Ferguson v. George A. Fuller Co.

58 A.2d 810, 74 R.I. 98, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 11, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 58 A.2d 810 (Ferguson v. George A. Fuller 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
Ferguson v. George A. Fuller Co., 58 A.2d 810, 74 R.I. 98, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 42 (R.I. 1948).

Opinions

This is a petition brought under the provisions of the workmen's compensation act, general laws 1938, chapter 300, to review an agreement for compensation. After a hearing in the superior court the trial justice entered a decree denying and dismissing the petition, and from the entry of that decree the petitioner duly prosecuted his appeal to this court.

The evidence, apart from the medical testimony, showed the following sequence of events. The petitioner, a carpenter, who was about forty-eight years of age and weighed over two hundred pounds at the time of the trial, had been a resident of Foxboro in the commonwealth of Massachusetts for several years. On December 9, 1942, in the course of his employment by the respondents in Rhode Island, he and three other men were moving a bulkhead, so called, being part of a Quonset hut. This bulkhead weighed approximately 600 pounds and the petitioner was carrying one of its front corners on his right shoulder. The man who was carrying the other front corner stepped into a hole or depression which was covered with snow and, while petitioner did not fall, the entire weight of the front of the bulkhead was thrown upon his shoulder, which was thereby injured. He stopped work at once and on the following day consulted a doctor in Foxboro who diagnosed the injury as acute bursitis.

Following that injury a preliminary agreement was entered into under which the petitioner was paid for total disability until July 28, 1943. On October 13, 1943 while he was shingling the roof of a small one-story building or shed the ladder upon which he was standing twisted, the *Page 100 ground being uneven. He tried to support himself and steady the ladder by reaching up with his right arm to hold onto the eaves of the building. He was, however, not able to do so since his arm "locked," allegedly because of the injury to his shoulder on December 9, 1942, and he fell upon an oil drum which was under the ladder and was injured. A second preliminary agreement was thereupon executed under which he received payments for total disability to November 3, 1943. Under date of November 16, 1943 a settlement receipt was signed by the petitioner showing that he had been paid compensation amounting to $723.33 covering both the above occurrences.

Thereafter on April 5, 1944 the parties entered into a supplementary preliminary agreement which was duly approved May 3, 1944. That agreement referred to the original accident as the cause of the injury and made December 20, 1943 the starting date of the third incapacity thereunder. It also provided for the payment of compensation to the petitioner for the duration of total disability. A settlement receipt, bearing the same dates as such supplementary agreement, was also signed by the parties according to which receipt the petitioner was paid the further sum of $280 for total incapacity terminating on March 25, 1944. On this receipt over his signature appears the following: "I am in business for myself and earning as much money per wk. as I was earning when injured."

The evidence further shows that in April 1945, while doing carpentry on his own account inside a house, petitioner fell from a stepladder and injured his chest and other parts of his body. No compensation agreement was entered into by the parties respecting this happening. After the original accident of December 9, 1942 the petitioner was not again employed by the respondents and all the work he did thereafter was for his own benefit as an independent carpenter.

It is the petitioner's apparent contention that all his falls and injuries stem from the first accident of December *Page 101 9, 1942; that he is now at least partially incapacitated; that in the circumstances he is entitled to some compensation; and that he has the right to receive the cost of medical treatment in excess of $300. The respondents contest these claims.

The petitioner offered as witnesses two doctors both of whom testified by deposition. The first was an osteopathic physician who was consulted by the petitioner on the day after the original accident. This doctor treated him for acute acromial bursitis and muscular strain of the upper back and right shoulder by using diathermy and massage two and three times a week for about thirteen months. At the end of this period the petitioner was improved and had approximately 80 per cent motion in his right arm. This doctor treated him again in the same manner about once a week from April 12, 1944 to March 28, 1945. Thereafter the doctor saw him professionally about nine times prior to December 3, 1946 which was the last time treatment consisting of massage and manipulative therapy was administered. During this last period the petitioner complained of pain in the mid-thoracic area of the spine radiating around the ribs and also of limited motion of the right shoulder. The doctor further testified that as bursitis becomes chronic a calcium deposit forms which creates arthritis; that he found petitioner had developed an arthritic condition which affected various parts of his body; and that in his opinion such condition was caused by trauma from petitioner's injuries and falls.

The other doctor who was called by the petitioner also lived in Foxboro. He was a general practitioner and treated him from April 19, 1945 to February 1946 for pain and restriction of motion in the right shoulder, arm, neck, back and abdomen. This doctor found a 30 per cent limitation of motion in the shoulder. The petitioner complained to him of having had an injury about a week before April 19, 1945 while working in a well hole and standing upon a ladder which gave way. He reached for support and his *Page 102 right shoulder locked with the result that he fell hurting his arm, shoulder, back, neck and abdominal muscles. This doctor was of the opinion that the petitioner could do administrative and directive work but that heavy work would aggravate his arthritic condition. In June 1945 a doctor in Boston was consulted respecting the petitioner's condition and the latter on advice spent about four weeks, starting July 27, 1945, in a Boston hospital for diagnosis and treatment. The diagnosis was hypertrophic arthritis of the right shoulder joint and spinal vertebrae.

The respondents presented as a witness Dr. Roland Hammond, of Providence, who had acted for the director of labor as an impartial medical examiner on December 27, 1945, the present petition having been filed in November of that year. This witness testified that according to his records, although many questions were asked of the petitioner, he did not mention any locking of his arm. Upon examination, the witness found that the petitioner could move his arms, legs and spine freely without pain with the exception of the right arm which he raised voluntarily only to the horizontal position. The doctor, however, was able to move it without pain through the full arc of motion up to the side of the head.

In giving his opinion of the petitioner's condition the doctor, after referring to certain complaints of pain, stated: "X-ray examination includes both shoulders and the entire spine and the right knee. These joints show a mild degree of hypertrophic arthritis pretty generally distributed throughout the spine and in the shoulder joints. This patient is suffering from an arthritis which had been lighted up by a series of accidents so that the pain follows the distribution of the arthritis. The long duration of this disability has produced a nervous upset which verges on hysteria. * * * I thought what he needed most was psychiatric treatment, and, of course, keep up the physiotherapy."

In deciding the cause the trial justice in his rescript, after *Page 103

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Bluebook (online)
58 A.2d 810, 74 R.I. 98, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-george-a-fuller-co-ri-1948.