Salvas v. Pawtucket School Department

420 A.2d 74, 1980 R.I. LEXIS 1846
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 1, 1980
DocketNo. 78-236-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 420 A.2d 74 (Salvas v. Pawtucket School Department) 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
Salvas v. Pawtucket School Department, 420 A.2d 74, 1980 R.I. LEXIS 1846 (R.I. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Justice.

This is an appeal by the Pawtucket School Department (employer) from a decree of the Worker’s Compensation Commission (commission) awarding compensation for total disability to its employee Rene Salvas. The employer claims that the commission improperly denied its motion to dismiss the employee’s petition to review an earlier decree denying compensation. It asserts also that the commission erroneously awarded compensation because the employee failed to sustain his burden of proving the claimed disability.

The facts are not in dispute. In 1971, Salvas suffered a totally disabling back strain in the course of his employment as a [75]*75janitor. Salvas petitioned the commission for total-disability compensation and received an award of benefits from July 14, 1971 through January 29, 1974. In 1975, Salvas petitioned pursuant to G.L.1956 (1968 Reenactment) § 28-35-45 1 for review of that earlier award claiming that he was again totally disabled by the injury sustained in 1971. On June 24, 1976, the trial commissioner decreed that Salvas had proved total incapacity “from March 4, 1975 through October 14, 1975, on account of the return of the effects of” the 1971 injury but had “failed to prove he was incapacitated, in whole or in part, since October 15, 1975” as a result of that injury. Neither party appealed from the trial commissioner’s decree.

On August 6, 1976, Salvas petitioned for review of the June 24, 1976 decree alleging that the effects of the 1971 injury had returned immediately after that decree and had rendered him totally incapacitated. The employer did not resume payment of compensation benefits upon receipt of Sal-vas’s petition. It chose instead to rely on the 1976 decree in which the trial commissioner had terminated compensation because Salvas had failed to prove his disability. Prior to the hearing on Salvas’s petition, the employer requested Salvas to submit to a medical examination as provided in § 28-33-34.2 Salvas refused and that refusal prompted the employer to move for dismissal of his petition in an attempt to invoke the sanctions provided in § 28-33-38 3 for refusal to submit to such an exam.

The trial commissioner denied the employer’s motion, basing his denial on the [76]*76fact that as long as the employer was not paying Salvas compensation, the employee was under no obligation to submit to a physical examination. The trial commissioner then proceeded to hear testimony from only Salvas and his physician concerning the allegedly disabling effects of Sal-vas’s 1971 injury. At the conclusion of the testimony the employer renewed his earlier motion to dismiss the employee’s petition.

In his decision the trial commissioner, in ruling on the employer’s motion, looked to this court’s ruling in Saccoccio v. Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp., 107 R.I. 53, 264 A.2d 905 (1970), that an employer who has disclaimed responsibility under the Worker’s Compensation Act (Act) for an employee’s injury cannot benefit from the sanctions set forth in § 28-33-38. He determined that the employer’s denial of liability for the employee’s return of incapacity constituted a disclaimer of responsibility within the meaning of Saccoccio. The trial commissioner stated that the employee was under no obligation to submit to a physical examination until the employer had been determined to be liable for the employee’s return of incapacity and the payment of compensation benefits commenced. Accordingly he denied the employer’s motion to dismiss. On the basis of the testimony, the trial commissioner found that Salvas suffered “a return of total incapacity as of July 12, 1976 flowing from and as a result of his original injury until April 11, 1977 at which time the petitioner became only partially incapacitated for work and continues to so remain * * *.”

The employer appealed to the full commission from the trial commissioner’s denial of its motion to dismiss and from his finding that Salvas’s incapacity for work had returned. It claimed that the Saccoccio ruling applies only to employers who deny liability under the act when an employee first sustains a work-related injury. According to the employer, its initial admission of liability combined with the 1976 decree terminating Salvas’s compensation entitled it to deny liability in a proceeding to review the 1976 decree without forfeiting its rights under §§ 28-33-34 and 28-33-38. The employer maintained also that the trial commissioner’s finding of incapacity was not supported in the record because Salvas had failed to sustain his burden of proving a change in his condition from the date of the 1976 decree.

The full commission determined that the Saccoccio case applied with equal force to employers who originally admitted liability for a particular injury but subsequently denied liability on a petition claiming a disabling return of that injury. It concluded therefore that the employer was not entitled to invoke the sanctions of § 28-33-38 so long as it denied liability for Salvas’s alleged return to incapacitating disability.

In relation to the employer’s second ground for appeal, the commission agreed with the employer’s contention that when an employee petitions under § 28-35-45 for review of an earlier decree, he ordinarily must prove a change in his condition from the date of that decree. The commission ruled, however, that under the circumstances of this case Salvas did not have to demonstrate a change in his condition to prevail on his petition to review the 1976 decree. It reasoned that Salvas had already proved that'the effects of his 1971 injury had totally disabled him in 1975. In its view, the 1976 finding that Salvas had “failed to prove he was incapacitated, in whole or in part, since October 15, 1975 due to the effects of such injury sustained on May 25, 1971” was not equivalent to a finding that Salvas had recovered from the effects of that injury. The commission concluded that, absent an affirmative finding in the 1976 decree that Salvas had recovered from the 1975 return of his 1971 injury, Salvas to prevail on his petition to review the 1976 decree, need prove only that he remained incapacitated from the 1975 return of his injury. It found that the record fully sup[77]*77ported the trial commissioner’s determination that Salvas had been totally incapacitated from July 12,1976 to April 11,1977, and partially incapacitated thereafter. It therefore affirmed the decree of the trial commissioner, thereby prompting the employer to appeal to this court.

The employer requests this court to reverse the commission’s rulings on the two issues presented to it. We shall first consider its claim that the commission improperly relied on the Saccoccio ruling to deny its motion to dismiss. In Saccoccio, the employee suffered a totally incapacitating back injury while employed as a millwright. Unable to reach an agreement with his employer, he filed an original petition with the commission seeking an award of benefits for total disability. Prior to the hearing on his petition the employer made three separate appointments for medical examinations of the employee. The employee failed to keep any of the appointments, which failure prompted the employer to invoke the sanctions provided in § 28-33-38. The commission refused to penalize the employee, and we affirmed its refusal on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
420 A.2d 74, 1980 R.I. LEXIS 1846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvas-v-pawtucket-school-department-ri-1980.