Hardy v. Hardy's Trailer Sales, Inc.

448 A.2d 895, 1982 Me. LEXIS 748
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 9, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 448 A.2d 895 (Hardy v. Hardy's Trailer Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Hardy's Trailer Sales, Inc., 448 A.2d 895, 1982 Me. LEXIS 748 (Me. 1982).

Opinion

GODFREY, Justice.

Claimant Christine Hardy brings this consolidated appeal from two pro forma judgments entered in Superior Court (Penobscot and Aroostook Counties), affirming the denial by the Workers’ Compensation Commission of her two petitions for further compensation. The first sought an award of further compensation for total incapacity against Hardy’s Trailer Sales, Inc. as the result of a work-related injury received on August 5, 1976. The second sought an award of compensation against Swamp Fox Motor Inn as the result of a work-related injury received on July 23, 1977. On appeal, claimant contends that the burden of proof applied by the Commissioner to her petitions was erroneous as a matter of law and that his findings of fact are not supported by competent evidence. We vacate the pro forma judgments and remand the case to the Commission.

I.

On August 5, 1976, Christine Hardy sustained a work-related injury to her lower back while employed as a salesperson by Hardy’s Trailer Sales, Inc., in Brewer. Surgery was performed on her lower back, 1 and pursuant to a Commission-approved agreement, she received benefits for total incapacity from August 7, 1976 to October 15, 1976. Benefits were discontinued on October 15,1976, by agreement, when Mrs. Hardy returned to work.

Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Hardy left Hardy’s Trailer Sales and began work as the restaurant manager for the Swamp Fox Motor Inn in Presque Isle. While lifting trays and tables at the Swamp Fox, Mrs. Hardy suffered further injury to her back on July 23,1977. After a period of recuperation, she returned to work at the Swamp Fox on December 28, 1977 at the identical weekly wage she had earned before her injury. She testified, however, that she could no longer do any heavy work and that her employment consisted solely of supervisory and light office work.

On June 22, 1978, Mrs. Hardy filed with the Workers’ Compensation Commission a petition against Swamp Fox seeking an award of compensation for the July 23,1977 injury. That same day she also filed (1) a petition for further compensation against Hardy’s Trailer Sales based on the August 5, 1976 injury and (2) a petition against Hardy’s Trailer Sales to determine the extent of permanent impairment resulting from the August 5, 1976 injury.

On November 7, 1978, the Commissioner awarded Mrs. Hardy compensation against Hardy’s Trailer Sales for 20% permanent impairment to her back and 5% permanent impairment to her left leg as a result of the August 5, 1976 injury. By decree entered on February 9, 1979, the Commissioner found, on the basis of a stipulation of facts filed by the parties, (1) that Mrs. Hardy had sustained a work-related injury at the Swamp Fox on July 23, 1977, consisting of the “onset of pain in the back and down the left leg which was the exacerbation of a pre-existing condition,” and (2) that as a result of conservative treatment her symptoms had so improved that she was able to return to work on December 28, 1977, without having suffered any permanent impairment as a result of the July 23,1977 injury. He accordingly awarded her benefits against Swamp Fox for total disability only for the period from July 23,1977 to December 28, 1977. No action was taken at that time on the June 22, 1978 petition for further compensation against Hardy Trailer Sales.

*897 In March, 1978, the Swamp Fox was sold, and Mrs. Hardy discontinued working there. She returned to the Bangor area and began working at Hardy’s Furniture, earning $2,716.50 there in 1978. She also worked intermittently for Hardy’s Trailer Sales in 1978 and again in 1979, escorting the delivery of mobile homes and doing some office work. Although she did no heavy work, Mrs. Hardy testified that she was unable to work long at these various jobs because of the pain in her lower back.

On November 4,1980, Mrs. Hardy filed a petition for further compensation against Swamp Fox based on her injury of July 23, 1977. This petition was consolidated for hearing with her petition for further compensation filed June 22, 1978 against Hardy’s Trailer Sales.

At the hearing on the consolidated petitions for further compensation, the only two witnesses were Dr. John Adams, an orthopedic surgeon, and Mrs. Hardy. Dr. Adams testified that he first saw Mrs. Hardy in August, 1978, and that he has been treating her ever since. He felt that Mrs. Hardy could not do work “requiring lifting, bending, repetitive twisting, pushing heavy objects. She could sit for moderate periods of time, stand for moderate periods of time and walk fairly well in any job that she was required to do.” Dr. Adams stated as his opinion that both the August, 1976, and July, 1978, injuries contributed to Mrs. Hardy’s present condition. Yet he stated his belief that the July 23 injury had simply aggravated an already existing condition. Dr. Adams explained Mrs. Hardy’s symptoms as the result primarily of nerve root irritation and scarring caused by surgery performed in 1970 and in 1976. However, Dr. Adams admitted that his opinions on the causal connection between the respective injuries and the continuing pain experienced by Mrs. Hardy were guesses, since he did not examine her until about a year after the July 23 injury.

At the hearing, Mrs. Hardy testified on the history of her employment since 1976 and the reason she was unable to continue working at Hardy Furniture and other jobs following her return from Presque Isle. She testified that since 1978 she had diligently looked for work, having applied unsuccessfully for positions in restaurant management in several area establishments and registered with an employment agency. She said that at least one restaurant had made it clear that because of her back problems she would be unable to handle the work involved in the available position. She had also sought employment with a travel agency. But for a short stint as a salesperson with Friedman’s Furniture during its going-out-of-business sale in 1980, Mrs. Hardy remained unemployed after she was forced to leave Hardy’s Furniture because of back pain.

In two separate decrees entered on April 21, 1980, the Commissioner denied both petitions for further compensation. In the decree denying claimant’s petition for further compensation against Swamp Fox, he found as follows:

By decree dated February 9, 1979 it was established that Mrs. Hardy had recovered her full work capacity which is confirmed by the fact that she returned to her former job as a restaurant manager at Swamp Fox Motor Inn at her previous salary and carried on successfully until the end of March 1978 when the job itself was abolished because the business was sold.

The Commissioner then said:

The obligation to establish by medical evidence that since December 1977 [when Mrs. Hardy had returned to work at the Swamp Fox] her back condition degenerated and that her work capacity was thereby decreased as a result of her work related injury rests with the petitioner.

Finding that the medical testimony failed to satisfy that burden of proof, the Commissioner denied the petition for further compensation against Swamp Fox.

The Commissioner’s findings with respect to Hardy’s Trailer Sales were parallel to those in the Swamp Fox decree. In short, he found that Mrs.

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448 A.2d 895, 1982 Me. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-hardys-trailer-sales-inc-me-1982.