299 Conn. 265

DAVID CIARLELLI v. TOWN OF HAMDEN ET AL.

(SC 18201)

Rogers, C. J., and Norcott, Katz, Palmer and Zarella, Js.*

*267Argued January 9, 2009

officially released December 21, 2010

Andrew J. Morrissey, with whom was Jill Morrissey, for the appellant (plaintiff).

Jason M. Dodge, with whom was Heather K. Porto, for the appellees (defendants).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

This appeal requires us to determine when the one year limitation period of General Statutes § 31-294c (a)1 begins to run on a claim for hypertension benefits under General Statutes § 7-433c.2 The plaintiff, *268David Ciarlelli, appeals3 from the decision of the compensation review board (board), which affirmed the decision of the workers’ compensation commissioner for the third district (commissioner) dismissing the plaintiffs claim for hypertension benefits under § 7-433c as untimely because the plaintiff had failed to file his claim within one year of what the commissioner characterized as “documented, elevated hypertensive blood pressure readings . . . .” The plaintiff contends that, for purposes of determining when the one year limitation period of § 31-294c commenced, the board improperly treated his hypertension as an accidental injury definitely located in time and place, a claim for which must be filed within one year of that date, rather than, a repetitive trauma injury, a claim for which generally need not be brought until one year from the last day of the claimant’s employment. The plaintiff further contends that the board incorrectly concluded that a *269claimant seeking benefits for hypertension under § 7-433c must file a notice of claim within one year from the date that the claimant knew or should have known that he had symptoms of hypertension, rather than within one year from the date that he was informed by a medical professional that he suffers from hypertension. Although we reject the plaintiffs first claim, we agree with his second claim and, accordingly, reverse the decision of the board.

The record reveals the following undisputed facts and procedural history. The plaintiff was hired by the named defendant, the town of Hamden,4 as a police officer in 1982, and he remained a regular member of the Hamden police department until his retirement in August, 2004. When he was hired, the plaintiff passed a preemployment physical that did not reveal any evidence of hypertension or heart disease. In 1996, after the death of his treating physician, the plaintiff began seeing another physician, Paul Monaco, who remained his physician until the plaintiffs retirement in 2004. Between 1996 and 2004, the plaintiff visited Monaco on numerous occasions, and Monaco usually measured the plaintiffs blood pressure at those visits. According to Monaco, the plaintiffs blood pressure frequently was either normal or “borderline” for hypertension.5 The *270plaintiffs highest readings were associated with particularly stressful situations, either work-related or otherwise. For example, in February, 1999, the plaintiff was sprayed with pepper spray during a training exercise at work and, thereafter, registered a blood pressure reading of 220/130; on another occasion in March, 2002, the plaintiff discovered a lump in his groin and registered a blood pressure reading of 160/100.6 Beginning in late 2000, Monaco advised the plaintiff to monitor his blood pressure at home and to watch his weight and to diet. When the plaintiff measured his own blood pressure at home, his readings usually were in the normal range, leading Monaco to conclude that the plaintiff suffered from “white coat effect,” a term used to describe a patient’s elevated blood pressure readings, when those readings are taken at a physician’s office, due to the patient’s anxiety about being seen by a physician. In early May, 2004, the plaintiff developed a severe headache and sought treatment at a hospital emergency department. His blood pressure at that time was abnormally high, and it remained elevated the next day when he visited Monaco’s office. At that point, Monaco decided to put the plaintiff on Monopril, a prescription antihypertensive medication.

The plaintiff filed a notice of claim for hypertension benefits on May 20, 2004. A hearing on his claim was *271held on November 29, 2005, at which the plaintiff introduced into evidence the deposition testimony of Monaco, who stated that he did not consider the plaintiff to be hypertensive until May 11,2004, because, prior to that date, the plaintiffs blood pressure never was “consistently elevated . . . .” The plaintiff testified at the hearing that Monaco never had informed him, prior to May 11, 2004, that he was hypertensive. The plaintiff further testified that he never had noted any consistently high blood pressure readings when he took his own blood pressure at home. When the plaintiff was asked if he had been aware of the Heart and Hypertension Act7 during his tenure as a police officer, he responded in the affirmative. When questioned why, given that awareness, he had not filed a notice of claim prior to May 11, 2004, the plaintiff responded: “I’m not a doctor. I have to put my trust in my doctor and [in] what he tells me. He never told me I was hypertensive, and I don’t have the schooling to dispute him otherwise.” Finally, the plaintiff testified that, when Monaco recommended that he lose weight or make changes to his diet, Monaco did not mention high blood pressure as the reason for the recommendation.

The defendant introduced into evidence the deposition testimony of Martin Krauthamer, a cardiologist whom the defendant had retained to review the plaintiffs medical file. Krauthamer testified that, in his medical opinion, the plaintiff had documented hypertensive blood pressure readings in December, 2000, January, 2001, March, 2002, and March, 2003. On the basis of Krauthamer’s testimony, the commissioner dismissed the plaintiffs claim as untimely because the plaintiff had failed to file a notice of claim for benefits within one year of the hypertensive blood pressure readings identified by Krauthamer.

*272Following the commissioner’s decision, the plaintiff filed a motion to correct the commissioner’s findings and a motion for articulation. In his motion to correct, the plaintiff requested, inter aha, that the commissioner supplement his decision to include a finding that, although Monaco had discussed the plaintiffs blood pressure with him prior to May, 2004, the term “hypertension” did not appear anywhere in the plaintiffs medical records prior to May 11,2004, and, further, that there was no evidence that Monaco ever had communicated a diagnosis of hypertension to the plaintiff before that date. The plaintiff also requested a finding that Krau-thamer’s medical opinions cannot be imputed to the plaintiff retroactively so as to constitute notice to him that he was suffering from hypertension prior to May 11, 2004. The commissioner denied the plaintiffs motion to correct.

In his motion for articulation, the plaintiff sought an explanation of whether, for purposes of applying the one year limitation period of § 31-294c, the commissioner had considered the plaintiffs hypertension to be an “accidental injury [that] may be definitely located in time and place” or a “repetitive trauma” injury.8 The plaintiff also sought an articulation of whether the commissioner had found that, prior to May 11, 2004, the plaintiff was aware of an actual diagnosis of hypertension, or merely was aware of symptoms indicative of a potential diagnosis in the future.

