Hassenfeld Bros., Inc. v. Wolowicz

247 A.2d 834, 104 R.I. 620, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 19, 1968
Docket337-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 247 A.2d 834 (Hassenfeld Bros., Inc. v. Wolowicz) 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
Hassenfeld Bros., Inc. v. Wolowicz, 247 A.2d 834, 104 R.I. 620, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 695 (R.I. 1968).

Opinion

*622 Powers, J.

This is an employer’s petition to review incapacity. It is before us on the employee’s appeal from a final decree of the workmen’s compensation commission affirming the decree of a single commissioner.

The record establishes that respondent, hereinafter referred to as “employee” was employed for some three years by Hassenfeld as an “Injection Molder.” A housewife and mother of three minor children, employee’s domestic obligations were such that her hours of employment were from 11:00 P. M. to 7:00 A. M., the third shift, so-called.

On June 17, 1966, while engaged in her regular occupation, employee struck her right arm on an angle iron, sustaining .an injury diagnosed as “Tennis elbow.” This injury subsequently resulted in total incapacity, and a preliminary agreement was signed between the parties on October 14, 1966. It fixed employee’s average weekly wage at the time of her injury at $70.70 and provided for weekly compensation of $45.00 so long as the incapacity remained total.

The record further establishes that some time in January 1967, Hassenfeld offered employee a position on the 11:00 P. M. to 7:00 A. M. shift similar to her regular employment. The employee tried this work but was apparently unable to do it. Hassenfeld then offered her light work as an inspector which, however, was available only on the first two shifts and these conflicted with employee’s domestic obligations. It is not disputed that the only type of work available on the third shift was that which employee was found unable to perform.

On February 24, 1967, after all offers of light work had been explored and found wanting, Hassenfeld and its carrier filed the instant petition. It sought to have the commission determine that employee was able to return to light *623 selected work and to fix the dollar value of employee’s weekly earning capacity as authorized by the first proviso of G. L. 1956, §28-33-18.

The employee answering, admitted that she was able to do light work but alleged that she had not been offered suitable light work commensurate with her then disability. This answer clearly sought to invoke the benefit of the second proviso of said §28-33-18, which entitled a partially incapacitated employee to total compensation when such employee has been unsuccessful in obtaining suitable work that she is able to perform despite a bona fide effort and the employer has neither offered her such work nor given evidence as to where such work might be obtained.

The petition was heard by a single commissioner, at which hearing Hassenfeld introduced the preliminary agreement; a report of Dr. Carroll Silver to the effect that employee could do light work; and testimony of its personnel director regarding efforts to furnish employee with suitable light work.

The employee testified that she could do some light work with limited use of her right arm, but repeatedly stated that because of her household duties her working hours were limited to the third shift.

After the parties had rested, the single commissioner entered an interlocutory order in which he found that employee’s incapacity had diminished from total to partial; he then recessed the hearing for the purpose of providing employee with an opportunity to make a bona fide effort to obtain suitable work that she was able to perform. This order was contained in an interlocutory decree entered April 18, 1967, pursuant to a decision mailed to employee the previous April 12.

The hearing was resumed April 25, 1967, at which time employee testified as to her efforts to find suitable work that she was able to perform. It appears that she devoted *624 at most some five hours extending over a period of two days. She first applied to the social security office where, in her words, she was told, “* * * I would have to go into a different category, not being able to use this arm to any extent; and I’d have to have doctors’ papers in order to register.” Although not developed in her testimony, it would appear from the foregoing, and employee’s repeated references to the limited use she could make of her right arm, that her attempts to procure light work through registration at the social security office ended up with a discussion regarding possible benefits under the temporary disability act, or cash sickness, so-called. Indeed, employee’s quoted testimony and repeated references to the condition of her arm led the single commissioner to observe, “Mrs. Wolowicz, I have the impression that you don’t really think that you can do any work.” In any event, if the information that she needed doctors’ papers was related to her obtaining light work, employee did not follow it up.

In addition to her visit to the social security office, employee called at three places of private employment where, she testified, no suitable work was available. She gave several reasons, including sickness and lack of transportation, why her search was limited to two days.

The single commissioner noted that there had been only a week’s time between the entry of the decree and the hearing. He offered to continue the hearing and afford her more time if she felt that she needed it, but from employee’s responses to that offer he determined that no useful purpose would be served and the parties rested.

In his decision, the single commissioner found that employee’s incapacity was partial, and that she had not made a bona fide attempt to find suitable work that she was able to perform. He refused to fix the dollar value of her then earning capacity and ordered petitioner to pay com *625 pensation for maximum partial incapacity. He also awarded employee’s counsel a fee of $50.

From the decree entered pursuant to said decision, petitioners and employee appealed to the full commission. In their appeal, petitioners assigned as reasons therefor that the single commissioner erred in refusing to fix the dollar value of employee’s earning capacity in accordance with the first proviso of §28-33-18, and in awarding a counsel fee.

In her claim of appeal to the full commission, employee assigned several reasons which can be compressed into two contentions; namely that the single commissioner’s finding that employee had not made a bona fide attempt to obtain suitable work that she could perform was contrary to law and that the counsel fee of $50 was so unrealistic as to be arbitrary and an abuse of sound judicial discretion.

In their decision, the full commission affirmed the findings of the single commissioner, denied and dismissed both appeals, and awarded employee’s counsel a $50 fee for services in connection with petitioner’s appeal. From the full commission’s decree, entered in accordance with their findings, employee seasonably appealed to this court.

In connection therewith, she has assigned the reasons advanced in support of her appeal to the full commission and the additional reason that the full commission’s award of a $50 counsel fee was likewise arbitrary, amounting to an abuse of sound judicial discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
247 A.2d 834, 104 R.I. 620, 1968 R.I. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hassenfeld-bros-inc-v-wolowicz-ri-1968.