Pepe v. American Silk Spinning Co.

38 A.2d 474, 70 R.I. 309, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 17, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 38 A.2d 474 (Pepe v. American Silk Spinning 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
Pepe v. American Silk Spinning Co., 38 A.2d 474, 70 R.I. 309, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 46 (R.I. 1944).

Opinion

*310 Moss, J.

This cause was begun by a petition for review filed in the office of the director of labor on March 30, 1943 by an injured employee of the respondent, for an increase of compensation, under the workmen’s compensation act, on the ground of decreased earning capacity. The petition was heard on June 9, 1943; and on the next September 4 it was granted by a decision in which the petitioner was awarded compensation for total disability from January 10, 1943, and payment of medical expenses.

The respondent appealed from this decision to the superior court, in which the cause was heard de novo, and a written decision was filed October 29,1943, in which she was awarded compensation for only partial incapacity, from January 10, 1943, at the rate of $1.42 per week, and $100 for medical expenses.

*311 On December 8, 1943 a decree was entered in accordance with this decision and included findings of fact, which were, in effect, that she had not been totally incapacitated since January 10, 1943, or sustained the burden of proving decreased earning capacity since that date; that the employer had offered and made available to her, during that period, light work, which she had been capable of doing, and that, if she had done it, she would have been entitled to partial compensation of only $1.42 per week, under article II, §11, of the workmen’s compensation act, which provides for the payment of one-half of the difference between the earnings before, and those after the accident.

Meantime, on November 18, 1943, an order had been entered by the trial justice in which he appointed Dr. William A. Horan to act as an impartial medical examiner, to examine the petitioner in order to determine the nature, extent and probable duration of her injury and to file his report in the office of the clerk of the court. This report, typewritten, was made by Dr. Horan and was received by mail by the clerk, inclosed in a sealed envelope postmarked January 5, 1944.

In this report, after finding, inter alia, that the petitioner was unable to put her right arm behind her; that there was a prominence over the external condyle of the right humerus and that hyper-extension of the right elbow caused her to complain of pain, he concluded as follows: “I feel that this patient can resume work.” Because of the nature of this report and the fact that the examination was not made until December 28, 1943, after the petitioner’s claim of appeal was filed, we are of the opinion that the report gives no support to the decision or decree of the superior court.

On December 16, 1943, the petitioner filed a claim of appeal from the decree; on January 31, 1944 her reasons of appeal and the transcript of testimony were filed; and a little later the cause reached this court on the appeal, the reasons of appeal given therein being, in substance and *312 effect, that the decree was contrary to the law and to the evidence and the weight thereof; that there was no competent evidence upon which a finding could be made that the petitioner had not been totally incapacitated since January 10, 1943, or a finding that she had failed to prove that she had had a decreased earning capacity since that date; or a finding that the respondent had'offered and made available to her, since that date and down to the time of the hearing in the superior court, light work which she had been capable of doing.

Many facts in the cause are undisputed. On December 3, 1941 the petitioner, while at work as a filler for the respondent, which work she had done for it for many years, had a fall and thereby so injured her right elbow and arm that she was totally incapacitated for work as a filler. A preliminary agreement under the workmen’s compensation act was made on the next day, which provided for payment to her of compensation at the rate of $10.92 per week, upon the basis of an average weekly wage of $21.84.

On January 22, 1942 she returned to work for the respondent and was given light work, at which she earned $19 per week; but she refused to sign an agreement for partial incapacity. The respondent therefore filed a petition with the director of labor to review the preliminary agreement. This petition was heard on March 4 and on March 11, 1942 a decision was entered granting the petition and awarding her compensation for partial incapacity. That decision, in accordance with the above-cited art. II, §11, entitled her to receive weekly one-half of the difference between $21.84 and $19, viz., $1.42.

On July 13, 1942 the employer filed a second petition, to review the decision of March 11, 1942, on the ground that she was no longer incapacitated, since she was then earning wages as a filler equal to or in excess of those which she was earning at the time of her injury.

As this was not disputed, a decision granting the petition and suspending compensation payments under the act, as *313 of July 14, 1942, was rendered by the director of labor and no appeal was taken from that decision. There was no finding that she had recovered from her injury. Thereafter she continued to work for the respondent as a filler until January 3, 1943, when she stopped working and went away on a visit to her sister.

She returned to the respondent’s factory on January 9 or 10 to resume her work there as a filler and was informed by its general foreman that there was no more filling work for her to do. In his testimony he explained this by saying that by leaving the employment for about a week, as she had done, she had lost her seniority rights for employment on that work; that the respondent company was turning from silk to rayon; that they had to cut down the number of employees engaged in filling and that those whose rights to employment in that work were then senior to hers could do all that work.

The petitioner testified that she had worked for the respondent for many years as a filler; that when she fell, in the course of her employment, her right elbow was badly injured and she could not work for four months. Then she went back to work at her former job, but looking after only one machine. Later she got back to her- regular work and did not require the use of her right arm very much. Yet she often had to sit down and her arm pained her at times and she had treatments by the nurse twice a day. That she complained of pain while working on this job and received treatments by the nurse was corroborated by testimony by the respondent’s foreman.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony, when she got back after visiting her sister for about “a week in January 1943, the foreman told her that she could not have a filling job any more and gave her work cutting off, with scissors, the tops and bottoms of old silk stockings, work which required the use of the muscles of her right arm. She tried it all day long, but her arm became swollen and pained her so much that she could not stand the pain. She went back *314 the next morning and he told her that he had nothing else for her. Three weeks before the hearing in the superior court she went back again and asked for some light work and was offered only the same job of cutting stockings.

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Related

Vincent v. John Bowen Company
32 A.2d 628 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 474, 70 R.I. 309, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pepe-v-american-silk-spinning-co-ri-1944.