In response to the plaintiffs motion for articulation, the commissioner made the following articulation: “The *273[plaintiff] received repeated advice from his treating physician that he had elevated and/or borderline blood pressure readings in December, 2000, January, 2001, March, 2002, September, 2002, and March 2003. . . . Monaco had advised the [plaintiff] several times between December, 2000, and March, 2003, about watching his diet, losing weight, monitoring his blood pressure at home and making lifestyle changes. The [plaintiff] had, therefore, been alerted by . . . Monaco of a potential claim for hypertension benefits which, under . . . [§] 7-433c, requires the claimant to notify the employer of a potential claim under [General Statutes §] 31-294b and to file a notice of claim under . . . [§] 31-294C.

“The repeated elevated blood pressure readings between December, 2000, and March, 2003, makes the notice of claim in May, 2004, untimely because it is more than one year after the claim should have been filed.

“[Krauthamer’s] expert opinion as a cardiologist was acknowledged to verify the finding that the multiple, elevated blood pressure readings by . . . Monaco should have alerted the [plaintiff] to file a potential claim for hypertension benefits.”

The plaintiff appealed from the decision of the commissioner to the board, which, in a split decision, affirmed the commissioner’s decision. In so doing, the board surveyed the relevant case law pertaining to when a notice of claim under § 7-433c must be filed. The board acknowledged that its perspective on the issue had changed over time and that, until several years ago, a claimant generally was required to file a notice of claim only when the disease became “disabling,” which was defined by the need for medical care, including prescription medication. The board noted, however, that, in Pearce v. New Haven, 76 Conn. App. 441, 450, 819 A.2d 878, cert. denied, 264 Conn. 913, 826 A.2d 1155 *274(2003), the Appellate Court had endorsed an approach that requires a claimant to file a notice of claim when he becomes aware that he has symptoms of hypertension. The board further noted that, in Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., 103 Conn. App. 172, 177, 928 A.2d 616 (2007), the Appellate Court, although reversing the decision of the board in that case, nevertheless purported to reaffirm the standard that it had applied in Pearce. The board thus concluded: “[T]he § 7-433c case law establishes that a claimant is required to notify his or her employer of a potential claim for benefits by filing a notice of claim when (1) the medical evidence shows that he or she has developed symptoms of hypertension, and (2) he or she knows, or should know, that he or she has symptoms of hypertension that may require lifestyle changes and/or treatment (whether or not disability yet exists).”

In reaching its decision, the board rejected the plaintiffs claim that, for purposes of applying the one year limitation period of § 31-294c, hypertension is more properly classified as a repetitive trauma rather than an accidental injury, even though, as the plaintiff maintained, medical evidence demonstrates that high blood pressure conditions tend to evolve over time, often due to the aging process. In addressing this claim, the board first noted that no decision of this court or the Appellate Court ever had treated a claim for heart and hypertension benefits under § 7-433c as a claim for a repetitive trauma injury. The board further noted that the pla.iut.iff had not alleged any facts or presented any evidence to support a finding that his hypertension constituted a repetitive trauma injury. The board then explained that an award under § 7-433c, unlike benefits awarded under the Workers’ Compensation Act, General Statutes § 31-275 et seq., does not require proof of a causal connection between a claimant’s heart or hypertension condition and his or her employment. In contrast, a repetitive *275trauma injury is defined under the Workers’ Compensation Act as an injury “causally connected with the employee’s employment and . . . the direct result of repetitive trauma or repetitive acts incident to . . . employment . . . .” General Statutes § 31-275 (16) (A). The board concluded, therefore, that to treat hypertension as a repetitive trauma injury would have required it to presume a causal relationship between the plaintiffs employment and his hypertension, in contravention of the plain meaning of § 31-275 (16) (A) and this court’s decision in Ducharme v. Putnam, 161 Conn. 135, 143, 285 A.2d 318 (1971) (holding unconstitutional conclusive presumption under General Statutes [Sup. 1969] § 7-433a, predecessor statute to § 7-433c, that hypertension and heart disease were causally connected to police officer or firefighter’s employment).9 Finally, the board observed that, if the plaintiff had wished to proceed under a repetitive trauma theory of recovery, he could have filed a claim under the Workers’ Compensation Act and introduced evidence establishing a causal connection between his disease and his employment.

One of the three members of the board in the present case, Commissioner Donald H. Doyle, dissented from the board’s decision. In his view, the evidence did not support a finding that the claimant had sufficient information prior to May, 2004, to put him on notice that his elevated blood pressure readings were symptoms of hypertension. Doyle reasoned that, even if the commissioner properly had concluded that Monaco possessed sufficient information to have diagnosed the *276plaintiff with hypertension at some point between 2000 and 2003, there was nothing in the record to indicate that Monaco had communicated that information to the plaintiff, thereby providing the plaintiff with personal knowledge that he was suffering from hypertension.

On appeal, the plaintiff renews his claim that hypertension should be treated as a repetitive trauma injury for purposes of applying the one year limitation period of § 31-294c. In the alternative, the plaintiff contends that, even if hypertension properly is treated as an accidental injury definitely located in time and place for purposes of § 31-294c, the board improperly concluded that the one year limitation period applicable to such injuries started to run when the plaintiff knew or should have known that he had symptoms of hypertension. The plaintiff maintains, rather, that, although a notice of claim for benefits under § 7-433c may be filed when symptoms of hypertension first appear, the limitation period does not begin to run until the claimant has been informed by a medical professional that he suffers from hypertension. We conclude that the board properly applied the one year limitation period for accidental injury definitely located in time and place to the plaintiffs claim. We further conclude, however, that that period did not begin to run until Monaco indicated to the plaintiff that he suffered from hypertension in May, 2004.

The following legal principles guide our analysis of the plaintiffs claims. “It is well settled that the ‘special compensation,’ or the ‘outright bonus,’ of § 7-433c ‘is that the claimant is not required to prove that the heart disease is causally connected to [his or her] employment, which he [or she] would ordinarily have to establish in order to receive benefits pursuant to the Workers’ Compensation Act.’ . . . The benefits provided under § 7-433c are, however, payable and administered under the Workers’ Compensation Act . . . and ‘the type and *277amount of benefits available pursuant to § 7-433c are the same as those under the Workers’ Compensation Act . . . .’” (Citations omitted.) O’Connor v. Waterbury, 286 Conn. 732, 752, 945 A.2d 936 (2008); see also Genesky v. East Lyme, 275 Conn. 246, 252 n.9, 881 A.2d 114 (2005) (“[although an award of benefits under § 7-433c is not a workers’ compensation award, the Workers’ Compensation Act is used as a ‘procedural avenue’ for the administration of benefits under § 7-433c”).

