Marconi v. Bartlett Scrap Iron Co.

19 A.2d 766, 66 R.I. 409, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 29, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 766 (Marconi v. Bartlett Scrap Iron 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
Marconi v. Bartlett Scrap Iron Co., 19 A.2d 766, 66 R.I. 409, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 45 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

*410 Baker, J.

This is a petition brought under the workmen's compensation act. Following a hearing in the superior court a justice thereof entered a decree denying and dismissing the petition. From the entry of that decree the petitioner duly appealed to this court.

It appears from the admitted allegations in the petition and from the evidence in the cause that on October 19, 1936 the petitioner, then about fifty-four years of age, while working for the respondent company sustained an injury by reason of particles of steel entering his right eye. He had worked for the respondent for many years prior to the date above mentioned, and ordinarily operated shears which were used to cut heavy metal. As a result of such injury the petitioner lost the entire sight of his right eye which, however, was not removed. Following the accident, agreements duly approved by the director of labor were entered into by the parties whereby compensation for the petitioner was provided for during his disability, and also specific compensation for his loss of sight as aforesaid.

On January 15, 1937 the petitioner returned to work with the respondent. Thereafter he apparently had some difficulty in carrying out the duties which he had been performing prior to being injured, and he was, therefore, assigned to a lighter job which involved merely the sorting of metals. Finally, he was made yard foreman, receiving a substantial increase in wages. On May 12, 1937, iii response to a peti *411 tion filed by him, a decree providing for commutation of all payments due .under the beforementioned agreement for specific compensation, without any reduction for acceleration, was entered by the superior court. No attorney represented the petitioner at that time. No claim is made by him that any payments are now due under the agreements hereinbefore referred to. On February 23, 1938 the petitioner was discharged by the respondent. During the week immediately prior to that date all of the respondent’s employees, including the petitioner, had been examined in respect to their physical condition.

The petition now before us was filed in the office of the director of labor May 9, 1939. In it the petitioner set out a statement of the facts which we have already mentioned, and alleged that on October 19, 1936 he sustained an injury to his right eye from particles of steel, arising out of and in the course of his employment with the respondent; that since that date he has sustained a loss of sight in his left eye; and that, because of the injury above mentioned, he has suffered ’ constant headaches and dizzy and paralytic spells. The petitioner prayed for compensation by reason of alleged permanent total incapacity.

The decree entered in the superior court and now appealed from contained the following findings of fact: “(1) That the petitioner has not proved that he is suffering from headaches and dizziness, which were the forms of physical disability relied upon by him in his proof. (2) That the petitioner has not proved that his present physical condition, assuming that it is such as to result in his disablement, is the proximate result of the injury which he suffered on October 19, 1936.”

It is proper to note that the instant petition was apparently tried in the superior court on the theory that the alleged headaches and dizzy spells, of which the petitioner complained, were either new compensable injuries resulting *412 from the original accident of October 19, 1936, or were new manifestations of that accident, and that they first appeared in August 1937 and continued down to the time of the trial. Such alleged headaches and dizzy spells were the forms of physical disability which were relied upon by the petitioner to show that, when the cause was heard, he was totally incapacitated from working, and his evidence was directed at proving the existence of such forms of disability.

It is clear, from his decision, that the trial justice considered that the questions of fact before him related, first, to the existence of the alleged headaches and dizzy spells, and second, assuming such existence to have been shown, as to whether or not said conditions were the direct or consequential result of the injury of October 19, 1936. That the nature of the present petition, and the evidence submitted thereunder, were as above indicated was recognized in the decree entered following the hearing in the superior court. In such decree it was specifically set out that the headaches and dizziness were the forms of physical disability relied upon by the petitioner in his proof. Therefore, in the paragraph of such decree marked (2) the words “present physical condition” are construed by us, in determining the issues raised in this petition, as referring only to the petitioner’s physical condition in relation to such alleged headaches and dizziness, and not to any other possible matters, symptoms or manifestations relating to his physical condition. The existence, extent, effect or cause of any such other possible matters, symptoms or manifestations, if any there be, in our opinion are not before us, and are, therefore, not passed upon by us in any way in the instant proceeding.

It is, of course, expressly set out in the workmen’s compensation act itself, general laws 1938, chapter 300, article III, § 6, that in the absence of fraud findings of fact made by the superior court are conclusive. The section in question has been considered in many cases, and it is settled that this court cannot review such findings of the superior court if *413 there is any legal evidence to support them. See Reynolds v. Freemasons Hall Co., 60 R. I. 343. Only when there is an entire absence, of such evidence does the question then become one of law upon which we can pass.

The petitioner contends that the findings of fact set out in the decree, as above indicated, were not supported by legal evidence and, therefore, were erroneous as a matter of law.' He testified, in substance, that in August 1937 he began to have headaches and dizzy spells which gradually became worse and continued up to the time of trial, and that, because of such condition, he was then unable to work. He did not, however, prior to his discharge voluntarily stop work for this cause. He also gave evidence that he had never suffered such spells and had never worn glasses before his injury on October 19, 1936. There was no evidence supporting the allegation in the petition that he had suffered any paralytic spells, so called.

On the petitioner’s behalf a physician, who had been a general practitioner for about six and one half years, and who had never done any eye surgery, but had taken courses relating to the eye and had examined eyes, testified that the petitioner was his patient and that he first saw him professionally about March 1, 1940, at which time he gave him a complete physical examination which, apart from his left eye, was negative. This witness also gave evidence that the petitioner complained of pain, dizziness and headaches aggravated by damp weather, which complaints the witness attributed to a sympathetic condition from the right eye, the sight of which, as already stated, had been lost by reason of the injury in question.

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Related

General Scrap Iron, Inc. v. Laporte
26 A.2d 618 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 766, 66 R.I. 409, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marconi-v-bartlett-scrap-iron-co-ri-1941.