446 A.2d 831 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1981
The plaintiff in this action seeks workers' compensation benefits as the result of an injury alleged to have occurred in August, 1974, when his right foot and ankle struck the edge of a skid while he was moving a barrel at his place of employment. The defendant employer, Jacob Brothers, Inc., furnished medical care to the plaintiff on the date of the injury. *332
On February 12, 1980, the plaintiff filed a notice of claim with his employer.1 On March 7, 1980, he filed a motion to preclude the defendants from contesting liability, alleging that his employer had not filed a notice that his claim for compensation was contested within the required twenty days.2
By his finding and award, the compensation commissioner granted the plaintiff's motion to preclude and found that the plaintiff had indeed suffered a compensable injury to his right foot arising out of and in the course of his employment with the defendant. The defendants appealed to the compensation review division, which thereafter affirmed the compensation commissioner's decision in its entirety.
The employer and its insurer have appealed to this court. They contend that the provisions of General Statutes (Rev. to 1972)
"Statutes creating permanent irrebuttable presumptions, which are neither necessarily nor universally true, are disfavored under both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, because they preclude individualized determination of the facts upon which substantial rights or obligations may depend. Vlandis v. Kline,
"`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,4 "congressional judgments in the form of `irrebuttable presumptions' in the economic area will 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 purposed 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.
The entitlement to compensation from an employer for employment-related injuries is solely a function of legislative enactment. To be eligible for participation in compensation proceedings, the employee is required under
Among its other purposes, two obvious functions of
On the other hand,
The fact that the employer's interest in this case was protected under
There is no error.
In this opinion SHEA and BIELUCH, Js., concurred.