Rodríguez Rivera v. Industrial Commission
Rodríguez Rivera v. Industrial Commission
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The workman, appellant herein, suffered a. labor accident while lifting with a bar an iron sheet which fell on his right foot, wounding his third and fourth toes and fracturing the tip of the second toe of said foot. On December 2, 1942, he
On April 13, 1943, the Industrial Commission reversed the decision of the manager and rendered another instead: to the effect that the workman was entitled to an additional treatment of physiotherapy and a period of rest not greater than two weeks and to the payment of allowances during such period. On May 10, 1943, the commission, pursuant to the reports of its medical advisers and of the Fund, ruled that the workman be discharged with the acknowledgment in his-favor of a 10-percent disability of the physiological functions of the second toe of his right foot. On May 19, 1943,. the workman moved for the reconsideration thereof and for an order of payment to him of the allowances for the time • elapsed between December 3, 1942, and April 19, 1943, plus-' that corresponding to the two weeks of additional treatment The commission denied the reconsideration on the ground that “the bunions and the mycotic infection from which the workman is suffering are responsible for the condition of disability of the workman for working and as this condition existed when he was discharged as being fit for work, if he. failed to work during the period between December, 1942;. and April, 1943, it is logical to conclude, and we so hold,.
In support of the appeal before us, the appellant alleges:
(A) That the commission erred in concluding that the disability of the workman prior to his final discharge was not related to the accident sustained.
(B) That the commission committed an error of law in refusing to pay the workman the allowances from December 2, 1942, when he was discharged from the hospital for the first time, until April 19, 1943, when he was granted a two-week additional treatment, “at the end of which he was finally discharged as fit to resume work in spite of the my-cotic infection and the bunions.”
The two questions raised by the appellant are so closely related that it becomes necessary to consider them jointly as if they were a single one.
It appears from the record before us that the injured workman was finally discharged on December 9, 1942, by Dr. J. M. Quiñones, medical inspector of the Fund; that on March 5, 1943, the workman was again examined by the above physician and by Dr. Cordero, medical adviser to the commission, who after reporting that “the workman presents a slight edema on the back of the right foot as well as in the toes of the same foot, and I have also discovered that the workman presents bunions in both feet and a mycotic infection in the toe nails of both feet,” gave as his opinion that the workman should be given the benefit of the doubt as to the present symptomatology being the result of the fracture sustained in the second toe of the right foot; and that upon the medical adviser of the Fund disagreeing, it .was decided to hold a public hearing.
We have examined the expert evidence heard by the commission, a summary of which will follow. Dr. Quiñones, as the Fund’s physician, testified that he had examined many times the injured man and made a careful study of the case
Dr. Cordero, medical adviser of the commission, took the stand. He described conditions similar to those observed by the physician of the Fund in the feet of the workman and stated, besides, that he had noticed a slight edema in the right foot which did not show in the left foot although both feet presented the bunions and the fungus growth. He asserted that there are three causes that may produce such kind of edema and conceded that bunions might be the cause of the edema and also of the pains in the workman’s right foot, as claimed by him, and that the mycotic infection might also be the cause of the pain and of the edema. He further stated, “that it is almost unbelievable that such slight frac
The conclusions reached by the commission are sustained by the expert evidence and we fail to see any reason to justify our disturbing the weighing of such evidence.
Having reached the conclusion, which we find justified, that the disability from which the appellant workman is suffering and which prevents him from resuming work is not related to the accident, the commission did not err in refusing the appellant the allowances sought.
The decision appealed from must be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.