Rivera v. Simmons Co.
Decision Date | 12 July 1973 |
Docket Number | No. 2--273A35,2--273A35 |
Citation | 37 Ind.Dec. 411,157 Ind.App. 10,298 N.E.2d 477 |
Parties | Angel L. RIVERA, Appellant (Plaintiff below), v. SIMMONS COMPANY, Appellee (Defendant below). |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
Robert L. Pressler, Chudom & Pressler, Gary, for appellant.
James E. Schreiner, Travis, Tinkham & Schreiner, Hammond, for appellee.
Review is sought by plaintiff-appellant Angel L. Rivers (Rivera) from a decision of the Full Industrial Board of Indiana (the Board) denying benefits for an injury which the Board found did not arise out of and in the course of his employment with defendant-appellee Simmons Company (Simmons).
We reverse.
While on the job Rivera sustained an injury to his back and filed a claim with the Industrial Board, which a Hearing Member denied on June 28, 1972. Thereafter, Rivera filed an Application for Review by the Full Board, and on January 10, 1973 the Board sustained the Hearing Member's finding against Rivera and rendered the following 'Findings of Fact':
'That plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant on the 16th day of June, 1970, at an average weekly wage in excess of the maximum; that on said date plaintiff did not sustain an accidental injury arising out of and in the course of his employment with the defendant herein; that plaintiff's condition, if any, is due to causes wholly unrelated to his employment by said defendant;
'That prior to the filing of plaintiff's application a good faith effort was made by said parties to adjust said claim, which effort resulted in a disagreement between the parties.
'The full Industrial Board now finds for the defendant and against the plaintiff on plaintiff's Form 9 application for the adjustment of claim for compensation, filed on the 16th day of October, 1970.
'IT IS THEREFORE CONSIDERED, ORDERED, AND ADJUDGED by the full Industrial Board of Indiana that plaintiff herein shall take nothing by his application Form 9 for the adjustment of claim for compensation, filed on the 16th day of October, 1970, and plaintiff shall pay all costs, if any, taxed in said cause.'
For reasons that hereinafter appear, we cannot decide this case on the merits and only consider whether the Findings of Fact by the Board are specific enough to enable this court to intelligently review the Board's award.
CONCLUSION--It is our opinion that the Board should make Findings of Fact specific enough to enable this court to intelligently review its decisions.
Even a cursory examination of these Findings of Fact indicates their insufficiency. They fail to specify 'the finding of the facts on which it (the award) is based.' 1 They are mere conclusions which afford no basis for intelligent judicial review.
Without a factual foundation for the Board's action a reviewing court must assume the Board's fact finding function by searching the record and by relying on the parties' briefs, to engage in a guessing game as to the 'facts' found by the Board to support its action. The usurpation of the Board's statutory duty is not a legitimate function of judicial review. Transport Motor Express, Inc. v. Smith, Ind.App., 289 N.E.2d 737, handed down December 4, 1972, (the Second TMX case).
In deciding 'the dispute' between 'the parties at issue' 2 no distinction is made by the Workmen's Compensation Act between positive or negative awards, i.e., whether the Board's action is to deny, grant, reduce, or raise benefits. The Board's function in any event is to enter specific findings of fact relevant to the disputed issues.
In the Second TMX case the requisite specificity was stated to be:
'. . . the specific findings we need are those which are relevant to the contested issues, the disputed issues, which is to say, the specific facts which are basic to the ultimate facts upon which the parties have been unable to agree.
'As to the other elements of the claimant's burden of proof, the uncontested and undisputed elements, on which the Board must make a finding, it is relatively unimportant whether the facts are found specifically or whether the Board merely 'mouthes the general language of the statute."
The need for specific findings of fact has been repeatedly emphasized in a series of cases from this court beginning with Transport Motor Express, Inc. v. Smith, Ind.App., 279 N.E.2d 262, handed down March 1, 1972, (the First TMX case). Typical is TRW, Inc., Ross Gear Division v. West, (Ind.App. March 14, 1973) 293 N.E.2d 517:
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Medical Licensing Bd. of Indiana v. Ward
...were not made with the specificity required by law, and specifically do not conform to the requirements of Rivera v. Simmons Company (1973), 157 Ind.App. 10, 298 N.E.2d 477, and Board of Medical Registration and Examination v. Stidd (1978), 177 Ind.App. 21, 377 N.E.2d 3. The Board's Finding......
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Rivera v. Simmons Co.
...January 10, 1973, were not sufficiently specific to enable this Court to intelligently review the Board's decision. Rivera v. Simmons Co. (1973), Ind.App., 298 N.E.2d 477. Therefore, it was remanded with directions to the Board to submit additional Findings specifically setting forth the fa......
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Perez v. U.S. Steel Corp.
...this Court examines Board awards does not permit such self-indulgence. As Chief Judge Buchanan observed in Rivera v. Simmons Co. (1973), 157 Ind.App. 10, 13, 298 N.E.2d 477, 479, "The usurpation of the Board's statutory duty (to make specific findings of fact) is not a legitimate function o......