2 A.D.2d 394 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1956
Claimant was employed as a floor girl and trimmer and while at work in her employer’s factory, went to answer a telephone. On the way, a plank, which was being used by an independent contractor who was making repairs to the factory, came loose and fell, struck a water tank and then hit claimant on the side of her head. After being hit, claimant lunged and lurched forward and then lapsed into unconsciousness. Claimant was hospitalized for about 10 days following this industrial accident and has not since worked.
A month after the accident, claimant retained counsel who, on her and her husband’s behalf, commenced an action against the independent contractor for damages arising out of the accident. In this third-party action, claimant and her husband recovered judgment. In the proceeding before the Workmen’s Compensation Board, claimant was awarded compensation and a determination was made with respect to the amount to be credited to the employer and insurance carrier from claimant’s third-party recovery against the amount of compensation awarded and against prospective medical expenses. (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 29.) By its decision, the board held that the recovery in the third-party action was not the result of a compromise and, in addition, determined that the employer and its insurance carrier were not entitled to credit against the recovery had by claimant’s husband.
Appellants strongly argue'that the third-party recovery was not pursuant to a judgment, within the meaning of section 29 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, but was, in effect, a compromise of claimant’s cause of action against a third-party, accomplished without the consent of appellants and that, therefore, claimant is not entitled to any award of compensation.
Appellants attack this judicial process on several grounds. They state that the insurance carrier was approached concerning a settlement but refused its consent; that claimant’s attorney knew the limits of insurance coverage in the third-party action to be $5,000; and that the record of the trial reveals that it was not a legitimate contest between opposing parties. Appellants also assert that the failure of the plaintiffs to tax a bill of costs in the third-party action is an indication that the action was compromised.
These factors are evidence which must .be considered with the presumption of regularity which attaches to a trial, followed by a formal decision of the trial justice and a judgment. The board has found that recovery was not the result of a compromise and there is substantial evidence to support it. Or, to express it in words used previously by us, “ We cannot say, as a matter of law, upon the record before us, that this result did not represent the trial court’s considered judgment and evaluation, based on the evidence, which appears to have been adequate to enable him to reach a fair determination”. (Matter of Sadowski v. J. W. Danforth Co., 2 A D 2d 728.)
Appellants urge that in the event we hold, as we do, that there was a valid judgment, within the meaning of section 29
Appellant’s last contention is that there is no substantial evidence to sustain the finding of the board that claimant’s back condition is related to the accident. Prior to the accident, claimant had experienced no difficulty with her back. Immediately following her first hospitalization she began complaining of pain in her back and legs. Upon being referred to a specialist, it was revealed that she had a ruptured intervertebral disc. In one report the specialist stated that claimant may have ruptured the disc at the time of the accident. In another report he writes that he could not understand how a blow on the head would result in an injury to a disc. A doctor testified that, if claimant did not fall to the floor when struck by the plank, it was his opinion that the ruptured disc was not caused by the industrial accident. A report from a hospital, where claimant was treated several months after the accident, states that she may have sustained a ruptured disc at the time of the accident. Thus, there appears a conflict and some uncertainty in the medical evidence concerning causal relationship of the back injury. Considering her previous history of no back trouble, the manner in which she was injured and the favorable portions of the medical evidence, there appears to us to be substantial evidence to sustain the finding of the board.
The decision and award of the Workmen’s Compensation Board should be affirmed, with costs.
Foster, P. J., Bergan, Halpern and Gibson, JJ., concur.
Decision and award unanimously affirmed, with costs to the respondent, Workmen’s Compensation Board.