Fontaine v. Gorfine

250 A.2d 361, 105 R.I. 174, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 735
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 19, 1969
Docket457-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 250 A.2d 361 (Fontaine v. Gorfine) 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
Fontaine v. Gorfine, 250 A.2d 361, 105 R.I. 174, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 735 (R.I. 1969).

Opinion

*176 Joslin, J.

This is an employee’s petition for specific compensation benefits for the “loss of use and function” of her left hand. A single commissioner found for the petitioner and, in addition to awarding miscellaneous benefits, directed weekly payments for a 25 per cent loss of use. Both parties appealed to the full commission. The principal reason of appeal relied upon by the petitioner was that the payment ordered by the single commissioner was insufficient in amount. The full commission, except to the extent that it sustained petitioner’s appeal, affirmed the earlier decree in substantially all of its other aspects. It ordered the respondents to pay specific compensation benefits of $30 per week for a period of 61 weeks for the permanent 25 per cent loss of use of the petitioner’s left hand, credited them with $500 on account of specific compensation previously paid in 1952 and directed payment of counsel fees, fees for the testimony of an expert witness, and reimbursement of miscellaneous costs. From that decree, the respondents have appealed.

The respondents are dentists and petitioner was employed by them as a dental assistant. Her duties included taking dental Xrays. In 1947 she was bothered by a broken thumb nail. She sought medical assistance and was told that she had suffered Xray burns of her left hand. This necessitated surgery in 1951. A preliminary agreement was then entered into and she received weekly benefits of $28 based on an average weekly wage of $57. That agreement recited her injury as “Radiation damage to left thumb” and gave as its cause “Occupational condition *177 caused by x-ray films.” The agreed payments were made until petitioner returned to work in March 1952.

Thereafter, in 1957, and again in 1960, petitioner submitted to surgery, and on each occasion, as well as for a period in 1954, she received compensation benefits. The 1957 surgery involved the amputation of the distal phalanx of her left thumb for which, in addition to other benefits, she thereafter was paid specific compensation of $20 per week for 25 weeks pursuant to an agreement dated October 9, 1952. Other than while disabled, petitioner has continued to work for respondents and is still in their employ. Since 1958, however, she has acted as a secretary-receptionist, rather than as a dental assistant. In that position she does not come in contact with X-ray radiation.

What the condition of her hand was and whether it worsened or in any way changed in the five years following the 1960 surgery the record does not disclose. We do know, however, that she also suffered from radiation burns to the index and middle fingers of her left hand as well as to the thumb, and that she underwent periodic medical examinations for that condition from 1960 to 1967. We know also on the basis of her own uncontradicted testimony that within two years next preceding the filing of this petition she developed a numbness in her hand and that within that timespan it became increasingly difficult for her to close her hand and to pick up anything. It was these changes in the condition of her hand which prompted the filing of this petition for specific benefits on April 4, 1967.

Before the commission the only medical testimony came from Dr. E. Arthur Catullo, an orthopedic surgeon, who examined petitioner during the pendency of the hearing and who testified on her behalf. His opinion was that petitioner had sustained a 25 per cent permanent loss of use of her left hand. That loss, he said, was based in part on the partial amputation of her thumb, and in part also *178 upon a hypesthesia and atrophy in the left index and middle fingers, and upon a slight limitation of motion of the hand. While frank to admit that the lack of an opportunity to examine petitioner prior to the trial made it impossible for him to determine when her increased loss of use had first manifested itself, he nonetheless stated that the condition he had described was the end result and was permanent.

The principal and the only substantial legal problem raised by the appeal is whether petitioner’s permanent 25 per cent loss of use of her hand occurred or was manifested within two years of the time she filed her petition for additional specific compensation. Unless it did occur or was manifested within that period, her claim is barred by G. L. 1956, §28-35-57, as amended. That section, in pertinent portion, requires that an employee’s claim for compensation under chapters 29 to 38 inclusive, of the Act shall be barred unless an agreement or petition shall be filed within two years after the occurrence or manifestation of the injury or incapacity.

Respondents rely on Tirocchi v. United States Rubber Co., 101 R. I. 429, 224 A.2d 387. The rule of that case is that the statutory period within which a claim for specific compensation may be filed begins to run at the time sound medical opinion concludes that post-surgery functional development of a damaged member can objectively be said to have reached its potential. The respondents misapply that rule when they argue that it bars the claim in this case.

Tirocchi was a case where a worker, whose hands had been crushed in an industrial accident, submitted to reconstructive surgery as well as to physical, psychological and rehabilitative therapy in an attempt to achieve as great an amelioration as possible of the effects of her injury. That treatment was intended to better and improve the condition of her hands, and, in justice both to her and to her *179 employer, we held that the extent of the percentage of her loss of use of her hands should not be determined until sound medical opinion could objectively conclude that whatever betterment and improvement might result from the post-surgical treatment had reached its potential. The issue in Tirocchi was not with the anatomic condition of the damaged hands. Rather were we concerned with when and at what point in the reconstructive and rehabilitative treatment sound medical practice could do no more to improve that condition.

The Tirocchi rule must be considered in the light of what it was designed to achieve, and, so construed, the sound-medical-opinion doctrine it lays down applies not to when the condition giving rise to a cause of action first occurs or manifests itself, but rather to whether an existing condition is permanent and to whether an end result in its treatment has been reached. It is to those questions, rather than to when the incapacitating condition occurred or was manifested, that the sound-medical-opinion doctrine is addressable. So limited, the Tirocchi doctrine has no application to the argument respondents advance in this case. Here the medical testimony was that petitioner’s condition was permanent and that an end result had been achieved. That testimony was neither impeached nor contradicted. That it came from a non-attending physician who had examined petitioner only once may, subject to the general rules affecting uncontradicted and unimpeached testimony, reflect on its weight. It does not destroy its probative effect. Moreover, that testimony, once accepted, satisfies the Tirocchi

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Bluebook (online)
250 A.2d 361, 105 R.I. 174, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontaine-v-gorfine-ri-1969.