Fredette v. Connecticut Air National Guard

930 A.2d 666, 283 Conn. 813, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 372
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 18, 2007
DocketSC 17777
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 930 A.2d 666 (Fredette v. Connecticut Air National Guard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fredette v. Connecticut Air National Guard, 930 A.2d 666, 283 Conn. 813, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 372 (Colo. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

BORDEN, J.

The named defendant, 1 the Connecticut Air National Guard, appeals 2 from the decision of the compensation review board (board) affirming the decision of the workers’ compensation commissioner for the eighth district (commissioner) granting the motion of the plaintiff, Rita Fredette, seeking to preclude the defendant from contesting her right to receive benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act (act), General Statutes § 31-275 et seq. The defendant claims that the commissioner improperly construed General Statutes § 31-294c (a) 3 to allow the plaintiff to maintain a claim for dependent’s benefits, pursuant to General Statutes § 31-306 (a), 4 following the death of her husband, John O. Fredette (decedent). Specifically, the question we must consider is whether a dependent has filed a timely *816 claim for benefits when the employee, who had not made a claim for occupational disease benefits during his life, died more than two years after the first manifestation of his occupational disease, and the dependent filed a claim within three years from that first manifestation. We answer that question in the affirmative and, accordingly, we affirm the decision of the board.

The relevant, undisputed facts and procedural history are as follows. The plaintiff is the widow and presumptive dependent 5 of the decedent. From 1960 to 1992, the decedent was a civilian aircraft technician employed by the defendant. During the course of his employment, the decedent was exposed to asbestos, which contributed to his September 25, 2000 diagnosis of pulmonary asbestosis. This diagnosis constituted the “first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational disease” within the meaning of § 31-294c (a). The decedent died from respiratory failure on March 25, 2003, due in part to that condition. On May 28, 2003, the plaintiff filed notice of workers’ compensation claims pursuant to §§ 31-294c (a) and 31-306 on behalf of the decedent’s estate and herself. Prior to his death, the decedent had not filed a claim under the act.

Because the state claims administrator had failed to contest the plaintiff’s claims in a timely manner, the plaintiff filed a motion, pursuant to § 31-294c (b), 6 to *817 preclude the defendant from contesting the compensability of those claims. The commissioner granted that motion. The defendant then moved to correct that ruling to reflect certain undisputed facts as well as to find, pursuant to § 31-294c, that “insofar as [the decedent] failed to file a notice of claim for compensation within three years of the first manifestation of a symptom of his occupational disease, and he died more than two years after the date of first manifestation, then the provisions providing for a survivor’s claim to be brought by the surviving dependent spouse did not come into play, thereby depriving the trial [commissioner of subject matter jurisdiction over the death claim.” The commissioner granted in part the defendant’s motion to include those certain undisputed facts, but denied that part of the motion to correct the commissioner’s ruling to find that he did not have subject matter jurisdiction over the claim for dependents’ benefits.

The defendant subsequently appealed to the board from the commissioner’s decision granting the plaintiffs motion to preclude, claiming that the commissioner lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the plaintiffs notice of her dependent’s claim was untimely under § 31-294c (a). The board dismissed the defendant’s appeal and affirmed that decision. This appeal followed. 7

The defendant claims that the board improperly concluded that the commissioner properly had interpreted § 31-294c (a) to conclude that the plaintiffs claim for dependent’s benefits was timely. 8 Specifically, the *818 defendant contends that, although the decedent would have had three years from the first manifestation of his disease in which to make a claim pursuant to § 31-294c (a), 9 because he did not do so, and because he died more than two years from the first manifestation of a symptom of his occupational disease, the additional time period for the plaintiff to assert a claim for survivor’s benefits never was triggered. Therefore, the commissioner lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the survivor’s claim. The plaintiff counters that the legislature did not intend the proviso in § 31-294c (a) to limit dependents’ claims under the act to those cases in which death occurs within two years after the first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational disease. Rather, she claims that it intended to create a modified limitations period for dependents’ claims in only those cases in which the decedent never filed a claim in his own right but died within two years from the first manifestation of the disease.

Reduced to their essences, the parties’ claims appear to be as follows. The defendant claims that, in order for there to be a viable claim by a decedent’s dependents either: (1) the decedent must have filed a claim within three years of the first manifestation of his disease; or (2) he must have died within two years of that first manifestation, and his dependents must have filed then-claims within that two year period or one year from the date of death, whichever is later. 10 Thus, the defendant reads the proviso language of § 31-294c (a), namely, “provided, if death has resulted within two years from *819 the date of the . . . first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational disease,” to mean that, in the absence of a timely filed claim of the decedent within his lifetime, the death of the decedent within two years of the first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational disease is a condition precedent to a dependent’s claim. Because in the present case the decedent neither filed a timely claim in his own right nor died within two years of the first manifestation of the disease, the defendant contends that condition precedent has not been satisfied.

The plaintiff claims that the only predicate to a decedent’s claim is that some claim — either by the decedent or his legal representative or dependent — must be filed within three years of the first manifestation, but that there is no requirement that the decedent must have died within two years of that first manifestation. She reads the proviso language of § 31-294c (a) to address only the case in which death occurs within two years of the first manifestation of the disease, in which case the dependent would be subject to a modified limitations period of “two years from the date of the . . . first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational disease ... or within one year from the date of death” to file a claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
930 A.2d 666, 283 Conn. 813, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fredette-v-connecticut-air-national-guard-conn-2007.