Barnard v. Industrial Commission

368 P.2d 749, 91 Ariz. 1, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 240
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1962
Docket7287
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 368 P.2d 749 (Barnard v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnard v. Industrial Commission, 368 P.2d 749, 91 Ariz. 1, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 240 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

UDALL, Vice Chief Justice.

*2 Certiorari to review an award dated May 26th, 1960, denying compensation to Charles Ray Barnard, petitioner herein. The findings of the respondent Commission were in part as follows:

“9. That said applicant [petitioner] has been able to continue with his work as a supervisor for the insured employer in spite of his -pain and suffering on account of the injury and that he has sustained no loss of earning capacity by reason of the disabilities arising from the injury. That he was on a monthly salary as a supervisor and. foreman -prior to the injury and that he has been able to and is of value to the employer to the extent of the same amount of salary which he has earned continuously 'since released to do work after injury.
. “10. That in determining that .applicant has no reduced monthly earning capacity as a result of his injury by accident, this Commission has given full consideration to each of the matters set forth in A.R.S. § 23-1044 D, 1956, and full consideration to all other facts and circumstances pertaining to the case.”

Accordingly,- the award made was limited tci $204.69 representing “compensation for total disability from March 29, 1959 through April 19, 1959' -*

Petitioner had been employed in Yuma County, Arizona by Sherrill & La Follette, hereinafter referred to as the. employers, for approximately eight years prior to the injury. He worked as a supervisor • in charge of surveying, land-leveling, ditch maintenance and repairs and irrigation for some six to eight thousand acres of land.

Prior to his accident petitioner worked seven days a week and approximately nine hours a day for his employers. For this he received a salary of $400 per month, a four-room dwelling with all utilities furnished as well as gas, oil and repairs for his automobile.

While in the course of his employment a car in which petitioner was riding was involved in a collision whereby petitioner received whiplash injuries to his neck and back. The accident caused permanent injury, i. e., inflammation of the nerve route (radiculitius) at the C-8 level of the spine. This in turn aggravated an old arthritic condition. As a result petitioner sustained a restriction in the range of motion of the neck, and now experiences difficulty in looking from side to side. He also complains of intermediate aching of the neck and head and diminution in sensation or feeling in the middle left finger.

Based upon the injuries thus sustained the medical advisory board recommended a 15% permanent partial disability. The Commission found that said applicant' had *3 suffered a 15% general physical functional disability as a result of said injury.

The record shows the injuries affected petitioner’s work in that whereas he previously worked nine hours a day, his working day was cut to four or five hours after the accident and his efficiency was impaired. The foreman of the ranch and one of the employers estimated there was a 50% decrease in petitioner’s efficiency after the accident.

Upon being discharged from the hospital petitioner was returned to his employment at the same wage that he received prior to the accident. Employer Sherrill testified that petitioner was kept on the job at the same salary up to the time of the hearing because of his long employment with the company and because of the fact that petitioner was his (Sherrill’s) uncle.

After the Commission had made its award, holding that since petitioner had been continued at the same salary his services were of equal value to his employer after the accident as before and hence no loss of earning capacity was involved, a motion for a rehearing was timely filed and a hearing conducted on the 10th day of December 1960. On the 3rd day of March, 1961, the Commission affirmed its prior award.

The petitioner contends that the Commission acted without jurisdiction in its findings and award, and that the findings and award are not supported by the evidence.

In refutation of petitioner’s position the Commission claims (1) that when an employee returns to his former work under ■the same contract of hire and performs labor of a value to the employer equal to the wages which he previously received he has suffered no loss of earning power,. and (2) that the “gratuity” in after-injury wage payments was not proven by a preponderance of the evidence. Petitioner spent about 25% of his time in the performance of engineering work. He took a $100 per month cut in wages for a period of time a year or more before the accident because there was no engineering work to be done. 1

Employer Sherrill testified that the surveying phase of the work performed by the petitioner was approximately eight days out of each month, or about 27% of the time, and that the latter had to be constantly on the job to take care of breaks in the ditches which usually occurred at the rate of one or two per day.

*4 It is claimed by the Commission that the post-injury earnings of the petitioner, evaluated in the light of all the circumstances, indicated that the petitioner’s services were worth $50 per day. The record however does not bear out this contention. The testimony in regard to this figure of $50 per day is as follows. 2 It is thus the opinion of the employer that a registered engineer would do the work that had been performed by petitioner in ten percent of his time or less, whereas the same work performed by the petitioner required about 27% of his time.

Throwing further light on this question the petitioner testified that he had never been paid $50 a day for his services and that if such a figure was suggested it was his opinion it would not only cover the services of an engineer but a crew of three as well. 3

It can readily be seen that the services of this 62-year-old engineer were never considered, either by himself or his employers, to be a major factor in his employment, and in view of the mixed and varied nature of his work it would have been almost impossible to state exactly how much time in each day was devoted to each phase of his employment. Furthermore there is no evidence that the employers needed the services of petitioner as an engineer a greater portion of the time after the accident than they did before the accident. The petitioner, for a period of approximately eight years, had been paid $400 per month plus other considerations for his combined efforts including his engineering skills. It may be assumed therefore that his services as an engineer were of no greater value to the employers than the amount they paid him.

The Commission by its findings Nos. 9 and 10 states that it has given “full consideration” to each of the matters referred to in A.R.S. § 23-1044, subd. D. This section in part reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
368 P.2d 749, 91 Ariz. 1, 1962 Ariz. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnard-v-industrial-commission-ariz-1962.