Wood v. Cives Construction Corp.

438 A.2d 905, 1981 Me. LEXIS 1060
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 31, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 438 A.2d 905 (Wood v. Cives Construction Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Cives Construction Corp., 438 A.2d 905, 1981 Me. LEXIS 1060 (Me. 1981).

Opinion

DUFRESNE, Active Retired Justice.

By decision dated February 5,1981, re-affirmed on April 21,1981, the Workers’ Compensation Commission awarded Lewis Wood compensation for total disability for two periods in 1980 following an injury Wood suffered on June 20 of that year while employed by Cives Construction Corporation. Viewing the employee’s disabling condition as related to the accident of June 20 to be of a temporary nature only, the Commission denied compensation for continuing disability. The Superior Court, Washington County, reflected the Commission’s decision in its pro-forma decree and Wood appeals to the Law Court from the *907 Superior Court judgment on the ground that the evidence did not support the Commissioner’s finding that Wood’s work-related injury resulted in no continuing disability. Six weeks after filing notice of appeal, Wood filed a motion with the Law Court seeking a remand of the case to the Superi- or Court with instructions to remand to the Commission for reconsideration in light of newly discovered evidence. We ordered that the merits of the appeal and the motion be briefed and argued together. We now deny both.

Wood, who had no prior history of back problems, twisted his back at work on June 20,1980. Thereafter he had pain in the low back and left leg. He was out of work for five days. He returned to his employment and worked through the month of July; then, he left again and has not worked since. He filed his petition for compensation on August 12, 1980.

Wood’s doctor referred him to a Dr. Pritchard, who examined him on August 12 and again on November 18, 1980, and testified before the Commissioner on January 5, 1981. At the employer’s request, Wood was examined by a Dr. McGinn on October 27, 1980. Dr. McGinn testified before the Commissioner on January 7, 1981.

Both doctors were of opinion that Wood was suffering from degenerative arthritic disc disease, a condition consistent with his being a 42 year old man who had done heavy labor for an extended period, and that the work-related incident of June 20, 1980, only temporarily aggravated the underlying condition, but did not anatomically alter it. The doctors testified that such occurrences would continue to befall the petitioner and would become more frequent as Wood grew older, if he continued to do heavy work. Both medical men, therefore, recommended that Wood do light to moderate work, a recommendation which would have been in order even before the incident of June 20.

Wood testified on January 8,1981, that as of that date he was still suffering symptoms, particularly pain on bending over to load wood into his stove.

The doctors stressed that their diagnosis was tentative. There was a possibility that Wood ruptured a disc on June 20. This possibility would be confirmed or eliminated by a myelogram, an enhanced x-ray procedure involving the injection of a substance into the patient’s spine. Dr. Pritch-ard scheduled a myelogram for August 20, 1980, but Wood cancelled this appointment because of a close friend’s death. Dr. McGinn scheduled a myelogram, but the employee cancelled this appointment also. Wood expected to have a myelogram performed on the date of his second appointment with Dr. Pritchard, November 18, 1980. This myelogram also was never performed, apparently because at the time of the appointment the employee’s symptoms had gone away. Dr. Pritchard recommended that a myelogram be considered if the left leg symptoms recurred.

The Commissioner rendered his decision on February 5, 1981. In his order of that date, he adopted the theory of both doctors that Wood suffered not from a ruptured disc but from a degenerative arthritic disc condition that was aggravated only temporarily by the work-related incident of June 20,1980. The Commissioner accordingly ordered compensation for only those periods during which Wood was out of work while suffering from aggravated symptoms caused by the work-related injury: the week immediately following the injury and the period from July 28,1980 until November 18, 1980, when the symptoms had subsided. After the employee’s motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law, the Commissioner reiterated his earlier conclusions on April 21, 1981.

Wood eventually had his myelogram on May 27, 1981. It indicated a suspected lateral herniated disc on the left side. At that time, the case was on appeal to the Law Court.

THE MOTION

As stated previously, the employee moves this Court to remand the case for reconsideration in light of the May 27 myelogram *908 results. The employee argues that the Rules of Civil Procedure are applicable, because 39 M.R.S.A. § 103 in effect at the time provides that the Superior Court’s pro forma decree

shall have the same effect and all proceedings in relation thereto shall thereafter be the same as though rendered in an action in which equitable relief is sought, duly heard and determined by said court .... 1

He concludes therefrom that, since the Superior Court’s pro forma judgment is statutorily given the same effect as a judgment of the court sitting in equity, it necessarily follows that a party aggrieved by such judgment may, pursuant to Rule 60(b)(2), M.R.Civ.P., obtain relief from it by motion to this Court on the basis of newly discovered evidence (here, the myelogram results of May 27, 1980, which, the petitioner claims, could not have been discovered by due diligence in time to move for a new trial under Rule 59(b)).

Cognizant of the fact Rule 60(b) contemplates that the relief-from-judgment process, whether by motion or plenary action, must be pursued in the trial court, i.e., in the Superior Court, and not in the Law Court, the petitioner, in an effort to overcome that hurdle, would superimpose a broad power in the Law Court to grant an application for an order as prayed for or for other relief by motion pursuant to Rule 75B(a), M.R.Civ.P. 2 The petitioner may take comfort from the statement in the Second Edition of the Maine Civil Practice, 1981 Supplement, Harvey, McGuire and Wroth, at page 517, § 75B.1 of the Commentary to Rule 75B(a):

The inherent power of the Law Court, entirely apart from its power to make procedural orders, is substantial.

Yet, Rule 75B(a) must not be interpreted so broadly as to nullify the statutory strictures which the Legislature has imposed upon the appellate mechanism established for judicial review of decisions of the Workers’ Compensation Commission.

First, the Workers’ Compensation Commission does not itself have authority to grant the relief that this motion seeks. At the time this case was before the Commission, no statute authorized the Commission to reopen cases for consideration of new evidence. 3 We have repeatedly stated that the Commission has no powers beyond those expressly granted to it by the Legislature, or such as emerge therefrom by implication as necessary and incidental to the full exercise of the powers explicitly granted. See Toomey v. City of Portland, Me., 396 A.2d 1029, 1032 (1979); Anania v. City of Portland,

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438 A.2d 905, 1981 Me. LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-cives-construction-corp-me-1981.