Ruddy v. I.D. Griffith & Co.

237 A.2d 700, 1968 Del. LEXIS 194
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 8, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 237 A.2d 700 (Ruddy v. I.D. Griffith & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruddy v. I.D. Griffith & Co., 237 A.2d 700, 1968 Del. LEXIS 194 (Del. 1968).

Opinion

HERRMANN, Justice:

In this workmen’s compensation case, we are required to determine the meaning of “earning power”, as that term is used in 19 Del.C. § 2325,1 and, in the ascertainment thereof, the consequence of an employee’s post-injury return to the same employment for the same compensation.

I.

These pertinent facts are uncontrovert-ed: The employee, Bernard J. Ruddy, was a welder in sheet metal work in the employ of I. D. Griffith & Co. (hereinafter “Griffith”). On June 11, 1965, Ruddy fainted while at work at the plant. The attack came upon him as he worked from a ladder, in extraordinary heat, on the sixth floor of the building, while leaning through a window. He had carried his tools and some sheet metal up the ladder.

After a first-aid electrocardiogram by the plant physician, Dr. George Henning, it was discovered that Ruddy had suffered a heart attack, a myocardial infarction. Following a period of hospitalization and home recuperation, Ruddy returned to work [702]*702for Griffith on September 13, 1965, with the doctor’s permission. He was assigned to “light work” on the first day, but on the second day, again with the doctor’s permission, he resumed his regular and ordinary duties as a welder, without restriction or limitation, at the same compensation he was earning at the time of the heart attack. On October 6, 1965, Ruddy filed a claim for compensation and a hearing thereon was held before the Industrial Accident Board on January 21, 1966, which produced the following:

“BY THE CHAIRMAN:
“Q Are you presently working?
“A Yes, sir.
“Q Doing anything?
“A Doing anything.
“Q So that after your second day back to work on the job then, you say, you have been doing whatever the job required ?
“A Whatever it requires.
“Q Are you compensated at the same rate of pay as prior to June 11? Are you receiving the same pay ?
“A The same pay, yes, sir.
“Q So the same pay the same duties?
“A Yes, sir.
* * * * * *
“Q And I think you said earlier that the way you feel now you can do whatever you have to do in connection with your work, and have worked constantly since September?
“A In fact, I feel better now than I felt in the past 10 years, I would say.”

Ruddy had been seen by Dr. Charles Allen once, on August 4, 1965. Upon the basis thereof, Dr. Allen testified:

“Q Have you examined the patient in respect to determining what amount of residual effect might have occurred be cause of the heart attack ?
“A Again I think examining him in the light of his usual occupation he certainly has to be limited in the amount of physical work he can do in the future. The time I saw him he was well convalesced from his heart attack. He was under very good close medical supervision and had just really started an increase in his activity. As a matter of fact, the week I saw him he was due back to work on a limited basis. I think again from a standpoint of his usual occupation no one is going to allow him to carry heavy tools up a ladder; no one is going to allow him to do quite the work he did prior to his heart attack. So I think in light of that, and digging into all the references I could find medically for medical cardiology, which is now getting to be a specialty of its own, I felt that he was certainly disabled to a point of earning his living as far as his present occupation was concerned. To judge again for sake of inability to get another job if he ever loses this one, I don’t believe many companies are hiring laborers who have had previous heart attacks. We came up with a 20 to 30 per cent disability. As I say, as a number it is not quite as easy as surgery where you lose a finger and you have a set fee schedule or set percentage.
* * * * * *
“Q Now, could you tell me once again the basis for the number which you described it as in assessing the disability that you find he now has between 20 and 30 per cent? What factors go into reaching that determination?
“A The medical authority on compensation cardiology or heart attacks related to the industrial field is a Dr. Segal in New York. And on some of his articles, although he never gave a definite formula, based his percentages on the type of work they must go back to and how much limitation they have. An office [703]*703worker, an executive may be zero percent due to the fact that he could fully return to work. The heavy truck loader or ditch digger may be 90 per cent because he’ll never return to work. And we gradually try to give a formula for somewhere in between partially disabled from his heart.
“Q So that the 20 to 30 per cent that you refer to relates to the nature of the activities he might subsequently perform ?
“A Or his limitation thereof, yes, sir.
“Q Yes. And, as you say, suppose Mr. Ruddy instead of being a sheetmetal worker or welder was, in fact, an office worker, would your percentage vary then?
“A Yes, indeed.”

The Industrial Accident Board found that as a result of the heart attack, Ruddy was unable to be gainfully employed for the period June 12 to September 16, 1965; that he was entitled to compensation therefor, together with reasonable medical and hospital expenses. The Board further found, however, that Ruddy had failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he had suffered e-'ther a loss of “earning capacity” or a permanent disability attributable to the June 11 occurrence.

Upon appeal to the Superior Court, the action of the Board was affirmed. Ruddy appeals.

II.

The Superior Court held that, by reason of his return to the same employment with the same wages, Ruddy was confronted with a rebuttable presumption that no loss of earning capacity had occurred; and that he had failed to adduce evidence sufficient to overcome that presumption. We agree.

The term “earning capacity”, as used by the Board and the Superior Court, and the term “earning power”, as used in 19 Del.C. § 2325, are synonymous; they both mean earning ability. It is important to note that the term “earning power”, as used in the Act, does not mean actual earnings or “wages received”, the term used in § 2325 for the pre-injury factor of the computation of disability. This is apparent from the fact that, in § 2325, the General Assembly chose a different phrase, i. e., “earning power”, for the post-injury factor. Thus, it is clear that actual earnings and “earning power” are not synonymous under the Delaware Statute.2

It is generally held that the fact that the employee receives post-injury compensation equal to that earned by him before the injury, will not, per se, defeat his claim for compensation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 A.2d 700, 1968 Del. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruddy-v-id-griffith-co-del-1968.