Shortall v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co.

60 A.2d 143, 74 R.I. 237, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 143 (Shortall v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing 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
Shortall v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co., 60 A.2d 143, 74 R.I. 237, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 65 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

*238 Capotosto, J.

This is a petition by an employee for partial compensation and medical expenses under the workmen’s compensation act, general laws 1938, chapter 300. The case is before us on the employer’s appeal from a decree of the superior court granting the petition.

Respondent’s contentions require that we first set out with some particularity the rather confusing circumstances in the record under consideration. The evidence shows that on January 26, 1940 the petitioner, while lifting a heavy piece of cast iron in the course of his work, suffered a “strained back” by accident. Compensation on the basis of an average weekly wage of $44.82 was duly paid him under a preliminary agreement dated February 27, 1940. On April 15, 1940 he returned to work as a “scraper” which also required the *239 lifting of rather heavy cast-iron pieces. On May 5, 1941 he signed a settlement receipt. Thereafter he worked steadily without medical attention although with occasional discomfort.

On or about March 8, 1944, as he was lifting a piece of cast iron, petitioner’s foot slipped and he bumped his knee against the bench at which he was working. At the same time he also felt “a kink in my back — I felt my back snap.” He immediately reported this accident to the foreman and was given first-aid treatment to the knee by a doctor in respondent’s dispensary. The next day he consulted his own doctor, William A. Horan, who, after various examinations and tests, operated on him in May 1944 for a “ruptured disc.” At the time of this second accident petitioner’s weekly wages were at the rate of $1.55 an hour for a 50-hour week, or $77.50.

On April 7, 1944 the petitioner filed a petition with the department of labor seeking a review of the 1940 preliminary agreement on the ground of decreased earning capacity allegedly due to a recurrence of the “disability suffered originally on January 26, 1940,” namely, a strained back. Subsequently, on September 12, 1944, he apparently abandoned that petition and entered into a second preliminary agreement which provided for the payment of compensation for total incapacity at an average weekly wage of $44.82. This agreement gave the date of accident as January 26, 1940, the date of the second incapacity as April 13, 1944, and the cause, nature and location of injury as a strained back. The parties agree that all payments for compensation under this agreement and for medical expenses were paid up to the time the petitioner returned to work for the respondent as a guard on November 6, 1944. No settlement receipt was signed by him on this occasion.

Following the employee’s return to work as a guard the respondent stopped compensation payments, and on November 10, 1944 filed a petition asking that it be relieved of such payments as the petitioner had returned to work at *240 the same or greater rate of wages earned prior to his accident of January 26, 1940. While this petition was pending the petitioner, on April 6, 1945, brought a petition whereby he sought reimbursement for additional medical expenses in connection with the 1940 accident.

These two cases were heard together de novo in the superior court on appeals by the respective parties from the decisions of the director of labor. On June 18, 1946 that court entered a decree granting the employer’s petition to discontinue payment of compensation on the ground that the employee’s then loss of earning capacity was not due to the accident of 1940, and on the same date it entered another decree denying and dismissing the employee’s petition for additional medical expenses on the ground that such expenses for the 1940 accident had been fully paid in accordance with the provisions of the act then in force. No appeals were taken to this court from the entry of these decrees, which therefore became final.

We now come to the petition in the instant case. On February 27, 1946 the petitioner brought the present original petition for partial compensation alleging therein that on or about March 9, 1944 he sustained an “intervertebral disc fracture” by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment as a “scraper” for the respondent. We recall here that after the second -accident of March 1944 the petitioner returned to work for the respondent as a guard in November of that year. His pay for that work, according to the evidence, was at the rate of 79 cents an hour for a 55-hour week and he worked in that capacity until he was laid off on February 19, 1945. Within a few weeks thereafter he secured employment as an “oiler” with the Gorham Manufacturing Company at 75 cents an hour for a 53-hour week. When the present ease was heard in the superior court his rate of pay had been increased to 97 cents an hour.

Doctor Horan, who attended the petitioner for his injury in the accident of March 1944, testified that he had *241 treated him for a strained back in 1940 and that at that time his symptoms were not consistent with an injury to the spine. He next saw him on March 11, 1944 when the patient’s history was taken by his secretary. The date of the second accident and injury to petitioner’s knee and back appeared therein as January 1, 1944. The hospital records connected with his operation in May of that year and the doctor’s report of the following- September to the respondent contained the same date. With reference to this matter, the doctor testified that he was concerned with the condition of his patient and not with the date of the accident.

Doctor Horan’s opinion was that the petitioner suffered a “ruptured intervertebral disc” as a result of the accident in 1944. His testimony on this point was that the “bump on the knee just caused a twisting which caused a disturbance of a disc” and that such condition “irritated the sciatic nerve” thereby completing “the cycle.” In his judgment the petitioner could do only light work for some indefinite time. In cross-examination Dr. Horan’s attention was called to his report of September 1, 1944 to the director of labor in which he stated that when the petitioner came to him in March 1944 “it was apparent from his history that the original pain had never quite subsided and that he suffered an exacerbation five or six months before he came.” (italics ours) Respondent strongly relies on that language but fails to note that immediately following it the report states: “Investigation showed that he had a Ruptured Disc. Operation confirmed this diagnosis and removed the cause of his disability.”

Upon a hearing de novo in the superior court of the petition in the instant case a decree was entered which contains, among others, the following findings of fact: That the petitioner sustained a compensable injury by accident in March 1944 when “he slipped * * * and he struck his knee, felt a twist in his back and subsequently a ruptured intervertebral disc was discovered”; that at the *242

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Bluebook (online)
60 A.2d 143, 74 R.I. 237, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shortall-v-brown-sharpe-manufacturing-co-ri-1948.