Jaramillo v. Kaufman Plumbing & Heating Co.

708 P.2d 312, 103 N.M. 400
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1985
Docket16025
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 708 P.2d 312 (Jaramillo v. Kaufman Plumbing & Heating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaramillo v. Kaufman Plumbing & Heating Co., 708 P.2d 312, 103 N.M. 400 (N.M. 1985).

Opinions

OPINION

WALTERS, Justice.

We granted certiorari on this matter only to review the basis for the Court of Appeals’ decision regarding reimbursement of compensation paid after the workman’s disability has ended.

Repeal of a statute by implication is disfavored. We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals but, with regard to reimbursement, we adopt Judge Bivins’s special concurrence.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

FEDERICI, C.J., SOSA, Senior Justice, and RIORDAN and STOWERS, JJ., concur.

APPENDIX

Nos. 7996, 8003.

Court of Appeals of New Mexico.

July 16, 1985.

DONNELLY, Chief Judge.

Both plaintiff and defendants appeal from a judgment modifying a prior workmen’s compensation award of total and permanent disability. We discuss: (1) whether substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that plaintiff’s disability had partially diminished; (2) whether defendants were entitled to reimbursement for total disability benefits paid after plaintiff obtained other employment; and (3) denial of an award of attorney’s fees. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Plaintiff was injured on May 29, 1979, while employed as a carpenter for defendant, Kaufman Plumbing and Heating Company. While jumping from a scaffold, plaintiff hit his head and fell. As a result of the injury, plaintiff experienced neck pain, headaches and dizziness, pain in his right shoulder and arm, accompanying numbness in his right arm, and lower back pain. In September 1980, the trial court entered a judgment finding plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled and awarded him weekly benefits of $186.38, not to exceed a total of six hundred weeks.

Prior to his accident, plaintiff had previously worked as a sheriff's deputy for Sandoval County and as a reserve sheriff’s officer for Bernalillo County. Because of this background, plaintiff decided in the course of rehabilitation counseling to seek admission to the New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy (Academy). In March 1981, less than six months following the judgment awarding him total disability benefits, plaintiff was physically examined in connection with his application to the Academy. As part of the exam, plaintiff filled out a checklist, indicating that he was not suffering headaches, dizziness or back pain, but also indicating that he had received workmen’s compensation benefits for a neck and back injury. At the time of the examination on March 10, 1981, plaintiff reported that he was experiencing “no difficulty now.”

Plaintiff was admitted to the Academy and attended a six-week course in the summer of 1981. He graduated sixth in a class of 28. Frank A. Mulholland, deputy director of the Academy, testified that plaintiff’s test performance scores were “near perfect”. Plaintiff’s transcript from the Academy showed that he scored a grade of 100 on the physical agility component of the program which, according to Mulholland, involved running after a suspect to make an arrest, climbing a chain link fence, crawling and climbing through an open window, dragging heavy weights and climbing stairs. Plaintiff testified that although he had difficulty performing these physical requirements, he never complained to Academy personnel for fear of being rejected from the program.

After graduating from the Academy, plaintiff applied for a position as a policeman with the Rio Rancho Police Depart-, ment. In his employment application, plaintiff acknowledged having suffered a back injury, but denied having any current physical defects. As part of the application process, plaintiff was required to submit to a comprehensive physical examination. The medical report indicated that plaintiff denied having ever had a “serious” accident or illness, back trouble, frequent headaches or dizzy spells. Dr. Roy Kropinak, who conducted the physical examination of plaintiff incident to his job application, noted that plaintiff was in “excellent health— both physical and mental,” and testified at the hearing that in his opinion plaintiff was not disabled.

Plaintiff was employed as a Rio Rancho police officer, effective October 22, 1981, and served in that capacity until June 7, 1982, when he was terminated from employment. Rio Rancho Police Chief, Dencil Haycox, testified that plaintiff was dismissed for reasons of “job performance” not related to any type of physical disability.

Defendants learned of plaintiffs full-time employment with the Rio Rancho police department and on February 15, 1983, filed a motion in the workmen’s compensation action to reduce or terminate plaintiff’s disability benefits. One month later, and prior to any hearing on the pending motion, defendants stopped making any additional payments to plaintiff. Defendants sought and obtained a setting on their motion for April 28, 1983. The motion hearing was rescheduled for May 16, 1983. The May 16, 1983 hearing was vacated at the request of plaintiff’s attorney, who was in the process of withdrawing as counsel. For reasons not explained at trial, a hearing on defendants’ motion was delayed until March 2, 1984. During this time, plaintiff received no disability payments.

Following hearing, the trial court determined that the benefits had been terminated without court order, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover total disability benefits in the amount of $9,691.76, withheld by defendants from March 15, 1983 up through the date of the hearing on the motion. The court also concluded that the plaintiff’s disability had diminished to 15 percent (permanent partial) as of the date of hearing, and ordered a prospective reduction in the payment of future compensation benefits. No attorneys fees were awarded plaintiff.

I. SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE

On appeal, both the plaintiff and the defendants challenge the trial court’s finding that plaintiff is 15 percent permanently partially disabled. Defendants argue that the plaintiff’s disability ended when he returned to full-time employment as a police officer on October 22, 1981. They also point to the fact that plaintiff, by his own testimony, experienced no significant physical problem in performing his duties as a police officer.

In challenging the sufficiency of evidence, defendants additionally cite the testimony of Dr. Barry Marón, an orthopedic specialist, who examined plaintiff on four occasions between 1979 and 1983, and who testified that there was no objective evidence to support the plaintiff’s subjective complaints; Dr. William Keightley, a psychiatrist who treated plaintiff for anxiety and depression, and who testified that he “had the impression” that he was dealing with a “physically intact” person; Dr. Kropinak, who examined plaintiff for the Rio Rancho police department job, testified that he found plaintiff to be in excellent health; Mr. Mulholland, deputy director of the Academy, testified that plaintiff had fulfilled both the Academy’s physical and mental entry and graduation requirements; and Rio Rancho Police Chief Haycox, who said he was not aware that plaintiff suffered from any physical disability during the time he was employed with that department.

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Jaramillo v. Kaufman Plumbing & Heating Co.
708 P.2d 312 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
708 P.2d 312, 103 N.M. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaramillo-v-kaufman-plumbing-heating-co-nm-1985.