American Railroad v. Industrial Commission

63 P.R. 598
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 10, 1944
DocketNo. 289
StatusPublished

This text of 63 P.R. 598 (American Railroad v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Railroad v. Industrial Commission, 63 P.R. 598 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the court.

The facts giving rise to the present appeal are as follows :

In 1941 several workmen of the American Railroad Company claimed the payment of wages earned under the Federal Wage and Hour Law. On November 4, 1941, said claim was settled. The company paid the sum of $700,000 to be distributed among the claimants in payment of the difference between the wages already received by them and those to which they were entitled pursuant to the Federal Act.

Several injured workmen, who had been paid per diems based on the wages which they earned on the day of the accident, asked the Manager of the State Insurance Fund to readjust said per diems and compensations in conformity with the wages as raised by the amount corresponding to each of the claimants by virtue of the aforesaid settlement. Thereupon, in May 1942, the manager made an investigation of the payrolls of the company. The inspectors appointed by the manager informed the latter that the company had failed to> include in the payrolls corresponding to the fiscal years 1938-39, 1939-40, Í940-41, and part of 1941-42 the sum of [600]*600$659,999.33 paid to the workmen as wages due. The manager then levied' additional premiums on the company for said years, as follows:

Oct. 28,1938, to June 30, 1939 (245 days) $146, 733. 07
Year 1939-40 (365 days)' 218, 602. 31
Year 1940-41 (365 days) 218, 602. 31
July 1, 1941 to Nov. 4, 1941 (127 days) ‘ 76, 061, 64
Total . $659,999.33

On May 21, 1943, the Manager of the Fund notified the petitioning company of the report presented by his auditors in connection with the period between January 1 and June 30, 1942, wherein there was included, as wages paid, the sum of $20,554.10 which had been paid to the workmen subsequent to said period, in conformity with the above-mentioned settlement entered into by the company and the claimant workmen.

Feeling aggrieved by the decisions of the manager, the company appealed to the Industrial Commission. On November 1, 1943, the commission rendered its decision affirming the two decisions of the manager and upon a reconsideration being sought, the same was denied. The company-thereupon took the present appeal.

In support of its petition to review and set aside ,the decisions appealed from, the petitioner assigns in its brief seven errors which in its opinion were committed by the Industrial Commission. The questions raised by said seven assignments and which are before us to be considered and decided are as follows:

Did the Manager of' the State Insurance Fund act lawfully in levying on the petitioner the premiums básed on the amounts paid to the workmen, by virtue of a settlement of - a claim for unpaid earned wages, taking into account that said sums were' paid subsequently to the dates when the payrolls corresponding to the period from October 28, 1938, to June 30, 1942, were drawn up and paid?

[601]*601The petitioner contends that the manager is only authorized to assess and collect the prémiums corresponding to a particular fiscal year, taking as a basis the payrolls of wages actually paid by the employer during the fiscal year prior to the levying of the premiums. In.support of its contention it invokes the provisions of §§25 to 28, inclusive, of Act No. 45 of April 18, 1935, Workmen’s Compensation Act.1

The arguments set forth by the petitioner are not convincing. It is true that according to a literal and strict construction. of said Sections, the manager must take as a basis for assesing and levying the annual premiums to bo paid by the employer “the total amount of.wages paid . . . during the year prior to the levying of the premiums”; that the premiums shall be fixed as soon as the manager receives the report provided by §27 of the act; and that in the case at bar the manager assessed and collected from the petitioner tne premiums corresponding to the years in controversy, taking as a basis for each one of said years the [602]*602total amount of the wages paid during the preceding year. However, we find nothing in the cited Sections, nor is there any provision in the Workmen’s Compensation Act; which forbids the Manager of the State Fund to levy and collect premiums on the wag'es that an insured should have paid his workmen under the statute in force, during a fixed year, and which he failed to pay until after the expiration of said year.

The Federal Act known as ‘ ‘ Fair Labor Standards Act, ’ ’ approved in 1938, became effective in Puerto Rico in the second semester of that same year. That said Act is applicable to the petitioner herein is an uncontrovertible fact. The Railroad Company expressly admitted this in the agreement entered into on November 7, 1941, by itself and more than one thousand one hundred workmen, to settle a claim filed by said workmen “for unpaid'earned wages,” under the Act of Congress of 1938 of Fair Labor Standards. Upon making [603]*603payment of the amount due to each one of the claimants, the company demanded a receipt which in' its pertinent part reads as follows:

“I. . . . have received from the American Railroad Company of Porto Rico the sum of . . . dollars, in payment of the difference between the wages earned by me from October 24, 1938, until November 4, 1941, inclusive, and the wages to which I was entitled pursuant to the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act approved in 1938, which payment has been made to me and accepted under the terms and conditions of the contract executed on November 4, 1941. ’ ’

Therefore, it its clear that by the express terms of the contract of settlement and of the receipt attached thereto, the petitioning company admitted that the amounts which it paid' to each one of the claiming workmen, subsequent to November 4, 1941, are the same amounts to which said workmen were entitled pursuant to the Federal Act and which the Railroad Company was bound to pay to them as part of their wages during the period covered from October 24, 1938, to November 4, 1941.

[604]*604It is ■ unquestionable that if tbe petitioner bad paid to its workmen tbe wages fixed by the Federal Act, at the proper time, tbe Manager of the Fund would have been able to assess and levy tbe premiums in strict compliance with the applicable provisions of the local statute. The annual premiums must be fixed on the total amount of the wages paid by the employer to his workmen during the year prior to the levying of the premiums. It is so provided by §25 of the Insular Act. However, in our opinion, it was not the intention of the lawmaker to enact a statute so strict and inflexible as to provide that the only amount upon which the levying of the premiums could be based is the amount actually or really paid by the employer to his workmen during the preceding year and to prohibit the taking as a basis the amount that should have been paid pursuant to the statute but which was not paid at the right time through the employer’s own fault, negligence, or error.

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63 P.R. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-railroad-v-industrial-commission-prsupreme-1944.