“Cases that present pure questions of law . . . invoke a broader standard of review than is ordinarily involved in deciding whether, in light of the evidence, the agency has acted unreasonably, arbitrarily, illegally or in abuse of its discretion. . . . We have determined, therefore, that the traditional deference accorded to an agency’s interpretation of a statutory term is unwarranted when the construction of a statute . . . has not previously been subjected to judicial scrutiny [or to] ... a governmental agency’s time-tested interpretation . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Chambers v. Electric Boat Corp., 283 Conn. 840, 844, 930 A.2d 653 (2007). There has been no prior judicial scrutiny or time-tested interpretation of § 31-294c with regard to when the statute of limitations begins to run on a claim brought pursuant to § 7-433c. Indeed, as we subsequently explain, until recently, the board construed § 31-294c as requiring notice of a claim only when the disease became disabling, rather than when a person knew or should have known that he had symptoms of the disease. “Accordingly, our statutory analysis accords no deference to the board’s interpretation . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.

When interpreting the statutory provisions at issue in the present case, we are mindful of “the proposition that all workers’ compensation legislation, because of its remedial nature, should be broadly construed in favor of disabled employees. . . . This proposition *278applies as well to the provisions of [§] 7-433c . . . because the measurement of the benefits to which a § 7-433c claimant is entitled is identical to the benefits that may be awarded to a [claimant] under . . . [the Workers’ Compensation Act].” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Szudora v. Fairfield, 214 Conn. 552, 557-58, 573 A.2d 1 (1990). “We also recognize, however, that the filing of a timely notice of claim is a condition precedent to liability and a jurisdictional requirement that cannot be waived. . . .

“When interpreting a statute, [o]ur fundamental objective is to ascertain and give effect to the apparent intent of the legislature. . . . The meaning of a statute shall, in the first instance, be ascertained from the text of the statute itself and its relationship to other statutes. If, after examining such text and considering such relationship, the meaning of such text is plain and unambiguous and does not yield absurd or unworkable results, extratextual evidence of the meaning of the statute shall not be considered. General Statutes § l-2z.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Chambers v. Electric Boat Corp., supra, 283 Conn. 844-45.

It is settled that, because General Statutes § 7-433c (a) does not set forth a limitation period for filing a claim but provides for the administration of benefits “in the same amount and the same manner as that provided under [the Workers’ Compensation Act] if such death or disability was caused by a personal injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment,” the one year limitation period of § 31-294c (a) governs claims filed under § 7-433c. General Statutes § 31-294c provides in relevant part: “(a) No proceedings for compensation under the provisions of this chapter shall be maintained unless a written notice of claim for compensation is given within one year from the date of the accident or within three years from the first manifestation of a symptom of the occupational dis*279ease, as the case may be, which caused the personal injury . . . .”

The plaintiff never has claimed that his hypertension constitutes an occupational disease. Therefore, even though it is undisputed that the plaintiff was required to file his claim within one year of the time of injury, it is not clear whether hypertension should be treated as a traditional accidental injury or as a repetitive trauma injury and, in either case, what constitutes the date of injury for purposes of triggering the commencement of that one year period.10 Because the language of § 31-294c provides no guidance as to when the one year limitation period begins to run on a claim brought pursuant to § 7-433c, to answer that question, we “apply our well established process of statutory interpretation, under which we seek to determine, in a reasoned manner, the meaning of the statutory language as applied to the facts of [the] case . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Chambers v. Electric Boat Corp., supra, 283 Conn. 845. “In seeking to determine that meaning, we look to the words of the statute itself, to the legislative history and circumstances surrounding its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation *280and common law principles governing the same general subject matter. . . . We have previously recognized that our construction of the [Workers’ Compensation Act] should make every part operative and harmonious with every other part insofar as is possible .... In applying these principles, we are mindful that the legislature is presumed to have intended a just and rational result.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.

I

The plaintiff first claims that the board incorrectly concluded that his hypertension is an accidental injury definitely located in time and place, rather than a repetitive trauma injury, for purposes of applying the one year limitation period of § 31-294c. As we previously observed; see footnote 10 of this opinion; whether an injury is classified as accidental or as a repetitive trauma can be determinative of whether a claim is timely under § 31-294c. In the present case, although the plaintiff does not dispute that he failed to present evidence of a causal link between his hypertension and his employment, he contends that Malchik v. Division of Criminal Justice, 266 Conn. 728, 744-45, 835 A.2d 940 (2003), supports the conclusion that hypertension presumptively should be treated as a repetitive trauma injury for purposes of computing the limitation period of § 7-433c. We disagree with the plaintiffs reading of Malchik. Indeed, as we explain more fully hereinafter, Malchik supports the board’s determination that hypertension cannot be treated as a repetitive trauma injury under § 7-433c because it would require the commissioner to presume jurisdictional facts not in evidence, in contravention of §§ 31-294c and 7-433c and this court’s decisional law interpreting those statutory provisions.

The primary issue in Malchik was whether the board properly had affirmed the determination of the workers’ compensation commissioner for the second district that *281there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that the coronary artery disease of the plaintiff, Michael W. Malchik, was an occupational disease within the meaning of § 31-275 (15).11 Id., 730. Malchik, a former inspector with the state division of criminal justice, retired from state service on September 30, 1998, and, approximately thirteen months later, filed a claim for benefits under General Statutes §§ 5-145a and 5-145c. See id., 732, 737 nn.9 and 10. Like § 7-433c, §§ 5-145a and 5-145c provide benefits for disability relating to hypertension or heart disease for certain state employees. Malchik sought reversal of the board’s decision that the commissioner properly had determined that Malchik’s claim was untimely because he had not brought it within one year of the date that he suffered his injury. See id., 730-31. He contended that the three year limitation period that governs occupational disease claims applied or, in the alternative, that the one year period for repetitive trauma injuries, which, in many cases, does not begin to run until the last day of the claimant’s employment, was applicable. See id.

With respect to the first claim, we concluded that, although “§§ 5-145a and 5-145c provide that hypertension or heart disease ‘shall be presumed to have been suffered in the performance of [the inspector’s] duty’ id., 738; “[t]hese rebuttable presumptions apply only to the question of causation . . . and not to the jurisdictional question of whether a disease is an occupational disease subject to the three year limitation period set forth in § 31-294c.” Id. We therefore reasoned that, to invoke the longer limitation period applicable to occupational diseases, Malchik was required to demonstrate *282that his coronary artery disease constituted an occupational disease for purposes of the Workers’ Compensation Act. See id. We concluded that Malchik had failed to do so because, “ [although the record reveal[ed] that [he] offered evidence to prove that he personally suffered coronary artery disease as a result of stress from his job, he failed to offer evidence that this stress and resulting disease were ‘peculiar to’ or so ‘distinctively associated with . . . [Malchik’s] occupation that there is a direct causal connection between the duties of the employment and the disease contracted.’ ” Id., 735-36. We also rejected Malchik’s alternative claim that the commissioner improperly had failed to treat his claim as one involving a repetitive trauma injury. Id., 744. We concluded that, even if Malchik’s coronary artery disease could be considered a repetitive trauma injury, his claim for benefits still would have been untimely because he had not filed it within one year of his last date of employment and that one year period did not extend beyond that date. See id., 744-75.

