Tirocchi v. UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY

224 A.2d 387, 101 R.I. 429, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 1, 1966
DocketAppeal No. 24
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 224 A.2d 387 (Tirocchi v. UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY) 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
Tirocchi v. UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY, 224 A.2d 387, 101 R.I. 429, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 411 (R.I. 1966).

Opinion

*430 Powers, J.

These are appeals which .are claimed by both an employee and her employer from a final decree of the workmen’s compensation commission sustaining the employer’s. appeal from the decree of a single commissioner. The cause originated with the filing of an employee’s petition to review and the posture in which it is presented to this court can be better comprehended from a recitation of the travel as established by the -record.

It appears therefrom that on December 28, 1960, petitioner while operating a preform hydraulic press in the employ of respondent sustained serious injuries to- both hands when they were caught and crushed in said press-. There being no question of petitioner’s right to compensation benefits, a preliminary agreement -was signed by the parties on January 24, 1961 and approved by the director of labor. By the terms thereof, petitioner was to- receive compensation for total incapacity on an average weekly wage of $79.84 until otherwise terminated -and $24 weekly for a pe *431 riod of 164 weeks as specific compensation for the loss of four fingers on her left hand and three fingers on her right. Under the agreement, compensation 'benefits started to run December 29, 1960 and petitioner continues to receive compensation for total incapacity.

On August 24, 1964 she filed .an employee’s petition for review of the agreement, based on her claim of specific compensation for toe permanent uselessness of her hands resulting from the loss of toe fingers. Further, in the petition she claimed that respondent refused to. pay medical expenses provided for in G. L. 1956, §§28-33-5 and 28-33-8, as amended.

When toe cause came to be heard by a single commissioner, respondent questioned toe .appropriateness of a petition to review when asserting a claim for specific compensation. For toe purposes of that claim toe petition was thereafter treated as an original petition for specific compensation and respondent makes no contention that the adopted procedure was in anywise invalid.

The probative evidence adduced before toe single commissioner consists of petitioner’s testimony and ¡that of Dr. Armand Versad together with a series, of correspondence between the latter and toe Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation located in New York city, Dr. Robert W. Beasley of toe Institute of Reconstructive Plastic Surgery connected with New York University Medical Center, and Dr. Joseph H. Dwindle of the Rhode Island Hospital Physical Medicine Department. From an 'analysis of this correspondence it would appear that about April 30, 1963, Dr. Versad referred petitioner to' Dr. Dwindle and the latter had petitioner admitted to the Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation where she remained from February 4 to February 11, 1964. During petitioner’s stay at said institute she was interviewed by Dr. Beasley of toe *432 New York University Medical ’Center apparently as part of the institute’s program.

In ¡any ¡event Dr. Versad, a spedalist in plastic surgery, testified that he performed five operations or “procedures” in an effort to preserve and/or reconstruct as much of each hand as possible. The first was performed December 291, 1960 and the last November 21, 1961. At the conclusion of the surgery or procedures, four fingers of the left hand were lost by 'amputation but on the right hand three fingers were amputated .and the long finger was substituted for the index finger to. give petitioner the best possible pinch by using it with the ¡thumb. The doctor continued to see petitioner and about November or December 1962 he sent her to a prosthetic spedalist named Tanen'baum in New York. The petitioner returned, he further testified, with oo¡smetic hands which admittedly have no¡ functional value and are used for appearance. It was the doctor’s testimony, corroborated1 by .petitioner, that she had difliculty wearing them and did so on a very limited basis.

The doctor further testified that .at or about the time he referred petitioner to- Dr. Dwindle at the Rhode Island Rehabilitation Center he believed that he had done about as much as he could by way of reconstructive surgery. This was the end of April or the first week in May 1963. It is the sense of Dr. Versaei’s testimony that the referral to Dr. Dwindle was for physical, psychological and rehabilitating therapy. It is 'also clear that both doctors were interested in possible functional advantages to petitioner through the use of mechanical prosthetic ¡devices. It is equally clear from all the correspondence .and the -testimony of Dr. Versad as we'll as1 that of petitioner that she had no interest in such devices., an attitude quite probably ¡resulting from her unsatisfactory experience with the cosmetic hands.

In.addition to her claim for specific compensation benefits, petitioner was seeking to have respondent provide her *433 with the services in her home of a helper in housekeeping and personal needs. Both petitioner and Dr. Versaci testified in considerable detail as to' the numerous ways that petitioner would be helped about her home and in the care of her person.

On the basis of the record before him the single comrni&sio-ner awarded petitioner specific compensation benefits for the permanent total loss of use of the left hand and 90 per cent loss of the use of the right hand, crediting respondent with payments made pursuant to the preliminary agreement. He also awarded $35 weekly for a period of nine months to- defray the -expenses of a helper in the home.

From the entry of his decree -containing such awards respondent appealed to .the- full commission, which sustained the appeal and entered a decree reversing the single commissioner.

Both -petitioner and respondent claimed an appeal therefrom to this court. In view of the consideration hereinafter given to petitioner’s appeal, we deem it necessary to consider only one aspect of respondent’s appeal. It is concerned with respondent’s first reason, namely, that petitioner’s claim for specific compensation was not filed within the time fixed by law.

In support of this reason, respondent argues that if there were resulting permanent uselessness to' both hands compensable under the statute, such uselessness became known on November 21, 196-1 when reconstructive surgery ended. The- petition not being filed until August 24, 1964, respondent contends it was not filed within the two-year period prescribed by G. L. 1956, §28-35-57, as amended.

It is the essence of respondent’s argument that since petitioner’s hands- were anatomically in the same condition with the 'Completion of the last surgery November 21, 1961, as they were in early May 1963 when Dr. Versaci concluded that he could do nothing further to- help' petitioner, the *434 doctor could not select this latter date nor could the single commissioner accept it as the time when the statute began tO' run. The issue here, however, is not the anatomic condition of petitioner’s hands. It is rather at what time following surgery did the percentage of uselessness of the hands, if any, become manifest.

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Bluebook (online)
224 A.2d 387, 101 R.I. 429, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tirocchi-v-united-states-rubber-company-ri-1966.