General Motors Corp. v. Coulbourne

415 A.2d 1345
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 19, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 415 A.2d 1345 (General Motors Corp. v. Coulbourne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Corp. v. Coulbourne, 415 A.2d 1345 (Del. 1980).

Opinion

QUILLEN, Justice:

In this Workmen’s Compensation appeal the employer, General Motors Corporation *1346 (GM), challenges a decision by the Superior Court modifying an original finding by the Industrial Accident Board (Board). The Board had ruled claimant Coulbourne was entitled to compensation for having lost in an industrial accident 83% of normal vision, and the Superior Court increased the award to compensate him for a 100% loss. GM claims Coulbourne should only be compensated for a 3% loss of vision.

This dispute focuses on the application of Sections 2326(a) and (c) of the Workmen’s Compensation Act to the instant situation, 1 where Coulbourne, having suffered a loss of 97% of the vision in his left eye in an injury prior to becoming employed by GM, later suffered a detached retina of his left eye as the result of a job-related mishap there, and consequently lost all remaining vision in that eye. 2

Coulbourne’s ophthalmologist testified before the Board that in a 1971 examination, after the first injury but before the second, he found his left eye vision to be 97% impaired but correctable to a 17% impairment through the use of a hard contact lens. He also stated that some people are unable to wear hard contact lenses. Coul-bourne gave up his attempts to wear a hard lens after several weeks because of irritation, and was functioning with 3% of his left eye vision when hired by GM. GM had conducted an eye examination before hiring him and found him to be “industrially blind” in his left eye. 3 The Board found that Coulbourne could see light and dark, and could see objects approaching him, with his unaided left eye.

GM contends that it was error to award Coulbourne compensation for that fractional part of vision loss that had occurred prior to the industrial accident, and that since Coulbourne had only a 3% visual capacity when the second loss occurred, that should be the extent of the award. GM also claims that is was error for the Superior Court to consider increasing the Board’s award when Coulbourne had not appealed from the award part of the Board’s decision.

Coulbourne has filed a cross-appeal, objecting to the Trial Court’s affirmance of the Board’s decision that he had failed to meet his burden of proof on the issue of loss of earning capacity resulting from the second eye injury. He testified that the GM foreman asked him to transfer to a janitor’s position because he kept getting cut at his assembly line job. The janitor’s pay was 44 cents less per hour. To demonstrate the voluntary and routine nature of the transfer, witnesses for GM testified that five workers had turned down the janitor position before it was offered to Coul-bourne, that he had filed no grievance after the transfer, and that there were several objective reasons why such a job can be preferred despite the lower hourly wage.

*1347 On the cross-appeal, we feel that the Superior Court was correct in affirming the Board’s decision. The Board made a factual determination, not unreasonable on the record presented, that Coulbourne had not met his burden of proof on the issue of loss of earning capacity resulting from his injury, and we will not disturb it. The Industrial Accident Board is the trier of fact. Johnson v. Chrysler Corporation, Del.Supr., 213 A.2d 64 (1965).

In the main appeal, we accept the factual finding of the Board on the percentage of capacity for vision that Coulbourne had at the different times relevant to his claim, despite contentions that have been raised attempting to throw doubt on the accuracy of these findings. There was an opportunity to present evidence to the Board, and we are bound by the reasonable conclusions it drew from the evidence presented. Thus, we accept as fact that the claimant’s left eye vision was 97% impaired but correctable to a 17% impairment through the use of a hard contact lens.

GM contends that the Superior Court erred in increasing Coulbourne’s award, which was to compensate for an 83% loss of vision as determined by the Board, to an award for a 100% loss. In changing the award, the Superior Court also changed the theory on which it was based. The Board had decided that Coulbourne was entitled to an award for that fractional portion of complete normal vision that he had lost in his second accident, and chose the 83% figure as the maximum his left eye was capable of when corrected by the hard contact lens. The Superior Court agreed that the amount of vision lost could in a proper case be evaluated from the standpoint of corrected vision prior to an industrial accident. However, it stated that his discomfort from the hard lens left Coulbourne, in effect, with 3% of normal vision. 4 The 100% loss, then, was predicated on the fact that Coulbourne had lost 100% of what he had before the GM accident. Even if he only had 3% of normal use, the Court below reasoned that the statute did not restrict recovery for total loss of an eye to only those in perfect condition at the time of loss, and that “any other result would foreclose a full award to everyone except those with normal vision, corrected or uncorrected, prior to the injury.”

Turning first to the argument that the Superior Court erred in increasing the award for loss of vision under 19 Del.C. § 2326 since the claimant did not appeal to the Superior Court from that aspect of the Board’s decision, we agree that ordinarily a cross-appeal is necessary to preserve rights. But in this case the employer’s appeal raised the very issue the Superior Court decided. The basic facts, as found by the Board, were accepted by the Superior Court, that Court differing with the Board only on the application of the law. In this context, we think it would be unduly restrictive to hold that the Superior Court could not correctly apply the law, as that Court sees it, on the very issue raised by the appeal. The Delaware Workmen’s Compensation Act is liberally construed with regard for its intended benevolent purpose. Mosley v. Bank of Delaware, Del.Supr., 372 A.2d 178, 179-180 (1977).

The merits of GM’s appeal give us more difficulty. From § 2326(a), which speaks directly to the situation of loss of vision, there does appear some statutory policy to compensate for the percentage of loss suffered. This is clear when the loss is less than total. In theory, it can certainly be persuasively argued that a fractional loss suffered by one with a partial impairment *1348 resulting in the total loss of use of the eye should not be treated any differently than a fractional loss suffered by one with normal vision resulting in a partial impairment. To do otherwise may effectively allow recovery against the employer for prior injuries entirely unrelated to a claimant’s employment, when the effects of such prior injuries combine with the present one to produce total loss. This would appear to be contrary to the general purpose of the Act (19 Del.C.

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Bluebook (online)
415 A.2d 1345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-corp-v-coulbourne-del-1980.