Tirocchi v. United States Rubber Company

232 A.2d 593, 102 R.I. 617, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 737
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 4, 1967
DocketAppeal No. 24
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 232 A.2d 593 (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, 232 A.2d 593, 102 R.I. 617, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 737 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

*618 Kelleher, J.

This is an employee’s motion for the award of a counsel fee filed in this court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. 1956, §28-35-32, as amended, wherein she alleges the successful prosecution of a petition for compensation within the purview of that statute. Her petition for compensation was before us in Tirocchi v. United States Rubber Co., 101 R. I. 429, 224 A.2d 387, where we held that the workmen’s compensation commission erred when it denied one portion of her petition in which the employee sought specific compensation for the permanent uselessness of her hands resulting from the loss of certain of her fingers. We did, however, affirm the commission’s denial of the other portion of her petition when we ruled that the workmen’s compensation act does not require an employer to provide the employee with a house helper to assist her with the household and personal tasks which she cannot perform for herself.

Accompanying the instant motion was an affidavit executed by employee’s counsel in conformance with this *619 court’s provisional order No. 5 1 wherein he discloses that he has received the sum of $350 from the employee as a retainer in this action. Counsel’s affidavit states that he expended $111 of this money for the typing and mimeographing of the briefs which he submitted to us on his client’s appeal. In his statement of services rendered, which was submitted in support of the motion, counsel stated that this money was paid him as a retainer for the prosecution of the appeal to this court from the adverse decision of the compensation commission.

The issues raised by this motion are twofold: (1) may a counsel fee be awarded where an employee has attained only partial success in prosecuting her petition for benefits under the compensation act, and (2) may an attorney who has accepted a fee from an employee be awarded a counsel fee provided for in the statute.

The answer to the first issue is no longer in doubt. In Palumbo v. United States Rubber Co., 102 R. I. 220, 229 A.2d 620, we held that a counsel fee shall be awarded in the instances provided for in the statute notwithstanding the fact that the employee’s success in prosecuting his petition may be partial rather than total. Employee’s motion therefore is properly before us.

A reply to the second issue posed herein involves a construction of the statute which, since its amendment in 1961, has afforded an employee an opportunity to have his at *620 torney awarded a fee to be paid for by the employer. The pertinent portion of §28-35-32, as amended, which concerns us here reads as follows:

* * jn proceedings under said chapter, costs shall be awarded, including counsel fees and fees for medical and other expert witnesses, to employees who successfully prosecute petitions for compensation, petitions for medical expenses, petitions to amend preliminary agreements and all other employee petitions, except petitions for lump sum commutation * * *. No employee’s attorney shall accept any other or additional fees for his services for the particular petition for which the fees are awarded in each tribunal.”

It is employee’s contention that this statutory prohibition against the acceptance of a fee is prospective and applies only after the appropriate tribunal has awarded her attorney a fee. The employer takes a position that the payment of the $350 bars the allowance of any fee for the services an attorney has performed for an employee in any of the tribunals which have considered the petition. We disagree with both of these contentions.

Any fee due an employee’s attorney which is to be assessed as part of the costs due from an employer must find its basis in the statute, and this legislative sanction may not be extended beyond the terms and plain implications of the statute. We first considered the provisions of §28-35-32, as amended, in Gomes v. Bristol Mfg. Corp., 95 R. I. 126, 184 A.2d 787, where we upheld the constitutionality of this .section. There this court described, as a reasonable belief, its assertion that in affording to an employee this unique method of providing compensation to his attorney at his employer’s expense, the legislature had considered the financial standing and resources of the average employee and those of the average employer. Thereupon, in its wisdom it placed the burden of the attorney’s fees upon the side better able to bear them. Otherwise we said it was conceivable any weekly sums due an employee would be *621 unwarrantedly lowered by the amount of the employee’s costs and fee due his attorney.

What we said in Gomes in 1962 is just as true today. The moneys paid an employee as weekly compensation benefits are intended to ease the economic impact a period of disability brings upon a worker and his family. It takes no great stretch of the imagination to realize that this financial trauma is increased immeasurably if the employee must pay from his compensation benefits an attorney for services rendered him in proceedings concerning the workmen’s compensation act.

We considered the provisions of this section once more in Capaldi v. Liberty Tool & Gage Works, Inc., 99 R. I. 236, 206 A.2d 639, and declared that while the statute contemplates the award of a fee upon the final success of a petition of an employee, it does not prohibit the assessment of a counsel fee by a tribunal other than that in which the litigation is successfully terminated. The tribunal in which the litigation concludes may, if it deems it appropriate, remand the case to a subordinate tribunal for the assessment of a fee consistent with the services performed before it. This action would be consistent with the language of this section which provides for the assessment of a counsel fee against an employer “* * * by a single commissioner, by the full commission on appeal and by the supreme court on appeal *

It is our opinion that the general assembly, in providing for the award of counsel fees in workmen’s compensation proceedings, intended that any remuneration received by a prevailing employee’s attorney would be derived solely and exclusively from the unsuccessful employer. It was not the purpose of this legislation that an attorney be paid by both the employer and employee, and in furtherance of its design in this area the legislature specifically provided that an attorney should not accept any other or additional fee *622 for services he may render in any one of the tribunals which is considering a petition and may, as a consequence of its deliberations, assess a counsel fee. The legislature chose its language carefully.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 A.2d 593, 102 R.I. 617, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tirocchi-v-united-states-rubber-company-ri-1967.