Pino v. Maplewood Packing Co.

Decision Date11 July 1977
Citation375 A.2d 534
PartiesStefano PINO v. MAPLEWOOD PACKING COMPANY and/or Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.
CourtMaine Supreme Court

Stanley W. Brown, Jr., Belfast, for plaintiff.

Rudman, Rudman & Carter, by Richard J. Relyea, Bangor, for defendants.

Before DUFRESNE, C. J. and POMEROY, WERNICK, ARCHIBALD, DELAHANTY and GODFREY, JJ.

WERNICK, Justice.

Stefano Pino has appealed from a pro forma decree of the Superior Court (Waldo County) affirming a dismissal by the Industrial Accident Commission (Commission) of his petition for award of workmen's compensation.

We sustain the appeal.

On March 16, 1970 petitioner, a veterinarian employed by Maplewood Packing Company (Maplewood), slipped on ice in the company's parking lot and injured his right shoulder. He forthwith reported the accident to Frances Farris, employed by Maplewood as an industrial nurse, who thereupon filed a report of the accident with Maplewood's workmen's compensation insurance carrier, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.

For approximately two months after the injury, petitioner treated himself by placing his right arm in a sling. Having observed no improvement in the pain and restricted movement he was experiencing, petitioner sought medical treatment, commencing in May, 1971, from a series of doctors. Toward the end of 1971, petitioner, still discouraged by lack of progress, began to think about going out-of-state for further expert assistance, but he did nothing at that time.

At last, in March of 1974, petitioner secured advice which ultimately led to his recovery. In that month resort to an arthrogram led to the diagnosis that petitioner had sustained a tear of the rotator cuff. Surgery was recommended. In April, 1974 petitioner underwent a successful operation in New York for the torn rotator cuff.

It was at that time that petitioner became aware that Maplewood's insurance carrier considered his claim for compensation barred by expiration of the two-year period for the filing of a petition. 1 Petitioner nevertheless filed a petition for award of compensation in November, 1974. He maintained that the prior expiration of the two-year period for filing such petition did not bar his compensation claim because (1) petitioner was under a "mistake of fact" as to the nature of the injury, and (2) in any event, conduct imputable to Maplewood upon which petitioner had relied precluded assertion of the bar by Maplewood. After hearings the Commission found against petitioner on both issues, and petitioner now assigns those rulings as reversible error.

1 The "Mistake of Fact" Issue

Relying upon the provision in 39 M.R.S.A. § 95 which authorizes the filing of a petition for compensation "within a reasonable time" after the two-year limitation period if there was no timely filing

"because of mistake of fact as to the cause and nature of the injury",

petitioner maintains that the original diagnosis of his sore shoulder as a sprain or subluxation, uncorrected until four years after the accident, constituted a "mistake of fact" within the meaning of § 95.

The Commission rejected petitioner's contention, saying:

" . . . (Petitioner) has known from the date of his fall that his injury was caused by his fall and that it consists of damage to the right shoulder and arm . . .. He may not have been given a specific medical diagnosis but certainly he had in mind all along the general nature of the injury."

We agree with this ruling of the Commission.

The language of the statute, the evident purpose furthered and our prior interpretations of predecessors of § 95 are in accord with the Commission's analysis.

Section 95 refers to a mistake concerning the "nature" of the injury. 2 The common meaning of "nature", according to Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language (1961), is:

"The essential character or constitution of something . . .; esp : the essence or ultimate form of something."

We think that this definition more readily fits a general description of the injury, i. e., damaged shoulder, than a specific diagnosis in connection therewith: tear of the rotator cuff.

The manifest purpose of the "mistake of fact" language confirms this interpretation of it. In general, statutes of limitation seek to reconcile the injured party's interest in compensation with the liable party's interest in a terminal date to litigation. See, e. g., Norton v. Penobscot Frozen Food Lockers, Inc., Me., 295 A.2d 32, 35 (1972). The specific provision of § 95 under scrutiny establishes in favor of the injured employee an exception to the general rule. The legislative motivation is readily apparent: when there is

"mistake of fact as to the cause and nature of the injury",

it would be unfair to bar the claim because the employee is unaware of it. Thus, the circumstances contemplated include those situations where the injury is latent or its relation to the accident unperceived. They do not include instances where, as here, the employee knows of the injury and its cause. In such a case the employee has notice of his claim and can proceed accordingly regardless of the ultimate diagnosis; the diagnosis only determines the extent of the injury, not its existence.

Our cases dealing with earlier versions of § 95 support this approach. In the two instances in which this Court has upheld the late filing of a petition based on statutory "mistake", the injury in question was not discovered until after the applicable limitation period. Brackett's Case, 126 Me. 365, 138 A. 557 (1927); Francis v. H. Sacks and Sons, 160 Me. 255, 203 A.2d 42 (1964).

Petitioner takes nothing by his assertion of "mistake of fact" under § 95 of the Act.

2 The Conduct of the Employer Issue "Waiver" and "Estoppel."

In its approach to petitioner's undertaking to avoid the bar which would ordinarily arise from his failure to file a timely petition for award of compensation the Commission subdivided petitioner's contention into the two separate concepts of "waiver" and "estoppel."

The only findings of fact made by the Commission bearing on waiver and estoppel were:

(1) "Mrs. Farris told Dr. Pino more than once, that she thought his case was 'covered' because an employer's first report had been submitted";

(2) " . . . (Nurse Farris) was aware that . . . (Dr. Pino) was obtaining medical treatment for his injured shoulder from different doctors";

(3) "(b)efore November 1974, Mrs. Farris was not aware that a Petition for Award of Compensation had to be filed within two years"; and

(4) " . . . (Nurse Farris) never had anything to do with filing . . . petitions (for award of compensation)."

As to waiver, properly conceived by the Commission as the intentional relinquishment of a known right, the Commission ruled, correctly, that Mrs. Farris' actions, as imputable to Maplewood, could not constitute a waiver by Maplewood of its right to assert Dr. Pino's late filing of a petition for award as a bar to his claim because Mrs. Farris

"didn't know of this requirement and, therefor(e), could not voluntarily set it aside."

The Commission disposed of the estoppel contention with no more than the summary conclusory statement:

"We do not believe that the actions or statements of Mrs. Farris, or of anyone else who participated for Maplewood, are grounds for ruling that Maplewood is estopped from asserting that Dr. Pino's rights are barred by the two year filing limitation of Paragraph 95 of the Act."

We find it highly significant, however, that the Commission stated this ultimate conclusion immediately after it had ruled, concerning waiver, that Mrs. Farris lacked knowledge of the two-year filing requirement. Moreover, we must take the Commission's generalized mention of the "actions or statements of Mrs. Farris . . . " as a reference only to those activities of Mrs. Farris concerning which the Commission had made the particularized findings of fact above-described.

With the Commission's estoppel decision thus postured, we must conclude that the record discloses affirmative indication that the Commission's evaluation of the estoppel question may have proceeded on the conception that it was essential to an "estoppel in pais" against Maplewood that Nurse Farris actually knew about the two-year filing requirement and, hence, her representations to Dr. Pino that the submission of the employer's first report had sufficiently covered his claim were knowingly, not inadvertently, misleading representations.

This is an erroneous view of the necessary elements of estoppel in pais. Unlike waiver, which, taken as the voluntary relinquishment of a known right, concentrates on fundamentally subjective considerations, estoppel in pais is concerned with essentially objective factors. Estoppel flows from the actual consequences produced by the conduct of A upon B regardless of whether A subjectively intended the consequences, and which resulted because,...

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