Taci v. United States Rubber Co.

58 A.2d 921, 74 R.I. 113, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 17, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 A.2d 921 (Taci v. United States Rubber 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
Taci v. United States Rubber Co., 58 A.2d 921, 74 R.I. 113, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 43 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

*114 Baker, J.

This is an original petition brought under the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act, general laws 1938, chapter 300. After a hearing in the superior court the trial justice entered a decree denying and dismissing the petition, and the petitioner has duly prosecuted her appeal to this court.

The decree appealed from contains the following language: “* * * the court finds that the petitioner sustained no injury by accident arising out of and in the course of her employment * * The determinative question is whether or not the above finding is correct. The answer to that question, on the record before us, depends upon whether the petitioner suffered an accident within the meaning of that term as used in the workmen’s compensation act and as construed by this court. That is the only issue in dispute between the parties.

It appears in evidence that the petitioner, who was about forty-one years of age and had been employed by the respondent for approximately fifteen years, suffered a severe pain in her back while working as a cementer on December 16, 1946. The petitioner testified, among other things, that on the above date in the course of her employment she pulled across a rough wooden floor toward the place where she was working a table upon which were about forty or forty-five trays containing rubber gloves to be cemented. She estimated that each trayful of gloves weighed about a pound and that she pulled the table a distance of from 10 to 12 feet. While so doing she felt a “kink” in her back which did not bother her “too much.” Thereafter she continued her regular cementing work in the usual manner for an appreciable time during which she applied the necessary cement to the gloves contained in “quite a few” of the trays hereinbefore referred to. She then testified that “as I was lifting one tray over to the other table, *115 I got half-way over and I felt this pain — severe pain in my back”; and further that in moving a tray she had to “swing around to put it over to the other table * * *.”

The evidence also discloses that owing to the severity of this pain the petitioner became temporarily unable to move or to call for help. However, an inspector in her department immediately noticed that she was in some difficulty and seated her in a chair. The foreman was called and he in turn communicated with the nurse at the plant hospital who arranged to have the petitioner moved to that place. There she complained of pain in her back, was put to bed, given heat treatments and a sedative and was later examined by Dr. Palmer, the plant physician, who strapped her back with tape. She was then taken home where she was attended by the doctor until January 7, 1947 when he told her he could do nothing more, whereupon she called her own physician Dr. Malinou who, a few days later, ordered that she be sent to the Miriam Hospital where she remained until February 2, 1947.

While there Dr. Malinou treated her for a sprained back and consulted an orthopedic specialist, Dr. Silver, who also examined and treated her. The last-named doctor found muscle spasm in the lower back, tenderness over the lumbar sacral joint, lesser tenderness over the sacroiliac joints and no tenderness over the sciatic nerve. X-ray photographs of the petitioner’s back showed no injury but a “congenital anomaly — sacralization” of the right transverse process of the fifth lumbar vertebra. At the time of trial her condition had improved considerably but she was still being treated by Dr. Malinou and had done no work since December 16, 1946.

In cross-examination Dr. Malinou said that the petitioner, in giving him a history of the occurrence, told him that she “lifted a tray of rubber material from one table to another” and then felt a pain in her back. According to Dr. Silver’s testimony, the petitioner stated to him that her job entailed the repeated lifting of trays of rubber *116 material weighing from five to ten pounds from one table to another twisting her body as she moved, and that on the morning in question “while at work she twisted with the tray from one side to the other, as she had done so many times,” and felt a sudden severe pain in her lower back.

Witnesses for the respondent testified as to what the petitioner told them about the advent of the pain in her back. According to the inspector’s testimony she “took the tray, turned around, and put it on the table” and then found herself unable to move back. The nurse testified she was told by the petitioner that “she didn’t know how it occurred; she said the pain occurred suddenly” and also that “she didn’t do anything unusual that she knew of at all, she couldn’t understand what caused it.” The testimony of the foreman was to the effect that he did not talk with the petitioner about the matter but that no claim of any accident was ever made to him. Testimony of a similar nature regarding the failure to report any accident happening to the petitioner at the time in question was given by the respondent’s supervisor of workmen’s compensation.

Under the provisions of our compensation act a personal injury to an employee to be compensable must have been sustained by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment. G. L. 1938, chap. 300, art. I, §1; art. II, §1. This court has held that the word “accident” as it is used in the act is to be understood in its popular and ordinary sense and means an unlooked-for mishap or untoward event which is not expected or designed. The court had occasion recently to consider at some length in Parente v. Apponaug Co., 73 R. I. 441, the question of what constitutes an accident under the provisions of the act, and in that case pointed out at least three classes or types of injury which properly may come within the above-described meaning of that term. It seems unnecessary to repeat here what was set out fully in that case. See also Zielonka v. United States Rubber Co., 74 R. I. 82.

*117 In the instant case in arriving at his decision the trial justice reviewed the pertinent principles of law set out in cases heretofore decided by this court and, after applying such law to the evidence, came to the conclusion that the petitioner had not sustained a personal injury by accident. In particular he relied on the case of Spolidoro v. United States Rubber Co., 72 R. I. 269. Upon consideration we find that his decision was without error.

The petitioner, however, argues that the alleged moving of the table containing a number of trays filled with rubber gloves as above described constituted an accident under the act within the meaning given to the word by this court, and that her subsequent back injury was due to such moving and developed from the so-called “kink” in her back incident thereto. It would appear from the evidence that this alleged happening was disclosed for the first time by the petitioner when she testified in this case.

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Related

Vastano v. Vastano
182 A.2d 443 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1962)
Zielonka v. United States Rubber Co.
65 A.2d 460 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
58 A.2d 921, 74 R.I. 113, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taci-v-united-states-rubber-co-ri-1948.