Zuchowski v. UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY

229 A.2d 61, 102 R.I. 165, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 664
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 3, 1967
DocketEq. No. 2396
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 A.2d 61 (Zuchowski 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
Zuchowski v. UNITED STATES RUBBER COMPANY, 229 A.2d 61, 102 R.I. 165, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 664 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

*166 Kelleher, J.

This is an original petition brought by ail employee against his employer to obtain compensation benefits under.the workmen’s compensation act. After a hearing before the superior court a decree was entered denying and dismissing the petition. It is before, us on the petitioner’s appeal from that decree.

The evidence shows that petitioner was employed by respondent as a worker whose job it was to reroll cloth inserts which were used to separate layer® of rubber sheeting. He and a fellow worker would place this fabric oii a wooden roller which they had placed on a frame. A switch would be turned and the cloth would be automatically taken up on the roller. This process allowed the fabric to be rolled straight, smooth and free'from folds.

*167 The petitioner had been employed on the 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. shift for about two weeks in April 1953 when an incident occurred which plays a part of the instant litigation. On April 28, 1953, petitioner had placed a bar through the wooden roller preparatory to his and his co-worker’s lifting it onto its frame when the bar slipped from the roller and struck petitioner on his right great toe. Since this occurred in the late evening near the end of the shift, petitioner went home without going to the plant hospital or reporting his injury to his superior or any representative of respondent. The next day he went to the plant hospital and reported his injury to the nurse in attendance. Subsequently an X ray was taken of his toe which disclosed that petitioner had sustained a chip fracture at the- extreme end of his .great toe in the area under the toenail. The'petitioner was advised by the plant physician, Dr. William S. Nerone, to apply “soaks” to his toe. This fracture was described at the trial by the plant physician as minimal. The record shows petitioner worked a full day on April 29th.

The petitioner testified that on April 30, 1953, as he approached the plant to begin his shift, the odor from the plant distressed him and made him sick to his stomach. He vomited during the afternoon but managed to carry on with •his work.

As the hour approached 6:30 p.m., petitioner, his supervisor and fellow employee finished what they were doing and all started for the cafeteria where they were to have their lunch. The petitioner had brought some food from home which he had left in the fabric room. All three proceeded to a corridor to go out a door which led to the cafeteria. The supervisor, who was in the lead, and petitioner’s fellow employee were together because petitioner had momentarily left his associates and stepped into the fabric room, which is immediately adjacent to the corridor,, to pick up his lunch. The doorway which leads from the corridor *168 bo the fabric room has no threshold so> the floor there is completely level.

Upon their arrival at the cafeteria, the supervisor and petitioner’s fellow employee noticed that petitioner had failed to join them. At the same time another employee who was returning from the cafeteria found petitioner in the corridor sitting in a pool of vomit with his hands behind him trying to get up from the floor. He was facing the door which led to the cafeteria and was approximately seven feet from the entryway to the fabric room. There was a pool of 'blood behind him. When petitioner was asked what had happened, he said that he had blacked out and that he did not know. The petitioner was taken to the first-aid room and Dr. Nerone was summoned. He ordered petitioner to be transferred immediately to St. Joseph’s Hospital. Doctor Nerone then summoned Dr. Thomas L. Greason, a neurologist, to the hospital to act as a consultant in the treatment of petitioner. The petitioner was treated by the two physicians during the time he was hospitalized. He was discharged from the hospital on May 24, 1953 and continued to see Dr. Greason at his office for a period of time thereafter.

It is conceded by all the parties that the injuries received by petitioner on April 30, 1953 were a fractured skull, a sub-arachnoid hemorrhage and a cerebral concussion. They disagree as to whether petitioner’s hemorrhage was spontaneous or traumatic in origin. In testimony offered in petitioner’s behalf both Dr. Greason and a neurosurgeon said that it was traumatic. However, respondent’s physician, Dr. Nerone, described the hemorrhage as spontaneous and attributed it to a ruptured blood vessel at the base of petitioner’s brain which occurred of its own weakness and was not due to any external influence. It was Dr. Nerone’s opinion that as a result of the rupture of a blood vessel, petitioner lost .consciousness and fell to the floor thereby receiving the concussion and fracture of the skull.

*169 The only issue raised by the instant record is whether or not petitioner has established a causal connection or nexus between his injuries and his employment. Under G. L. 1966, §28-33-1, it was his burden to- establish by the fair preponderance of the evidence that the injuries he suffered arose out of and in the course of his employment and were connected therewith and referable thereto. Gaudette v. Glas-Kraft, Inc., 91 R. I. 304. In this cause, where the evidence is neither uncontradicted nor unimpeachéd, our function by law is to ascertain if there is any competent evidence present in the record to support the findings made by the trial justice. If there is such evidence, his action will be upheld. Picozzi v. Nugent, 99 R. I. 398, 208 A.2d 99.

The pertinent findings of fact in the decree of the superior court denying and dismissing the petition are in part as follows:

“3. That the injury which petitioner suffered on April 28, 1953 as aforesaid, resulted in no incapacity entitling the petitioner to compensation ;
“4. That on the night of April 30, 1953 the petitioner suffered a second injury, being an injury to his head, by reason of a fall caused by a spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage;
“5. That neither the said spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage nor petitioner’s stomach trouble was caused or aggravated by petitioner’s employment or the conditions under which it was required to be, or was actually, performed;
“6. That the first injury which occurred on April 28, 1953 did not contribute in any way to the second injury which occurred on April 30, 1953;
“7. That the second injury which occurred on April 30, 1953 -did not arise out of the petititoner’s employment.”

The evidence presented in this cause is in conflict.

While petitioner has briefed several objections which he had duly noted on the record to certain evidentiary rulings *170 made by the trial justice, an examination of the transcript shows that in several instances, questions which were disallowed by the trial justice and the exclusion of which petitioner here objects were asked elsewhere in the record and a reply received.

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Bluebook (online)
229 A.2d 61, 102 R.I. 165, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zuchowski-v-united-states-rubber-company-ri-1967.