Truong v. Wong

775 N.E.2d 405, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 868, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1183
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 2002
DocketNo. 99-P-1284
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 775 N.E.2d 405 (Truong v. Wong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truong v. Wong, 775 N.E.2d 405, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 868, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1183 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Beck, J.

On May 29, 1997, the plaintiff-employee, Chi Truong, suffered an injury in the course of his work at the defendants’ tofu manufacturing plant. There is no dispute that the defendant-employer, Yah Kee, Inc. (corporation), did not carry workers’ compensation insurance and was not self-insured. In the absence of the requisite insurance, the employee filed a complaint in Superior Court for personal injury damages against the corporation as well as against the president and treasurer of the corporation, defendant Cheng Yah Wong (president). The parties cross-appeal from judgments on issues related to liability and damages.

Governing legal principles. Every employer in the Commonwealth, with certain limited exceptions, is required to carry workers’ compensation insurance, unless self-insured or a member of a self-insurance group if so qualified. See generally Locke, Workmen’s Compensation § 1, at 3 (Koziol Supp. 2000). If an employer fails to provide such coverage, an injured employee may sue the employer in a civil action for the full scope of tort damages. G. L. c. 152, §§ 66, 67. In such an action, the employer may not assert certain critical common-law defenses. Ibid. See LaClair v. Silberline Mfg. Co., 379 Mass. 21, 26 (1979). An employee may also bring an action in tort against a corporate officer who negligently fails to obtain workers’ compensation coverage. See id. at 29. In such a case the measure of damages is the “amount which would have been obtained under G. L. c. 152 had workers’] compensation coverage been provided.” Id. at 30.

The trial evidence. The jury could have found the following facts. The employee began work for the corporation in 1980 when he came to the United States at the age of forty-seven. For seventeen years he worked eleven hours a day, six days a week, originally at a plant on Tyler Street in Boston and more recently in Waltham, making tofu and doing manual tasks associated with that endeavor. He does not speak English.

On the morning of May 29, 1997, the employee slipped and fell on a wet floor at work and injured his right wrist in an at[870]*870tempt to break his fall. (The employee is right-handed.) That afternoon the employee went to see a Chinese doctor who was a “healer with bones.” That doctor referred the employee to the New England Medical Center. The employee went to the emergency room the next day, and from there he was referred to the hand clinic. On June 5, the chief hand surgeon at that hospital performed corrective surgery on the employee’s fractured wrist. The surgeon aligned the bony fragments in the plaintiff’s arm, inserting two pins in the bone between the plaintiff’s wrist and his fingers and two other pins in one of the major bones in his forearm. The surgeon then connected the pins with two carbon rods. At the time of his injury the employee was sixty-four years old.

Two months later, on August Í, the doctor removed the pins and applied a removable splint. The employee then began physical therapy. By September, the employee’s strength improved but was still far from normal. There was improvement after September, but the employee did not regain his original level of functioning. One year after the surgery, the surgeon estimated that the employee had regained seventy-five percent of his strength and eighty to ninety percent of his preinjury motion. The doctor did not expect further improvement and observed that older people do not heal as well or as fast as younger people. They also have less endurance.

Testifying through an interpreter, the employee described the circumstances of his fall and his subsequent treatment. In the course of his testimony, he also described in detail his work at the tofu factory, including loading carts with ten sixty-pound bags of beans and then emptying the bags in tanks. As for the effect of his accident, he testified that carrying a chicken of a few pounds “would be a great effort”; that pushing things was very painful; and that he did not have enough strength in his right hand to work, “because if there were enough strength [he] would go to work.” In the course of his testimony, he demonstrated the extent of motion in his right hand. He testified that he could not physically do his former work because he would need both hands to push the pail around every time. He said he had “asked around [for other work], but a lot of the Chinese work requires a lot of heavy lifting. [He also observed] [871]*871I’m older now.” The employee’s daughter, who had dinner with her father every night, testified that her father tends to use his left hand more, had trouble using chop sticks, and regularly depends on painkillers.

The president, who came to this country in 1975, has served as president of the corporation since the late 1980’s when his father retired from the family business. Although the president’s insurance agent told him about workers’ compensation insurance, he did not buy any because it was “too expensive.” The theory of the defense was that the employee was not injured at work, or at least that he was “not [being] honest” about the accident and his injury, and was looking for “a retirement plan.”

The trial process. The employee’s claims against the corporation and the president were tried before a Superior Court judge and jury over two days. At the close of the employee’s case, counsel for the employee attempted “to introduce requests for judicial notice of sections 34, 35, 36, and 37 [of G. L. c. 152].” The employee claimed that “once there is a determination that [the employee] was in fact injured, and once there is a determination that [the president] was in fact negligent, it [is] a question of law as to what the damages are as to [the president] . . . [because] the damages [are] spelled out in the workers’ compensation statute.” The judge responded that before there could be calculations, the jury would have to make other determinations, including the extent of the employee’s disability. With that disagreement unresolved, the employee rested, as did the defendants. The defendants then moved for a directed verdict.

Among the several grounds set out in the motion, the hearing focused primarily on the president’s contention that the employee had failed to carry his burden of proving damages. The president asserted that “[t]here has been nothing presented to the jury which would allow them to figure out what [the plaintiff] is entitled to in medical expenses, what he’s entitled to in lost wages, what his compensation] rate would have been, what kind of calculations are made against the statutory scheme for disability. . . . [I]t would be totally speculative on the part of the jury to try to figure out, with or without reading the [workers’ compensation act,] what [the employee] is entitled to as a matter of damages.”

[872]*872The judge asked counsel for the employee whether there had been any evidence she had missed as to what the employee was capable of earning after the accident. Counsel responded that the employee’s theory of the case was that he was “disabled from any type of work” and that he therefore had no duty to present evidence to prove that he had an ability to work and earn money. After further discussion, the employee repeated his argument that it was his burden to prove the extent of disability and “then it’s a question of law as to how the workers’ compensation statute is applied to those factual issues.”

The judge referred to LaClair v. Silberline Mfg. Co., 379 Mass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 N.E.2d 405, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 868, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truong-v-wong-massappct-2002.