Significantly, for purposes of the present case, we supported our conclusion in Malchik by observing that a claimant is not entitled to a presumption that his heart disease constitutes an occupational disease for purposes of computing the limitation period under § 7-433c. See id., 740. In particular, we explained that, “with respect to both § 7-433c and §§ 5-145a and 5-145c, the underlying legislative purpose was social rather than medical. More specifically, the legislature’s intent [in enacting all three statutes] was to afford the named occupations with . . . [special compensation] when, under the appropriate conditions, the employee suffered heart disease or hypertension. See, e.g., Carriero v. Naugatuck, 243 Conn. 747, 754, 707 A.2d 706 (1998) (payments pursuant to § 7-433c constitute special compensation, or even an outright bonus, to qualifying policemen and firemen). That does not mean, however *283. . . that the legislature also intended to afford those occupations with the additional benefit resulting from a declaration of heart disease and hypertension as an occupational disease. This conclusion is buttressed by our recognition that, although occupational disease has long been a recognized concept in workers’ compensation law, the legislature has not included heart disease or hypertension within that concept.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Malchik v. Division of Criminal Justice, supra, 266 Conn. 740; see also Plainville v. Travelers Indemnity Co., 178 Conn. 664, 673, 425 A.2d 131 (1979) (“[a]lthough the preamble to ... § 7-433c indicates a legislative recognition of the risks to which policemen and firemen are exposed, including an unusually high degree of susceptibility to heart disease and hypertension, we do not construe such language as the equivalent of a legislative finding that all heart ailments suffered by firemen and policemen are causally related to their employment”); Zaleta v. Fairfield, 38 Conn. App. 1, 7-8, 658 A.2d 166 (“[T]he [claimant] . . . relied only on the language of § 7-433c, claiming that it evinces legislative recognition of heart disease and hypertension as occupational diseases vis-á-vis police officers and firefighters. . . . [T]he [board], therefore, had no evidence before it that hypertension is an occupational disease and its finding that the [claimant’s] claim was subject to the three year statute of limitations cannot stand.” [Citations omitted.]), cert. denied, 234 Conn. 917, 661 A.2d 98 (1995).

Notably, in Malchik, this court did not deem it relevant, for purposes of determining the applicable limitation period, whether coronary artery disease was more like an occupational disease, a repetitive trauma injury or an accidental injury. Rather, the court looked to the definitions of those terms under the Workers’ Compensation Act, and we see no reason to deviate from that *284mode of analysis in the present case.12 Under the Workers’ Compensation Act, a repetitive trauma injury, like occupational disease, requires proof of a causal connec*285tion to employment. See General Statutes § 31-275 (16) (A) (defining “personal injury” or “injury” to include “an injury to an employee that is causally connected with the employee’s employment and is the direct result of repetitive trauma or repetitive acts incident to such employment” [emphasis added]). Because the plaintiff in the present case failed to present any evidence that his hypertension was causally connected to his employment, the board properly treated his claim as one for accidental injury definitely located in time and place.13

*286II

In light of our conclusion that the board correctly determined that the one year limitation period of § 31-294c for an accidental injury definitely located in time and place applies to the plaintiffs claim under § 7-433c, we now must decide when that limitation period began to run. The plaintiff asserts that the board incorrectly concluded that he was required to bring his claim within one year from the date that he knew or should have known that he was suffering from “symptoms” of hypertension. The plaintiff contends, rather, that the board’s interpretation of § 31-294c, as applied to claims under § 7-433c, is incompatible with the language and import of § 7-433c, and that the one year limitation period started to run on the date that his physician, Monaco, informed him that he had hypertension. The plaintiff further contends that the board’s unduly restrictive interpretation of § 31-294c vests far too much discretion in the commissioner to determine when a claimant is deemed to have hypertension and that the approach that the board adopted has resulted in standardless decision making. According to the plaintiff, the board’s construction also has resulted in an “overwhelming” number of claims under § 7-433c being dismissed as untimely,14 which, the plaintiff asserts, has frustrated *287the remedial purpose of that provision.15 Finally, the plaintiff contends that elevated blood pressure readings can be an indicator of any number of health problems or diseases, whereas hypertension is a diagnosis of a particular condition. The plaintiff maintains, therefore, that it is unreasonable to require an employee, who is not a medical professional, to file a notice of claim under § 7-433c merely because he or she has symptoms of hypertension. In the plaintiffs view, the only fair standard to apply is one that requires the filing of a notice of claim when an actual diagnosis of hypertension has been communicated to the employee by a medical professional. We agree with the plaintiff.

*288The Workers’ Compensation Act defines a personal injury or injury as one “that may be definitely located as to the time when and the place where the accident occurred . . . .” General Statutes § 31-275 (16) (A). We acknowledge that this standard presents certain challenges when applied to heart disease and related disabilities. See, e.g., Discuillo v. Stone & Webster, 242 Conn. 570, 580, 698 A.2d 873 (1997) (“[although the plaintiffs injury is localizable as to time and place ... a stress-induced heart attack does not necessarily coincide with the everyday usage of the word ‘accident’ ”). For the reasons set forth in part I of this opinion, however, we are constrained to apply the limitation period for accidental injury even though, as the plaintiff maintains, it reasonably may be argued that hypertension fits more readily within the conceptual framework of repetitive trauma. With respect to the determination of when the injury occurred in the context of heart disease claims, this court previously has identified a relatively discrete point in time at which the disability became manifest under the particular facts presented. See, e.g., McDo-nough v. Connecticut Bank & Trust Co., 204 Conn. 104, 119, 527 A.2d 664 (1987) (plaintiffs heart disease constituted accidental injury that manifested over two day period due to unexpected stress at work); Stier v. Derby, 119 Conn. 44, 49-52, 174 A. 332 (1934) (police officer’s death due to thrombosis or occlusion of coronary arteries, after excitement and unusual exertion while responding to accidental drowning, constituted accidental injury definitely located in time and place).

Although this court previously has not had occasion to consider how the date of injury is to be determined for purposes of ascertaining when the one year limitation period of § 31-294c begins to run on hypertension claims under § 7-433c, the Appellate Court has considered that issue in two recent cases, namely, Pearce v. New Haven, supra, 76 Conn. App. 441, and Arborio *289v. Windham Police Dept., supra, 103 Conn. App. 172. Because both Pearce andArborio involve the very same issue raised by the present appeal, we now discuss them in some detail.

