This is an appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court denying the employee’s claim for compensation for total incapacity from May 27,1976, to date and continuing, and for dependency compensation. The employee, a guard at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole, claimed a personal injury, compensable under G. L. c. 152, § 34, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 978, § 4, caused by "[tjension at work resulting in hypertension and question of heart condition.” The reviewing board adopted and affirmed the decision of the single member with certain amendments, and found that "the employee has failed to establish by a fair preponderance of the medical evidence that he has been incapacitated since May 27,1976, due to a personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment.” We conclude that the case should be remanded to the board because of the lack of findings on any of the material issues raised by the claim, and for reconsideration of the evidence in the light of cases decided after the reviewing board’s decision.
1. The decisions of both the single member and the board merely recite the evidence produced at the hearing and are lacking in "the subsidiary findings necessary to enable a court to understand the basis for its decision.” Wajda’s Case,
2. The single member considered the issues before her to be "(1) causal relationship; (2) liability; (3) disability.” After the board’s action in this case, the Supreme Judicial Court concluded in two decisions that "the term 'personal injury’ ... permits compensation in cases involving mental disorders or disabilities causally connected to mental trauma or shock arising 'out of the employment looked at in any of its aspects,’ ” Fitzgibbons’s Case,
The absence of any subsidiary findings in the original decisions, and the recent case law in the area make it appropriate for the board to consider whether the employee’s injury was caused or aggravated by "specific stressful work-related incidents” or was the product of "the general stress of his working conditions.”
The judgment is reversed. A new judgment is to enter remanding the case to the board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including, if deemed appropriate, the taking of additional evidence on any of the issues raised by the claim.
So ordered.
