Lancaster v. Cooper Industries

387 A.2d 5, 1978 Me. LEXIS 889
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 23, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 387 A.2d 5 (Lancaster v. Cooper Industries) 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
Lancaster v. Cooper Industries, 387 A.2d 5, 1978 Me. LEXIS 889 (Me. 1978).

Opinion

POMEROY, Justice.

In 1974 the appellee, William Lancaster, was injured in the course of his employment for Cooper Industries (Cooper). The injury occurred when appellee caught his left hand in a machine, amputating his little finger and a portion of his ring finger on his left hand. Cooper then agreed to pay appellee compensation for total incapacity for an indefinite period of time. In 1975, however, Cooper petitioned the Industrial Accident Commission for review of incapacity claiming that appellee’s incapacity had diminished or ended. Appellee then filed a petition seeking an award of vocational rehabilitation under 39 M.R.S.A. § 52.

*7 Finding that appellee was only partially incapacitated but that he had “made reasonable efforts to seek work commensurate with his physical limitations but such work is not available in the area where he resides,” the Commission dismissed the petition for review of incapacity. Appellee’s petition for an award of vocational rehabilitation, however, was granted on the grounds that the Commission found that “vocational rehabilitation is necessary and desirable to restore the injured employee to gainful employment,” and “the program submitted by the Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor ... is feasible and hereby adopted by this Commission.” From the pro forma decree entered in Superior Court affirming the Commission’s decision Cooper now appeals.

We deny in part and sustain in part.

Cooper first contends, in regard to its petition for review of incapacity, that the Commission’s conclusion that appellee was unable to find work commensurate with his physical limitations is ambiguous, requiring a remand for clarification. If the conclusion should be deemed unambiguous, however, Cooper next argues that there was no competent evidence to support the conclusion. We disagree with both contentions.

We find that the Commission’s conclusions that appellee sincerely desired to work, that he had made reasonable efforts to find work within his physical limitations, and that such work was not available in his community, demonstrate both the Commission’s acknowledgement and its application of the proper legal standards. Where an employee has suffered only partial incapacity, but has made a good faith effort to secure work, the employee may receive compensation for total disability where he has also shown that the efforts to find work failed “either because employers in his community would not hire people with such a limited capacity to do the type of work within his tolerance, or because there was no reasonably stable market in his community for that restricted work of which he was capable.” Bowen v. Maplewood Packing Co., Me., 366 A.2d 1116, 1119 (1976). The Commission’s stated conclusions regarding appellee’s attempts to find work reflect that the Commission found that appellee had made a good faith effort to find work but that no reasonably stable market existed in appellee’s community for the kind of work appellee was able to perform. While the phrasing of the decree was not as precise as it might have been, we believe the decree is not so ambiguous as to require a remand.

We further find that the award of compensation for total incapacity is supported by competent evidence. In a petition for review of incapacity the employer has the ultimate burden of proof, as contrasted to the situation where the employee, as the moving party, must prove the extent of incapacity. Fecteau v. Rich Vale Construction, Inc., Me., 349 A.2d 162, 164, n.1 (1975). In order to meet its burden in a petition for review, the employer must prove prima facie that the employee has recovered some work capacity. Once this burden has been met, the employee has the burden of coming forward with evidence of his reasonable but unsuccessful efforts to find work. Id. at 164; Martel v. United States Gypsum Co., Me., 329 A.2d 392, 394-95 (1974). In this case, Cooper does not appear to attack the Commission’s finding that the employee had met one portion of his burden of going forward — namely, that appellee had demonstrated that he had made a reasonable good faith effort to find work. Cooper’s contentions focus solely on whether appellee met his other portion of the burden by showing some evidence of the absence of a stable market for someone with his limited work capacity.

The reasonableness of a work search is a mixed question of law and fact requiring an appellate court to examine the reasonableness of a Commission’s ultimate conclusions while giving deference to the Commission’s expertise. Gaddis v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., Me., 382 A.2d 1045; Jacobsky v. D’Alfonso and Sons, Inc., Me., 358 A.2d 511 (1976). In contrast, the question of market stability is a pure question of fact. As such, the Commission’s findings will not be *8 reversed if supported by rational and natural inferences from proven facts. Overlock v. Eastern Fine Paper, Inc., Me., 314 A.2d 56, 60 (1974).

Here there was evidence that appellee had approached many different employers in his attempts to find work but that none of them was willing to hire him. It may well be true, as Cooper points out, that the area in which appellee sought work is economically depressed. That some of appellee’s rejections were economically motivated, however, is insufficient to require a conclusion that appellee failed in his burden of going forward to show unstable job market. Cf. Bowen v. Maplewood Packing Co., at 1120-21. The Commission’s findings must be sustained on this point.

We sustain Cooper’s appeal, however, insofar as it relates to the award of vocational rehabilitation.

39 M.R.S.A. § 52 provides in pertinent part:

“Whenever, because of the nature of such injury or the subsequent condition of the employee following such injury, it appears that vocational rehabilitation is necessary and desirable to restore the injured employee to gainful employment, the employee shall be entitled to reasonable and proper rehabilitation service . .” (emphasis supplied)

At the hearings before the Commission it appeared that Mr. Hayford, a Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor for the Industrial Accident Commission, recommended that appellee receive vocational rehabilitation by attending a six to twelve-week course at .the Nationwide Tractor Trailer School in Rhode Island. Mr. Hayford believed that appellee would be physically able to work as a tractor-trailer operator. Appellee indicated that he would be willing to do such work. No showing of any kind, however, was made to. demonstrate that this type of work would actually be available to appel-lee upon his completion of the course.

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387 A.2d 5, 1978 Me. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancaster-v-cooper-industries-me-1978.