In Pearce, the plaintiff, Francis Pearce, began working for the New Haven fire department in 1978 after successfully passing a preemployment physical examination that revealed no evidence of hypertension. Pearce v. New Haven, supra, 76 Conn. App. 442. In August, 1988, he began seeing Mark Kasper, Pearce’s family physician. Id. On August 16,1988, Pearce’s blood pressure was recorded three times, with readings of 180/94, 178/104 and 156/94. Id. At that time, Kasper informed Pearce that he had elevated blood pressure. Id.

For the next two years, Pearce saw Kasper on a regular basis. Id. At nearly every visit, Pearce registered elevated blood pressure readings, and Kasper discussed those readings with Pearce. Id. Kasper advised Pearce to make certain lifestyle changes and to monitor his blood pressure at home. Id. In 1990, Pearce stopped seeing Kasper and did not return for eight years. Id., 443. During that intervening period, in 1993, Pearce registered a blood pressure reading of 172/100. Id. In 1995, Kasper wrote a letter to Pearce asking him to return to his office because he was concerned about his blood pressure. Id. On October 15, 1998, Pearce formally was diagnosed with hypertension and was prescribed antihypertensive medication. Id. Shortly thereafter, he filed a notice of claim for hypertension benefits under § 7-433c, claiming a date of injury of October 15, 1998. Id. After a formal hearing, the workers’ compensation commissioner for the third district dismissed the claim as untimely because Pearce had not filed his claim within one year of the multiple, elevated blood pressure readings that he had registered between 1988 and 1990. See id., 444, 446.

*290Pearce appealed from the decision of the commissioner to the board, which affirmed the commissioner’s decision. Id., 444. The board framed the issue before it as requiring a determination of whether Pearce’s “high blood pressure readings in 1988, 1989 and 1990 constitute [d] an injury under § 31-294c (a) that obligated [him] to file a [claim] at that time, rather than a decade later . . . .” Pearce v. New Haven, No. 4385 CRB-03-01-5 (March 28, 2002). In answering that question in the affirmative, the board declared that, “upon developing symptoms of hypertension, [Pearce] was required to notify his employer of a compensation claim within one year of the date those symptoms [became] manifest.” Id.

Pearce then appealed to the Appellate Court, which affirmed the board’s decision. Pearce v. New Haven, supra, 76 Conn. App. 450. In so doing, the Appellate Court observed that the purpose of § 31-294c “is to inform the employer of [the] possibility of a claim for benefits being filed at a later time. . . . The employee need not be disabled at the time he or she files a notice that symptoms are being experienced related to hypertension or heart disease; the notice is required to alert the employer to a potential claim.” (Citation omitted.) Id., 449. The Appellate Court then concluded that “[Pearce had] failed to file a notice of injury or claim until 1998, despite having been repeatedly informed by his physician that his blood pressure readings, during 1988, 1989 and 1990, were elevated. Accordingly, the commissioner’s conclusion that the . . . claim for benefits was untimely reflected] a proper application of the law to the facts of [the] case.” Id., 450.

After Pearce, the board consistently applied the Appellate Court’s holding in that case for two propositions: (1) “[a] claimant with hypertensive symptoms is required to file a notice of claim when he is told [that] he has high blood pressure readings, even if he has not been placed on medication, lost time from work or *291become disabled”; Peck v. Somers, No. 4640 CRB-1-03-3 (March 5, 2004); see also id. (“the claimant’s knowledge of high blood pressure readings is crucial to the determination of whether the [employer] was put on timely notice of the claim for benefits”); and (2) the commissioner has considerable discretion to determine when an injury has occurred for purposes of deciding whether a claim is timely. See, e.g., Brymer v. Clinton, No. 5135 CRB-3-06-9 (April 23, 2008) (“[t]he essential question ... is whether the trier had sufficient evidence to find that the claimant suffered from hypertension [about three years before his primary care physician diagnosed him with the condition], triggering his duty to file a claim”); Kaminski v. Naugatuck, No. 4956 CRB-5-05-6 (June 28, 2006) (“In [the] board’s decision in Pearce, [the board] explicitly stressed that the trier of fact had discretion to decide whether high blood pressure readings constituted evidence of hypertension. ... In affirming [the board’s] decision, the Appellate Court expressed no disagreement with [the board’s] line of reasoning. . . . The established standard [therefore] is that the time of onset of a claimant’s hypertension symptoms presents a factual question, as does whether a given blood pressure reading constitutes a manifestation of that hypertension.” [Citations omitted.]).

Thereafter, however, in Arborio, the Appellate Court implicitly called into question the continued viability of the standard that the board had applied in Pearce. In Arborio, the Appellate Court reversed the board’s decision upholding the dismissal of a claim for benefits under § 7-433c as untimely notwithstanding the finding of the commissioner that the plaintiff, Rick E. Arborio, had not filed a notice of claim within one year of the date that he became aware that he had symptoms of hypertension. Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., supra, 103 Conn. App. 183-88. The Appellate Court concluded *292that, although the record supported the commissioner’s findings that Arborio knew of his elevated blood pressure readings and had been advised by his physician to monitor his blood pressure at home more than one year before he filed his claim; id., 183, 186; such findings did not support the legal conclusion that Arborio had suffered an injury within the meaning of § 31-294c. See id., 187-88.

The facts of Arborio, which are very similar to the facts of the present case, are set forth in the opinion of the Appellate Court. “After passing a preemployment physical examination that disclosed no signs of hypertension or heart disease, [Arborio] began his employment with the . . . Windham police department on July 27, 1987. [Arborio] had an office visit with Edward S. Sawicki, his treating physician, on December 23, 1997, at which he had a blood pressure reading of [150/ 86], which Sawicki indicated was not alarming. When [Arborio] next visited Sawicki on April 17, 2000, his blood pressure readings were [146/90] and [140/94], and Sawicki noted the words ‘labile hypertension’ on [Arborio’s] chart. During a deposition related to [the] case, Sawicki testified that at the time of the April 17, 2000 office visit, [Arborio] was age fifty-one, two blood pressure checks done in the office had been ‘above 90,’ [Arborio’s] cholesterol was high in 1998 and, because of the increasing risk to his health, consideration was given to the ‘potential need to address the blood pressure readings with medication, and [Arborio] was told to obtain a blood pressure monitor to check his blood pressure at home.’ On May 17, 2001, [Arborio] had a blood pressure reading of [140/100] at another office visit with Sawicki, who made another chart notation of ‘labile hypertension’ and also noted that [Arborio] had an outside reading of [130/90]. Sawicki, at [that] time, became more serious about the possibility of having to treat [Arborio’s] blood pressure. Sawicki ordered *293a stress test and requested that [Arborio] monitor his blood pressure at home and report back to him in a few weeks. The stress test showed that [Arborio] had a ‘hypertensive response.’ Sawicki began to monitor [Arborio’s] blood pressure more closely .... On January 23, 2003, Sawicki placed [Arborio] on medication to control his blood pressure [and, on April 21, 2003, Arborio filed notice of a claim under § 7-433c].” Id., 182-84.

