Bradley's Case
This text of 778 N.E.2d 11 (Bradley's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Injured in 1993 while employed as a serviceman for a utility company, Stephen T. Bradley was assigned light duty as an office clerk and received workers’ compensation payments for partial incapacity under G. L. c. 152, § 35, from the employer’s self-insurer, Commonwealth Energy Systems (insurer). From March 31 through September 23, 1996, there was a lockout of union employees, including Bradley, a longtime [360]*360union member.1 After Bradley began receiving unemployment compensation, the insurer, pursuant to the offset provision in G. L. c. 152, § 36B(2), applicable to workers receiving both partial disability benefits and unemployment compensation, discontinued its payments of disability benefits to him for the duration of the lockout.
An administrative judge of the Department of Industrial Accidents (DIA) issued a decision allowing Bradley’s claim for workers’ compensation during the lockout period. Following af-firmance of that decision by a majority of the DIA reviewing board,2 the insurer appealed to a single justice of this court, who reported the matter to a full panel.
The insurer argues it was error for the board to award Bradley disability benefits during the lockout because his loss of earnings was caused by the lockout and was not the result of his work-related injury. It also claims that the award was based on the judge’s erroneous determination of the amount of Bradley’s earning capacity during the lockout.
The lockout. The insurer’s assertion that Bradley should not have received disability benefits during the lockout ignores an employee’s right to compensation for a loss of earning capacity as a result of an industrial injury even though economic conditions may affect the availability of work. Pierce’s Case, 325 Mass. 649, 656 (1950) (“if the actual wages received after the injury have been diminished by reason of economic conditions, the extent that they have been so lessened is to be disregarded in determining [the employee’s] ability to earn subsequent to the accident”). As stated by a leading commentator, “[w]here the employee is claiming [workers’] compensation for total or partial incapacity after a period during which he was gainfully employed, it is immaterial whether the employee lost his job because of a layoff, strike, voluntary resignation, or business [361]*361recession. Whatever the reason for his predicament, he is entitled to compensation if he is totally or partially incapacitated from earning his former wage, by reason of the effects of his industrial injury.” Locke, Workmen’s Compensation § 325, at 385 (2d ed. 1981). Such a focus on compensation for injury-related loss of earning capacity is evident in older decisions such as Septimo’s Case, 219 Mass. 430 (1914); Johnson’s Case, 242 Mass. 489 (1922); and Percival’s Case, 268 Mass. 50 (1929), in which employees returned to work after a compensable injury and thereafter lost their jobs due to economic conditions and which may be read as supporting the payment of workers’ compensation benefits during layoffs. The board in its decision correctly treated the lockout in this case as analogous to a layoff. It stated: “As with a lockout, the termination of employment in a layoff is involuntary on the part of the employee and for reasons unrelated to his medical condition.” It is consistent with the purpose of the workers’ compensation statute that the employee’s work-related incapacity be recognized regardless of the current status or availability of the job at which he suffered his injury, particularly where the work is unavailable due to circumstances beyond the control of the employee.
The amount of benefits. Because Bradley also received unemployment benefits during the lockout,3 we consider the application of G. L. c. 152, § 36B,4 which provides for the [362]*362coordination of the two systems of benefits.5 Partial disability benefits pursuant to G. L. c. 152, § 35, as appearing in St. 1991, c. 398, § 63, are based on a percentage of the “difference between [the employee’s] average weekly wage before the injury and the weekly wage [the employee] is capable of earning after the injury.”6 The applicable postinjury wage capacity is designated as the “greatest” of the amounts computed under [363]*363the first four subsections of G. L. c. 152, § 35D.7 See Cassola’s Case, 54 Mass. App. Ct. 904, 905 & n.l (2002). Because Bradley’s actual earnings were terminated by the lockout and he was not capable of performing the job he held at the time of his injury,8 §§ 35D(1) and 35D(2) are not applicable. The parties’ dispute centers on the applicability of §§ 35D(3) and 35D(4).
The board agreed with the administrative judge’s determination of the partial disability benefits due Bradley based on the judge’s construction of G. L. c. 152, § 35D. Treating the lockout as a refusal to provide employment, the judge determined that Bradley’s light-duty job was, in the meaning of § 35D(3) (see note 7, supra), not “available” to him9 and correctly concluded [364]*364that the provisions of § 35D(3) could not be applied, leaving § 35D(4) as the controlling provision. In construing § 35D(4), the judge determined that Bradley had been assigned a position based on labor contract provisions, which resulted in his being paid wages that “did not reflect the true market value of the work he was performing.”10
After his injury, Bradley had been “medically retrogressed”11 to an office position titled “customer service clerk-special.” The duties of that position involved clerical work, including filing and handling telephone calls. The judge concluded that while this light-duty work was physically suitable for Bradley, his earnings of more than $23 per hour were based on his anomalous status under the employer’s labor contract which resulted in his “continuing] to receive high wages even though he no longer was doing work that in itself merited a high wage level.” Essentially the judge rejected the use of Bradley’s actual earnings immediately before the lockout because they had been “artificially inflated.” It is recognized that postinjury earnings may be an unreliable basis for determining earning capacity. See Johnson’s Case, 242 Mass. at 492 (“abnormal conditions produced ... by the great war .... enabled the employee to avoid an impairment of earning capacity which otherwise the physical injury would inevitably have caused”). See also 4 Larson’s Workers’ Compensation Law § 81.01[4] (1999).
The judge noted that clerks with length of service equivalent to that of Bradley were paid $15.63 per hour. He also found that Bradley had no training in the use of computers, did not [365]*365use one in his light-duty job, and had no typing, shorthand, or special office skills.12 Therefore, in accordance with § 35D(4), he determined the weekly wage “that the employee is capable of earning” and, based on his assessment of Bradley’s training, work experience, capabilities, pain, and physical limitations, see Mulcahey’s Case, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 3 (1988), assigned Bradley an earning capacity of $240 per week. Accordingly, the judge ordered payment of partial disability benefits of $407.48 per week,13
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
778 N.E.2d 11, 56 Mass. App. Ct. 359, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1068, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 1335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradleys-case-massappct-2002.