustained a low back strain on April 23, 1959. If the testimony of such doctors was all that was before the commission respondent’s contention might have merit. In urging such contention, however, it disregards the testimony of petitioner that he hurt his back while in its employ and that he complained of a back injury at that time and many times thereafter prior to his examination by Drs. Pine and Silver. It disregards also petitioner’s denial of and the lack of evidence as to an intervening back injury. In such circumstances the testimony of Drs. Pine and Silver, while not evidence that petitioner suffered a low back strain on April 23, 1959, is legal evidence upon which the commission could find that petitioner suffered from a low back strain at the times he consulted such physicians and that the strain arose out of the injury suffered by him on April 23, 1959.

This conclusion finds support in the case of Natalizia v. Atlantic Tubing & Rubber Co., 81 R. I. 515, where objection was made to a physician’s testimony concerning the history of an injury and the complaints which he received from the patient before examining him. The medical diagnosis there made was based on objective tests and the patient’s subjective symptoms. In holding such testimony competent the court at page 520 said: “The sole purpose of such testimony was to show what those symptoms were and not what caused them. Testimony of that nature is 'generally and properly considered receivable.’ ” See 3 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) §688 (l)-(3), p. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
192 A.2d 1, 96 R.I. 396, 1963 R.I. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/costa-v-cars-inc-ri-1963.