Thereafter, Arborio’s employer, the Windham police department, sought to have Arborio’s claim dismissed as untimely. On the basis of the foregoing facts, the commissioner dismissed the claim, finding in relevant part as follows: “As a result of the office visits of April 17, 2000, and May 17, 2001, which resulted in the scheduling of a stress test, [Arborio] was aware [that] he had elevated blood pressure and that he had a potential hypertension problem that may require medication. . . . [Arborio] did not file a notice of injury until April 21, 2003, despite having been informed by his physician that he had elevated blood pressure readings and had a potential problem [that could] require medication to control. . . . [Arborio’s] claim for benefits pursuant to § 7-433c . . . [was] untimely, and the workers’ compensation commission lack[ed] subject matter jurisdiction to consider [it].” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 184.

After the board upheld the dismissal of Arborio’s claim, Arborio appealed to the Appellate Court, which reversed the board’s decision on the ground that the commissioner’s factual findings, although supported by the record, did not support the legal conclusion that Arborio’s claim was untimely. Id., 187-88. The Appellate Court, however, first addressed Arborio’s contention that Pearce improperly had changed the law governing heart disease and hypertension claims by requiring employees to file a notice of claim before their hyperten*294sion became disabling. Id., 176. The Appellate Court rejected that contention, stating that, “[c]ertainly, proof of a disability is a prerequisite to the actual collection of benefits, but one need not be disabled before being required to notify one’s employer of an accidental injury and to file a claim within one year of that injury.” Id., 177. After underscoring the fact that a claimant may be required to notify his employer that he suffers from hypertension even though the condition had not yet ripened into a partial or total disability, the Appellate Court further stated: “When an employee sustains an accidental injury, defined in § 31-275 (16) as one that may be definitely located as to the time when and the place where the accident occurred, he immediately must notify his employer of the accident pursuant to § 31-294b. If an employee fails to provide immediate notification, his award of benefits may be reduced if the employer can prove that it has been prejudiced by the failure to provide immediate notification. General Statutes § 31-294b. However, pursuant to § 31-294c (a), the employee not only must notify his employer of the accident, but he also must file a claim for benefits within one year of the date of the accident. Failure to file such a claim results in a jurisdictional bar, unless the failure to file a claim within one year of the date of the accident is saved pursuant to one of the provisions found in § 31-294c (c). See Kuehl v. Z-Loda Systems Engineering [Inc.], 265 Conn. 525, 534, 829 A.2d 818 (2003) ([i]t is well established, moreover, that a notice of claim or the satisfaction of one of the . . . exceptions [contained in § 31-294c (c)] is a prerequisite that conditions whether the commissioner] has subject matter jurisdiction under the [Workers’ Compensation Act] . . . .).”16 *295(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., supra, 103 Conn. App. 178-79.

The Appellate Court then turned to Arborio’s contention that his claim improperly had been dismissed as untimely. The Appellate Court agreed with Arborio and explained: “Two office visits showing high blood pressure readings, a stress test and an employee’s awareness of those elevated readings and awareness that ‘he had a potential hypertension problem that may require medication’ simply are not sufficient to support the conclusion that [the employee] had an accidental injury that required him to notify his employer and to file a claim for benefits. The commissioner did not find that [Arborio] had hypertension but only that he had a potential hypertension problem. When an employee has an accidental injury, he is obligated to notify his employer and to file a claim for benefits within one year of that accidental injury. See General Statutes §§ 31-294b and 31-294c. This is true even when the employee is not seeking immediate benefits but simply is seeking to preserve his right to future benefits. . . . The employee, however, must have had some type of accidental injury (not necessarily an immediately disabling injury) before being required to file a claim. . . . *296[T]he mere awareness of some ‘potential problem’ that might, one day, require medication simply cannot be enough to trigger the notice of claim provision.” (Citations omitted.) Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., supra, 103 Conn. App. 187-88.

In both Pearce and Arborio, the board applied a standard that essentially authorizes workers’ compensation commissioners to accept a post hoc diagnosis of hypertension based on a claimant’s symptoms and then impute knowledge of that diagnosis retroactively to the claimant. We believe that such a standard is inconsistent with the meaning of accidental injury and our case law applying that principle, which “requires proof of an accidental injury which can be definitely located both as to time and place.” (Emphasis added.) Stier v. Derby, supra, 119 Conn. 49. Indeed, in the present case, Monaco, the plaintiffs physician, deemed the plaintiffs blood pressure readings prior to May, 2004, to be too inconsistent to render a definitive diagnosis of hypertension. The evidence presented to the commissioner also established that, prior to 2004, the majority of the plaintiffs blood pressure readings were either normal or borderline hypertensive. The commissioner concluded, nevertheless, on the basis of the testimony of Krauthamer, the defendant’s expert witness, that the plaintiffs claim was untimely because the plaintiffs medical records revealed “documented, elevated hypertensive blood pressure readings in 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2003.” Neither the commissioner nor Krauthamer, however, identified a date of injury, that is, a relatively discrete point in time at which the plaintiffs hypertension actually became manifest.

