Morton C. Tuttle Co. v. Carbone

125 A.2d 133, 84 R.I. 375, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 30, 1956
DocketEq. No. 2500
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 A.2d 133 (Morton C. Tuttle Co. v. Carbone) 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
Morton C. Tuttle Co. v. Carbone, 125 A.2d 133, 84 R.I. 375, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 100 (R.I. 1956).

Opinion

*377 Condon, J.

This is an employer’s petition to review a preliminary agreement for workmen’s compensation for total incapacity. The petition is based on the ground that the employee’s incapacity due to the injuries described in the agreement has ended or diminished. From a decree of the workmen’s compensation commission affirming a decree entered by a single member of the commission, who originally heard and granted the petition on the ground that the employee’s incapacity had ended, the employee has appealed to this court.

He has filed eight reasons of appeal substantially to the effect that the decree is against the law, the evidence and the weight thereof; that certain medical evidence was illegally admitted and considered; that it fails to do substantial justice; that it is without legal evidence to support it; and that it is otherwise contrary to the law and the evidence. However, in his brief he has summarized those reasons under the following points: 1. The trial commissioner erred in admitting and relying upon the testimony of Dr. Thomas C. McOsker. 2. The fair preponderance of the legal evidence fails to establish that the respondent’s incapacity for work due to the injuries enumerated in the preliminary agreement has ended. 3. The decree entered by the single commissioner was not entered according to law and therefore *378 such decree and the full commission’s decree affirming it are void. We shall consider only the issues thus briefed and argued.

It appears from the evidence that respondent was totally disabled on April 18, 1949 when he fell from a plank at the end of a scaffold while working as a laborer :for petitioner. A preliminary agreement for total disability compensation was approved June 1, 1949 in which respondent’s injuries were described as follows: “Cerebral concussion. Cont. of Scalp. Fracture 5th cervical vertebra, frac, surgical neck of the rt. humerus. Fract. 8th & 9th ribs. Db. fract. 10th It rib. Frac. 11th & 12th 1ft rib. Fract. transvers process of the left 1st & 2nd lumbar vertebra. Fluid left chest.” He was treated by Dr. Arthur E. Martin, an orthopedist, and thereafter by Dr. Wilfred Pickles, a neurosurgeon. The respondent never returned to work and while he was drawing compensation he suffered a cerebral thrombosis with hemiplegia on November 15, 1951. Thereafter he continued to receive compensation, apparently without question until the petitioner brought the instant petition.

On October 13, 1954 petitioner had Dr. Thomas C. Mc-Osker, a neurosurgeon, examine respondent and he reported that at that time he had none of the injuries enumerated in the agreement but that neurologically he had a complete right hemiplegia. Doctor McOsker also reported that in his opinion there was no causal connection between the cerebral accident and the injuries which respondent had received at his employment in 1949. As a result of this report petitioner brought the instant petition claiming that respondent’s present incapacity was not due to such injuries.

At the hearing before the single commissioner petitioner did not ask that Dr. McOsker’s report be admitted in evidence but called him to testify as its first witness. After he was sworn and petitioner had propounded the first question to him with reference to his examination of respondent, respondent objected to the doctor being allowed to testify. *379 Such objection was based on the ground that petitioner had not complied with the following provision of public laws 1954, chapter 3297, article II, sec. 21: “The employee shall be entitled to a full, exact, signed duplicate copy of the medical report of the examining physician, which shall be mailed by the employer or carrier to the employee or his attorney forthwith upon receipt of the original report by the employer or carrier. Failure to do so shall make such report or evidence of such examining physician inadmissible if objection is made by the employee to the admission of the report or evidence.”

The petitioner admitted that it did not mail forthwith to the respondent such a copy of Dr. McOsker’s report of his examination of October 13, 1954 after it had received his report, but sent one sometime later which respondent conceded he had received on May 7, 1955. The single commissioner construed the statute as admitting of some flexibility and held that in the circumstances of the case before him there had been a substantial compliance with the statute. The full commission approved that ruling but added that even if it were erroneous there was other evidence in the record aside from Dr. McOsker’s testimony which convinced them that respondent was no longer incapacitated by his original injuries.

The respondent contends that this is not a correct construction of the statute. He argues that the word “forthwith” means at least within a reasonably prompt time and that the delay until May 7, 1955 in mailing the copy of the report must be deemed unreasonable and therefore a failure to comply with the statute. This is a question of mixed law and fact and as such the finding of the commission in answer thereto is not final. This court is not precluded by the statute from ruling thereon.

The petitioner does not deny this. However, it does contend that we should not consider the question, because respondent did not object to the testimony as it was given but *380 contented himself merely with the one objection to Dr. McOsker testifying at all. The petitioner also argues that respondent made Dr. McOsker his own witness when, in cross-examination, he asked him a certain question on a precise matter on which the doctor had not been examined in direct examination and thus respondent lost the benefit of the statute.

Ordinarily there would be some merit in petitioner’s contentions but in the light of the above-quoted provision of sec. 21 we think they are devoid of any merit here. Under the respondent’s objection the question raised for determination was whether petitioner had the right to present Dr. McOsker as a witness who was competent to testify on any matter concerning his physical examination of respondent on October 13, 1954. At the very outset of petitioner’s examination of Dr. McOsker on the witness stand, respondent quite properly objected when it became apparent that the doctor was going to be interrogated as to what he had learned from such physical examination and as to which he was incompetent as a witness under sec. 21. In these circumstances that one objection was sufficient to raise a question as to the admissibility of any further interrogatories of the same nature. It was not necessary thereafter to repeat the objection to each question designed to elicit further testimony concerning what the doctor found or what opinions he formed as a result of his examination of respondent on October 13, 1954.

We now recur to the question raised by respondent. After careful consideration we are of the opinion that the legislature intended by the above-quoted provision of sec. 21 to assure to the injured employee knowledge of the results of a physical examination by the employer’s physician as fully and promptly as to the employer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A.2d 133, 84 R.I. 375, 1956 R.I. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-c-tuttle-co-v-carbone-ri-1956.