The decree below confirming a decision of the Industrial Accident Commission has reduced the compensation of the appealing employee Pelchat. This action was taken on a petition for review filed by the employer and is based on a finding by the Commission that Pelchat’s partial incapacity to work and earn wages has diminished to a present level of fifty per cent of his capacity prior to his accident. The issue is whether or not there was any evidence to' support the finding.
The medical testimony supports a finding that the employee is sufficiently recovered from the injury to his foot so as to have at least fifty per cent of normal capacity and in particular to be able to perform “light work.” It was strongly urged by medical witnesses that engaging in “light work” would benefit the employee’s physical condition and would have therapeutic value. The medical witnesses were of opinion that the injured employee entertained a genuine but mistaken fear of actively using his foot and for that reason preferred to remain for the most part immobile with the foot elevated.
As illustrative of what was meant by “light work,” the attending physician expressed the opinion that Mr. Pelchat could carry dry lumber weighing 15 to 20 pounds, but could not be expected to carry green lumber weighing about 85 pounds. The physician included as “light work” physical labor which would involve more use of the foot, walking and standing, even though some discomfort might be entailed, in order to improve both motion and circulation. He recognized some limitation in climbing ladders or walking on rough ground but in general felt that Mr. Pelchat could perform any type of work requiring standing, walking or *228 lifting. There was other medical testimony substantially to the same effect.
The petitioning employer offered no evidence of specific job opportunities or of the wages which might be earned from “light work.” Following what has apparently become accepted practice, the Commission, having found a fifty per cent incapacity, applied this percentage to the original earning capacity in order to determine the rate of weekly compensation as fixed by statute. The employee, while conceding that there was medical evidence to support a finding of fifty per cent partial incapacity, contends that there was no evidence as to what work was available to him or what wages such work would produce. He therefore insists that the petitioner wholly failed to sustain its burden of proof.
A review of the cases suggests at once that any appearance of conflict is largely dissipated if we keep in mind the distinction between the burden of proof and the burden of going forward with evidence. We are satisfied that this was the distinction which our court had in mind in
Connelly’s Case
(1923),
“When a petitioner for review has shown an ability to do such work as is ordinarily available in the community in which the injured employee resides, and the kind of work suggested by the physician testifying in this case was ‘driving a team or working around a place,’ he has sustained the burden upon him as the moving party in a petition of the kind now before us. It then, we think, becomes the burden of the employee to meet this by showing he has used reasonable efforts to obtain such work and failed by reason of his injury. * * *
If he fails to use reasonable efforts to find work such as he could perform or insists that he could not perform it, if available, no burden rests upon the petitioner to offer him work or to prove that some particular kind of ivork is available which he could perform.” (Emphasis supplied.)
It is obvious that the court was here thinking of more than the petitioner’s burden of proof. The opinion clearly indicates the nature of evidence which, when presented by the petitioner and accepted and believed by the factfinder, will cause the burden of going forward with contrary or offsetting evidence to shift to the adversary. If such contrary evidence is not forthcoming, both the petitioner’s *230 burden of proof and his initial burden of going forward with evidence have been satisfied.
The court assumed correctly that the term “light work” as commonly used and understood and as illustrated by the medical witness is broad enough in scope to include many types of work “ordinarily available” in any community. The court saw no practical need for requiring the petitioning employer to parade before the Commission a procession of employment officers, personnel directors and others who may know of specific job openings which involve only “light work” and who can indicate the wages being offered therefor. If the employee has diligently and in good faith made reasonable efforts to find “light work,” he is or should be in a better position than the petitioner to know whether there is anything available that he can do and what he could earn thereby. It is neither unreasonable nor unfair to allow the burden of going forward with evidence to shift to him, once the employer has made out what amounts to a prima facie case.
Applying the rule laid down in Connelly’s Case, which we deem controlling here, to the facts of the instant case, we find that the petitioner offered evidence which obviously satisfied the Commission that the injured employee had at least a fifty per cent capacity to work and earn and that he could and should for his health’s sake perform “light work.” As illustrated by the medical witnesses, the term “light work” could by reasonable inference mean to the Commission any type of work requiring mental or physical activity or both so long as the work did not involve the climbing of ladders, frequent or constant walking on rough ground, or the pushing, pulling or lifting of heavy loads. To meet the burden of going forward with evidence which then devolved upon him, the employee described his own efforts to find employment. The Commission could very properly conclude that he had not made reasonable efforts in good faith *231 to secure employment. By his own admission he sought only a position in which he could work entirely or at least for the most part in a seated position with his leg elevated. The Commission could properly find that he thereby imposed an unnecessary and improper limitation upon his own employability and that his consequent failure to find “light work” was attributable not to his injury, but to his exaggerated concern for keeping his injured foot immobile. Upon the whole evidence, therefore, the Commission could properly conclude that the petitioning employer had sustained its burden of proof.
Other cases which have been called to our attention require only brief comment. In
Ray’s Case
(1922),
Milton’s Case
(1923),
St. Pierre’s Case
(1946),
In
Shoemaker’s Case
(1947),
Eleanora Gagnon’s Case
(1949),
As already noted, we are satisfied on examination of the record before us and the law applicable thereto that there was sufficient evidence to support the finding and decision of the Commission fixing the extent of partial incapacity in terms of weekly compensation. The case has, however, raised issues of law of sufficient importance to warrant an allowance to the employee for costs and counsel fees to be paid by the petitioners pursuant to R. S., 1954, Chap. 31, Sec. 41. The entry will be
Appeal denied. Decree below affirmed. Allowance of $250 ordered to respondent Pelchat for expenses of appeal.
