Gobeille v. Ray's Inc. and Bank's I.I. Co.

14 A.2d 241, 65 R.I. 207, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 2, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 241 (Gobeille v. Ray's Inc. and Bank's I.I. 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
Gobeille v. Ray's Inc. and Bank's I.I. Co., 14 A.2d 241, 65 R.I. 207, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 103 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

*209 Flynn, C. J.

This cause is before us on the appeals of the respondent Bankers Indemnity Insurance Company from two decrees of the superior court, adjudging that respondent in contempt for certain failure to make payments in accordance with a preliminary agreement entered into between the employer and employee, under the workmen’s compensation act, general laws 1938, chapter 300. The petitioner was the employee of the respondent Ray’s Inc., hereinafter called the employer; and the Bankers Indemnity Insurance Company was the employer’s insurer under the act.

The following are some of the undisputed facts that are material here. On July 27, 1935, the employee suffered an injury to his knee arising out of and in the course of his employment, and on October 12, 1935 a preliminary agreement was entered into between the employer, the insurer and the employee. This agreement provided for compensation at the rate of $8 per week to be paid to the injured employee for duration of his total disability, and was duly approved by the director of labor in accordance with the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act. By a later decree of the court, the preliminary agreement was modified so as to provide for weekly payments of $7.20 instead of $8. The preliminary agreement as so modified will be referred to as “the agreement”. Thereafter, a petition was filed by the employer seeking to discontinue compensation payments under this agreement on the ground that the employee’s total disability had ceased, and eventually a decree was entered thereon in the superior court on April 8, 1936, *210 finding as a fact that the injured party had not recovered from his total disability and therefore denying the petition.

On July 25, 1938, another petition to review the agreement was filed by the employer with the director of labor, who denied it. The employer appealed therefrom to the superior court and, after a hearing thereon, a decree was entered on October 26, 1938, finding that the employee's total disability had not ended or diminished, and therefore denying the appeal.

On August 21, 1939, the employer Ray’s Inc. was dissolved by a decree of the superior court without notice to the employee. Later the employee voluntarily, at the request of the insurer and at its expense, went to New York and submitted to a further medical examination, following which the insurer ceased payments under the agreement and notified him in writing, on December 23, 1939, that it refused to make any further payments of compensation thereunder. No supplemental agreement, or other order or decree of the director of labor or of the court, modifying the terms of the agreement except as stated, had been made; and from and after December 25, 1939 to the date of the decree no compensation was paid by the insurer to the employee as required by that agreement.

On January 5, 1940, the injured employee filed in the superior court, under the provisions of art. Ill, § 1 of the workmen’s compensation act, a petition to have the insurer adjudged in contempt, for its willful failure or neglect to make compensation payments in obedience to the terms of the agreement. After a hearing by a justice of that court, a decree was entered, on January 24, 1940, adjudging the insurer in contempt of that agreement and allowing it to purge itself by paying the weekly compensation payments due under the agreement as modified, “and the costs of this proceeding in the sum of $3.70, and a counsel fee in the amount of $50.” The insurer duly filed its claim and rea *211 sons of appeal from this decree and this is the first appeal before us.

After the insurer had filed its claim of appeal, the employee brought, on January 30, 1940, a “supplementary petition” to adjudge the insurer in contempt. This petition was based upon the same facts and law as was the first petition, excepting that one additional week had elapsed from the date of the decree entered on the first petition, without payment by the insurer of any further compensation to the employee. In the superior court the insurer’s motions to dismiss and to enjoin prosecution of this “supplementary petition” were denied; a hearing was held thereon, and a decree was entered on February 13, 1940, adjudging the insurer to be in contempt of the agreement and allowing it to purge itself by payment of $3.60 costs, “and a counsel fee in the amount of One Hundred Fifty ($150.00) Dollars.” The insurer duly filed its claim and reasons of appeal from ~fhis decree, which is the second appeal before us.

The insurer contends that the trial justice erred as a matter of law because: First, the finding in each case that the respondent was guilty of contempt is entirely without legal evidence to support it; second, the burden of proof was upon the employee to prove contempt beyond a reasonable doubt; third, the respondent was erroneously ordered to pay counsel fee in each case; and fourth, the court erred in several rulings as set out in the reasons of appeal..

The first contention is based upon the alleged error of the trial justice in refusing to consider and determine whether the employee was, in fact, totally disabled, when compensation payments due under the agreement were stopped by the insurer. In support of that contention it argues that the agreement, entered into between the employer, the insurer and the employee, was approved by the director of labor in accordance with the workmen’s compensation act and, therefore, must be held to conform to *212 the law; that such agreement provided that compensation for the employee’s injury be payable “for duration of total incapacity thereafter or until otherwise terminated in accordance with the provisions of the 'Workmen’s Compensation Act’ of the State of Rhode Island”; that such language should be interpreted literally and, if so construed, the insurer was entitled to cease payments upon its own initiative whenever it determined, on reasonable grounds, that the employee’s disability had ended, being subject only to possible action by the employee as in the case of an alleged breach of ordinary contract; that nothing in the agreement provides that the stopping of payments, when the employee’s disability has in fact ceased, is a violation of its terms; and that, in practice, any other construction, that would require the insurer to file a petition for review of the agreement before warranting cessation of payments thereunder, would lead to unnecessary hardship, because of the alleged delay in receiving decisions on such petitions from the office of the director of labor.

We are of the opinion that the first point and these contentions of the insurer must be rejected on the ground that they are either inconsistent with certain provisions of the workmen’s compensation act or that they would substantially nullify other provisions as well as defeat the purpose of that act. The essence of this point, and its supporting arguments, is based on the conception that the agreement between an employer and an injured employee under the workmen’s compensation act is a simple contract to be interpreted apart from the act and virtually in accordance with the law governing ordinary contracts. But in our very recent opinion in Carpenter v. Globe Indemnity Co., 65 R.

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 241, 65 R.I. 207, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gobeille-v-rays-inc-and-banks-ii-co-ri-1940.