2 Conn. App. 363 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1984
In this workers' compensation case, these combined appeals raise questions concerning the constitutionality of the conclusive presumption of General Statutes
The facts are not in dispute. On May 2, 1980, the decedent, Roy Bush, who had been an employee of Quality Bakers of America (Quality), suffered a cardiac arrest and died after playing a racquetball game shortly after noon at a private health club with the president of Quality. Bush's widow, the claimant, filed a workers' compensation claim for survivor's benefits, providing written notice of her claim via certified mail to Quality on November 26, 1980. As of December 16, 1980, twenty days after receiving written notice of the widow's claim, Quality had not filed any notice of intention to contest the claim as required pursuant to General Statutes
On January 26, 1982, the workers' compensation commission for the seventh district entered a finding of compensability for the decedent's death against Quality on the basis of the conclusive presumption established by General Statutes
Quality and its workers' compensation carrier, Travelers Insurance Co., appealed the commissioner's finding and award to the compensation review division (CRD). On January 29, 1982, the defendants filed a motion requesting the CRD to reserve for the Appellate Session of the Superior Court the constitutional challenge to
Quality raises two issues which, as will be seen, overlap to some extent: (1) whether
Quality argues that the conclusive presumption of
The Ducharme court stated the issue in oft-quoted language as follows: "As the defendant municipality has properly argued, the presumption created by the statute being a conclusive one, and hence not rebuttable by proof of the actual facts, it would require an adjudication that a perfectly healthy off-duty Putnam policeman who brought on a heart attack by overexertion on the last day of a lengthy out-of-state vacation suffered the attack `in the course of his employment,' `in the line of duty' and `within the scope of his employment' by the city — despite the circumstance that that situation was entirely without foundation in fact. Constitutionally, the legislature can no more bind the courts to such a factually unsupportable conclusive adjudication than it can require their adjudication that a camel is a horse by the enactment of a statutory conclusive presumption that all four-footed animals are horses." Id., 140.
The question of whether the holding that the conclusive presumption was unconstitutional in Ducharme requires a similar holding concerning the conclusive presumption in General Statutes
"`"A presumption of law must be based upon facts of universal experience and be controlled by inexorable logic."' Ducharme v. Putnam,
"The broad scope of this irrebuttable presumption doctrine has been significantly narrowed, however, in more recent decisions involving economic areas. In Weinberger v. Salfi,
"While it is intellectually impossible to articulate accurately the doctrinal underpinning of the Supreme Court's recent decisions in the irrebuttable presumption area, `congressional judgments in the form of "irrebuttable presumptions"in the economic area will *369
be upheld where there is a rational relationship between the criteria set forth in the statutory mandate and a legitimate congressional purpose.' (Emphasis added.) Sakol v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
"In Menzies v. Fisher,
"The statute and its legislative history were thereafter reexamined in Adzima v. UAC/Norden Division,
"We conclude that the statute in question is economic in nature, that it articulates a legitimate legislative purpose and that the means adopted to produce the result bear a rational relationship to the stated purpose of the statute. This being the case, the conclusive presumption is entitled to be examined within the less expansive prohibitions found in Weinberger v. Salfi, Supra, and Usery v. Turner Elkhorn Mining Co., supra. When examined within the context, the legislation is found to be constitutionally valid."6 De Leon v. Jacob Bros., Inc., supra, 333-35.
We adopt both the reasoning and conclusions of the De Leon court and find General Statutes
There is an additional cogent reason for such a conclusion. The presumption in Ducharme concerned the fact of whether the injury was work related. Before the appearance of the "economic areas" line of cases, there was strong authority, both state and federal, to support the conclusion of unconstitutionality. See Ducharme v. Putnam, supra, 140-42. The conclusive presumption in this case, however, does not conclusively presume any fact either jurisdictional or evidentiary concerning a claimant's case. It holds that the employer "shall be conclusively presumed to have *371 accepted the compensability of such . . . death. "It is clearly, in the metaphor employed by then Justice House in Ducharme v. Putnam, supra, a horse of a different color.
When stripped to its essentials, it is clear that this is a procedural provision adopted for policy reasons by the General Assembly to meet recognized abuses in the workers' compensation system. "The Constitution does not preclude such policy choices as a price for conducting programs for the distribution of social insurance benefits. Cf. Geduldig v. Aiello, [
Although General Statutes
Quality's argument that the commissioner lacked jurisdiction because of his finding that Bush's death did not arise out of and in the course of his employment falls of its own weight. "[I]t is settled law that the commissioner's jurisdiction is `confined by the Act and limited by its provisions.' Jester v. Thompson,
In so doing, Quality overlooks the effect of the statutory preclusion. Quality gave up or relinquished any right it had to contest that issue. "The statute clearly speaks to a threshold failure on the employer's part to contest `liability': to claim, for example, that the injury did not arise out of and in the course of employment; see Menzies v. Fisher [
We agree with the conclusion of the compensation review division that once the commissioner found statutory preclusion of any defense to compensability, "he was no longer permitted to make any factual exploration *374 or finding concerning such a potential question." Quality's threshold failure to contest liability foreclosed any further inquiry.
In Menzies v. Fisher, supra, the Supreme Court of Connecticut found the employer's notice of contest inadequate under the statute in failing to supply any specific grounds for denying the plaintiff's claim. That court found that the trial court's failure to preclude the employer's defenses was harmless error in the light of its having sustained the award. The court then stated: "Our decision as to the procedural effect of
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.