It is noteworthy that the board, in several of its earlier decisions, had concluded that the limitation period of § 31-294c begins to run on hypertension claims under § 7-433c only when the claimant’s hypertension becomes disabling, which, as we previously indicated, *297has been defined by the need for medical treatment and prescription medicine. See, e.g., Riccitelli v. New Haven, 15 Conn. Workers’ Comp. Rev. Op. 138, 140 (1996) (limitation period for claim under § 7-433c began to run on date that claimant commenced taking prescription medication for hypertension), aff'd, 44 Conn. App. 903, 688 A.2d 367 (1997); see also Fortin v. Naugatuck, 14 Conn. Workers’ Comp. Rev. Op. 48, 48-49 (1995). Significantly, these events coincide with the employer’s obligation to pay benefits. See General Statutes § 31-294d (a) (1) (“[t]he employer, as soon as the employer has knowledge of an injury, shall provide a competent physician or surgeon to attend the injured employee and, in addition, shall furnish any medical and surgical aid or hospital and nursing service, including medical rehabilitation services and prescription drugs, as the physician or surgeon deems reasonable or necessary”). Although the board subsequently departed from that standard in favor of one that imputes knowledge of a diagnosis of hypertension to claimants on the basis of their awareness of elevated blood pressure readings, the reasoning for doing so lacks persuasive force.17

*298Because General Statutes § 7-433c (a) provides for an award of benefits to an otherwise eligible claimant who “suffers . . . any condition or impairment of health caused by hypertension or heart disease resulting *299in his death or his . . . disability,” it stands to reason that a formal diagnosis of hypertension or heart disease, communicated to an employee by his or her physician, constitutes the “injury” that triggers the running of the limitation period of § 31-294c. Indeed, under § 7-433c, a claimant may recover benefits for hypertension only if he suffers from that condition; a claimant is not entitled to benefits merely because he exhibits symptoms consistent with hypertension, such as elevated blood pressure, from time to time. Furthermore, requiring that an employee file a notice of claim for hypertension benefits only after he has been informed by a medical professional that he is suffering from that condition, and not merely from its symptoms, is consistent with the principle that, as a remedial statute; see Costello v. Fairfield, 214 Conn. 189, 194, 571 A.2d 93 (1990); § 7-433c must be liberally construed in favor of the claimant.

We also agree with the plaintiff that the standard presently applied by the board places the intended beneficiaries of § 7-433c in the untenable position of having to diagnose themselves with hypertension, on the basis of their symptoms, or having to run the risk of losing benefits under that statute. Periodic, elevated blood pressure readings “may or may not be indicative of hypertension, depending on the circumstances.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., supra, 103 Conn. App. 187. Indeed, in the present case, the plaintiffs two highest blood pressure readings were recorded when he was sprayed with pepper spray at work and when he discovered a lump in his groin. Thus, this court’s recent observation concerning a claim for benefits for an occupational disease applies with equal force in the present case: “Most symptoms of disease are not peculiar to one disease alone and their recognition is [a] matter largely within the field of expert medical knowledge; when an *300employee, feeling ill, visits a physician, the physician may find clearly present a symptom of some . . . disease [or condition, such as hypertension], but he may find other symptoms present suggesting the possibility of some other disease [or condition] and, until he is more certain, he may well deem it advisable not to inform the employee of the indication of the . . . disease [or condition] he has found.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Ricigliano v. Ideal Forging Corp., 280 Conn. 723, 735, 912 A.2d 462 (2006). This is especially true of hypertension, which often is diagnosed after observing the patient over a period of time. See National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, “How Is High Blood Pressure Diagnosed?,” available at http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/ Diseases/Hbp/HBP_Diagnosis.html (last visited December 6, 2010) (Physicians usually “diagnose high blood pressure . . . using the results of blood pressure tests. These tests will be done several times to make sure the results are correct. If [the] numbers are high, [the] doctor may have [the patient] return for more tests to check [the patient’s] blood pressure over time. If [the patient’s] blood pressure is 140/90 ... or higher over time, [the] doctor will likely diagnose [him or her] with [high blood pressure].”). Because a diagnosis of hypertension involves the sound exercise of medical judgment, it is particularly inappropriate to expect a patient to discern that he or she suffers from that condition in the absence of a diagnosis by a professional with the requisite medical training and expertise.

In light of the foregoing, we conclude that the one year limitation period for claims under § 7-433c begins to run only when an employee is informed by a medical professional that he or she has been diagnosed with hypertension. In many respects, this simply represents a return to the standard that the board applied prior to Pearce, which, in our view, more faithfully adhered to *301the statutory definition of accidental injury in view of the fact that, as a general matter, a formal diagnosis of hypertension can be definitely located in time and place. Thus, although the issue of when the limitation period of § 31-294c begins to run in any given case remains a question of fact for a workers’ compensation commissioner, evidence that an employee merely knew of past elevated blood pressure readings, or was advised by his or her physician to make certain lifestyle changes in response thereto, is not sufficient to trigger the limitation period in the absence of evidence that the employee formally had been diagnosed with hypertension by a medical professional and advised of that diagnosis.18

The decision of the compensation review board is reversed and the case is remanded with direction to reverse the decision of the commissioner and to remand the case to the commissioner for further proceedings according to law.

In this opinion ROGERS, C. J., and NORCOTT and KATZ, Js., concurred.

ZARELLA, J.,

concurring. I agree with the result reached by the majority. I write separately, however, because, in my view, nothing in General Statutes § 7-433c1 requires that notice of hypertension or heart disease be given to a municipal employer within a specified period of time in order for a claimant to receive compensation. I am aware that our precedent has repeatedly *302interpreted § 7-433c to require claimants to comply with the notice provisions relating to accidental injuries contained in the Workers’ Compensation Act (act), General Statutes § 31-294c (a);2 see, e.g., Collins v. West Haven, 210 Conn. 423, 430, 555 A.2d 981 (1989); and, as a result, our case law has been preoccupied with the quixotic exercise of attempting to determine “the time when and the place where” the hypertension or heart disease at issue occurred.3 See, e.g., Arborio v. Windham Police Dept., 103 Conn. App. 172, 187, 928 A.2d 616 (2007) (concluding that “[t]wo office visits showing high blood pressure readings, a stress test and an employee’s awareness of those elevated readings and awareness that ‘he had a potential hypertension problem that may require medication’ simply are not sufficient to support the conclusion that the plaintiff had an accidental injury [of hypertension] that required him to notify his employer and to file a claim of benefits”); Pearce v. New Haven, 76 Conn. App. 441, 450, 819 A.2d 878 (concluding that plaintiffs injury of hypertension occurred sometime between 1988 and 1990, because plaintiff had been repeatedly advised by his physician of high blood pressure readings during that time period), cert. denied, 264 Conn. 913, 826 A.2d 1155 (2003). Because I conclude that our previous interpretations of § 7-433c are clearly wrong, in that applying the notice requirements of § 31-294c (a) violates the express terms of § 7-433c, and *303that the notion that hypertension or heart disease is an “accidental injury” is absurd and contrary to common medical knowledge because such conditions are not definitively determinable as to time and place, I would overrule our prior decisions in this area.

