Brewer v. Industrial Commission

58 P.2d 33, 89 Utah 596, 1936 Utah LEXIS 135
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1936
DocketNo. 5715.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 33 (Brewer v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Industrial Commission, 58 P.2d 33, 89 Utah 596, 1936 Utah LEXIS 135 (Utah 1936).

Opinion

*597 FOLLAND, Justice.

The deceased, Dan W. Brewer, was killed in an accident arising out of and in the course of employment. At the time he was employed as a miner in the Utah Apex mine at a wage of $3 per day working 7 days per week. The insurance carrier, the State Insurance Fund, assumed liability and has paid to the widow and minor children death benefits at the rate of $11.49 per week. The widow on behalf of herself and minor children filed a petition with the Industrial Commission for adjusted compensation alleging that she is entitled to receive payment based on a higher wage than $3 per day; that under the evidence adduced it was reasonable to believe that Mr. Brewer would have earned a higher wage in the near future if he had not been killed. It was made to appear that the deceased was thirty-eight years of age, an experienced miner who at previous times in the same and in other mines earned from $5 to $8 per day as mine shift boss and leaser, and that he could reasonably have expected promotion to the position of shift boss at $5 a day had he lived. He had been working as a miner at the $3 a day wage for about two months. Previous to that time he was operating under a lease in the mine, but could not continue on account of a heavy fall of snow making shipment of ore impossible at the time. He thereupon went to work as a common miner. It is contended on such showing that section 42-1-71, R. S. Utah 1933, would be applicable and require an award for the maximum of $16 per week because of the skill, experience, and earning capacity of the deceased, and the probable increase of wages. This section is as follows:

“If it is established that the injured empolyee was of such age and experience when injured that under natural conditions his wages would be expected to increase, that fact tnay be considered' in arriving at his average weekly wage.”

Defendants take the position that this section applies only in case the killed or injured employee is a person of imma *598 ture years or an apprentice with little experience at the time of injury. The Industrial Commission decided that the provisions of the quoted section do not apply in cases of the character shown by this record; that the State Insurance Fund was paying compensation according to law, and denied the petition for an award of greater compensation.

The single question before us, which is one of first impression in this court, involves the construction and application of the quoted section of the law. The general rule for computing rate of benefit payments, which was followed in this case, is contained in section 42-1-70, R. S. Utah 1933, which we skeletonize as follows:

“The average weekly wage of the injured person at the time of injury shall be taken as the basis upon which to compute benefits. * * * The average weekly wage shall be determined as follows:
“(1) Determine the contract of hire existing at the time of the injury, whether upon year, month, week, day, hour or piece basis;
“ (2) Determine whether the employment is operated on a five and one-half, six or seven day basis. * * *
(4) To determine average weekly wage. * * * If the employment is seven days per week, multiply the daily wage, as determined above, by 382 and divide by 52.”
The definite formula is then outlined as follows:
“D (daily wage) X 332 X .60 / 52 =weekly compensation”

It was conceded that the contract of hire provided for a daily wage of $3 and that the employment was for 7 days a week. Using these factors in the above formula, the result would be a weekly compensation of $11.49. This is the correct and proper amount under the law, inadequate though it may be in providing for a widow and six children, unless section 42-1-71 is applicable and under its provisions the Industrial Commission is required to award a higher rate based on the fact that the deceased previously had earned *599 more money and there were prospects for a future higher wage.

This court has heretofore decided that compensation or benefits must be based on the wage presently earned and computed in accordance with the provisions of section 42-1-70, and that the “benefits may not be enlarged or diminished because the injured employee may have had larger or smaller earnings prior to the time of his injury in some other or the same employment.” Millard County v. Industrial Commission, 62 Utah 46, 217 P. 974, 976; Uintah Power & Light Co. v. Industrial Commission, 56 Utah 169, 189- P. 875, 876. In the Millard County Case, supra, the employee was an automobile salesman earning regularly an average of $125 per month. He was called specially by the sheriff of the county to aid in the apprehension of an escaped prisoner. The employee assisted in the search for four days when in an effort to capture the prisoner he was shot and killed by the outlaw. His wage for his services to the county was $3 per day. The commission awarded compensation to his dependents based on his earnings as an automobile salesman. This court held the award excessive and directed that it be based on “the average weekly wage of the deceased at the time of his injury and death, in the employment in which he was then engaged.” In the Uintah Power & Light Co. Case, supra, Mr. Justice Frick in his concurring opinion said:

“The statute assumes that the average wages earned at the time of the injury will continue indefinitely, and hence the earnings at that time were made the basis of computation.”

In each of these cases the employee was an adult. The provisions now found in section 42-1-71 were then in the law, but that section was not relied on by either party or referred to by the court in the decisions. The provision would probably have been applicable in the Millard County Case if found applicable to the facts in the present case. Since the decisions above referred to were rendered, the *600 with our statute. In the former class are New York, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Oklahoma, and Missouri. The English law is of similar effect. Woodilee Coal & Coke Co. v. M’Neill, (1918 A. C. 43), 2 A. L. R. 1637. In the latter class are Massachusetts, Maryland, and Ohio. It is generally recognized that large portions of our law were taken from the Ohio law, the section under consideration being practically identical. There are decisions by the courts of each of these states. The one from Ohio definitely decides that statute has been amended by adding the formula making more definite the method of computation of benefits based on the weekly wage.

Many of the state compensation statutes have similar provisions to our section 42-1-71. Some of these statutes are in terms limited to minors or persons of immature age while others are practically identical in language and meaning the section is limited in its application to cases involving injuries to or death of minors or persons of immature years.

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Related

Produce v. Industrial Commission
657 P.2d 1354 (Utah Supreme Court, 1983)
Probst v. Industrial Commission
588 P.2d 717 (Utah Supreme Court, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 33, 89 Utah 596, 1936 Utah LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-industrial-commission-utah-1936.