Section 7-433c (a) provides in relevant part: “Notwithstanding any provision of chapter 568 or any other general statute, charter, special act or ordinance to the contrary, in the event a uniformed member of a paid municipal fire department or a regular member of a paid municipal police department who successfully passed a physical examination on entry into such service, which examination failed to reveal any evidence of hypertension or heart disease, suffers either off duty or on duty any condition or impairment of health caused by hypertension or heart disease resulting in his death or his temporary or permanent, total or partial disability, he or his dependents, as the case may be, shall receive from his municipal employer compensation and medical care in the same amount and the same manner as that provided under chapter 568 if such death or disability was caused by a personal injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment and was suffered in the line of duty and within the scope of his employment

In my view, the plain meaning of § 7-433c unequivocally directs municipal employers to pay compensation and to provide medical care to qualified claimants whenever such claimants suffer “any condition or impairment of health caused by hypertension or heart disease resulting in . . . death or . . . temporary or permanent, total or partial disability . . . .” Indeed, we have previously stated that “[t]he mere fact that a fireman or policeman has hypertension or heart disease and dies or is disabled as a result thereof qualifies him or his dependents for benefits under this section.” Plainville v. Travelers Indemnity Co., 178 Conn. 664, *304670, 425 A.2d 131 (1979). Nothing in § 7-433c requires claimants to comply with the notice requirements of chapter 568 in order to receive compensation. In fact, quite the opposite is true. In chapter 568, which contains the act, the legislature defined “ ‘[pjersonal injury’ ” to include accidental injuries, repetitive trauma, and occupational diseases. General Statutes § 31-275 (16) (A). The purpose of distinguishing between these different types of personal injury is to allow for different notice provisions depending on the type of personal injury or disability suffered by the employee. See General Statutes § 31-294c; Malchik v. Division of Criminal Justice, 266 Conn. 728, 744, 835 A.2d 940 (2003) (claims for injuries resulting from repetitive trauma subject to same one year limitation period as claims for accidental injuries). In § 7-433c, however, the legislature used the term “personal injury,” without describing the injury as an accidental injury, repetitive trauma or occupational disease, which strongly suggests that the legislature never was contemplating any notice requirement for personal injuries under § 7-433c. In other words, if the legislature were contemplating a notice requirement for § 7-433c injuries, they would have designated the particular category of personal injury that would have then controlled the appropriate time limitations for the notice. In addition, I conclude that the legislature’s use of the phrase “ [n] otwithstanding any provision of chapter 568 ... to the contrary” also clearly evidences that the legislature intended that the notice requirements of chapter 568 and any other statutory impediments to recovery not apply to claims under § 7-433c. Thus, to be clear, the only provisions of chapter 568 that are incorporated into § 7-433c are those related to payment schedules and methods of payment for personal injuries. This interpretation is consistent with our case law that has deemed the compensation payable under § 7-*305433c an “ ‘outright bonus’ . . . .” O’Connor v. Waterbum, 286 Conn. 732, 752, 945 A.2d 936 (2008).

It appears that ora case law in this area was first led astray in Janco v. Fairfield, 39 Conn. Sup. 403, 404-405, 466 A.2d 1 (1983), in which the plaintiff police officer filed a notice of claim with the workers’ compensation commissioner (commissioner) for benefits under § 7-433c nearly three years after he became disabled due to heart disease. After a hearing, the commissioner awarded the plaintiff compensation. Id., 405. The town of Fairfield appealed to the compensation review board which affirmed the award. Id. The town then appealed the board’s decision to the Appellate Session of the Superior Court claiming that the plaintiff was barred from recovering benefits under § 7-433c because he did not comply with the notice provisions contained in General Statutes § 31-294, which is now codified at § 31-294c. Id. The plaintiff responded that although § 7-433c provides that municipal employers must pay eligible firemen and policemen “ ‘compensation and medical care in the same amount and the same manner as that provided under [the act],’ ” the term “manner,” as used in that statute, modifies “compensation and medical care” and, therefore, “refers solely to the types of benefits applicable to a given claim and the method of payment.” (Emphasis in original.) Id. Accordingly, the plaintiff claimed that entitlement to compensation under § 7-433c was not conditioned on compliance with the notice requirements of the act. The court disagreed and concluded that the reference to chapter 568 contained in § 7-433c required that claims brought pursuant to § 7-433c comply with the procedural mandates of the act, including the notice provisions contained in § 31-294. Id., 405^06.

In my view, the court in Janeo misinterpreted § 7-433c. I agree with the plaintiff in that case that the term “same manner,” as used in § 7-433c, modifies “compen*306sation and medical care” and, therefore, refers solely to the types of benefits applicable to a given claim and the method of payment. In addition, I note that the commissioner and the compensation review board in Janeo also must have agreed with this inteipretation in light of the fact that they ruled in favor of the plaintiff. Finally, I conclude that the interpretation adopted by the court in Janeo is further flawed in that it gives no meaning to the statute’s introductory phrase, “[notwithstanding any provision of chapter 568 ... to the contrary . . . .” General Statutes § 7-433c (a); see, e.g., American Promotional Events, Inc. v. Blumenthal, 285 Conn. 192, 203, 937 A.2d 1184 (2008) (“ [interpreting a statute to render some of its language superfluous violates cardinal principles of statutory interpretation”).4

*307I recognize that the rule in Janeo has been the law in this state for twenty-seven years and that “ [t]his court has repeatedly acknowledged the significance of stare decisis to our system of jurisprudence because it gives stability and continuity to our case law.” Conway v. Wilton, 238 Conn. 653, 658, 680 A.2d 242 (1996). Nevertheless, “this court also has concluded that, [t]he value of adhering to precedent is not an end in and of itself . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Miranda, 274 Conn. 727, 734, 878 A.2d 1118 (2005); see also Conway v. Wilton, supra, 660 (“[s]tare decisis is not an inexorable command” [internal quotation marks omitted]). “It is more important that the court should be right upon later and more elaborate consideration of the cases than consistent with previous declarations.” Barden v. Northern Pacific Railroad Co., 154 U.S. 288, 322, 14 S. Ct. 1030, 38 L. Ed. 934 (1894). “[T]here is a well recognized exception to stare decisis under which a court will examine and overrule a prior decision that is clearly wrong.” White v. Burns, 213 Conn. 307, 335, 567 A.2d 1195 (1990). “In short, consistency must not be the only reason for deciding a case in a particular way, if to do so would be unjust. Consistency obtains its value best when it promotes a just decision.” Conway v. Wilton, supra, 662.

*308After careful consideration of Janeo and its progeny; see, e.g., Collins v. West Haven, supra, 210 Conn. 430; I have become convinced that the holding in Janeo, that claims brought pursuant to § 7-433c must comply with the notice provisions contained in § 31-294c, was clearly wrong and, therefore, should be overruled.

Ciarlelli v. Town of Hamden
299 Conn. 265

Case Details

Name
Ciarlelli v. Town of Hamden
Decision Date
Dec 21, 2010
Citations

299 Conn. 265

Jurisdiction
Connecticut

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