Opinion
FUKUTO, J.
Plaintiff, Lindsay Paul Burnelle (Burnelle), appeals from a judgment in favor of Continental Can Company, Inc. (Continental), following the hearing of Continental’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
On April 1, 1983, Burnelle was employed by Continental as a seamless can line maintainer. His job was to watch the flow of cans, remove jam ups and to perform routine maintenance on the machines. During the course of his employment, he reached into a can necking machine to remove a piece of scrap which had become lodged inside. He hit the jog button which started the machine and his hand was pinched between a hose clamp and the base of the machine.
On May 3, 1983, Burnelle filed an application for adjudication of claim with the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board alleging an injury sustained when his hand was caught in a machine.
On June 29, 1983, Burnelle filed a complaint for personal injuries against Continental in the superior court. In two separate counts, he alleges his
employer knowingly removed or knowingly failed to install a “point of operation guard” on a power press, in violation of Labor Code section 4558,
and as a result of his employer’s violation of this statute, he “suffered and continues to suffer, permanent injuries to his person, body and health, including but not limited to, severe injuries to the muscles, tissues and nerves of his hand, ...”
On June 4, 1985, pursuant to written stipulation of the parties, the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board made an award in favor of Burnelle and against Continental and its insurance carrier, Western Employer’s Insurance Company.
On December 19, 1985, Continental filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings in the personal injury action on the basis that the final judgment entered in the worker’s compensation proceedings was a merger and a bar to appellant’s personal injury action based on the doctrine of res judicata.
On April 21, 1986, the trial court granted Continental’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, and on May 1, 1986, entered its judgment.
Burnelle appeals the judgment and assigns as error an earlier discovery ruling.
Burnelle contends, “The trial court erred in granting the motion for judgment on the pleadings because Labor Code section 4558 is clearly made a cumulative remedy by Labor Code section 3600 (b) and therefore the findings and award in the workmens’ compensation action is not res judicata.”
Labor Code section 3600 provides for employer liability for injuries to employees arising out of and in the course and scope of employment. Section 3602, rewritten in 1982, provides that where conditions of compensation exist, such compensation, as provided, is the exclusive remedy against the employer for injury of the employee, except as specifically provided in that section, and in sections 3706 and 4558.
In enacting section 4558, the Legislature created an exception to the exclusive remedy rule, on which this action is based.
At the same time it enacted section 4558, the Legislature amended section 3600, adding subdivision (b), which provides: “Where an employee, or his or her dependents, receives the compensation provided by this division and secures a judgment for, or settlement of, civil damages pursuant to those specific exemptions to the employee’s exclusive remedy set forth in . . . Section 4558, the compensation paid under this division shall be credited against the judgment or settlement, and the employer shall be relieved from the obligation to pay further compensation to, or on behalf of, the employee or his or her dependents up to the net amount of the judgment or
settlement received by the employee or his or her heirs, or that portion of the judgment as has been satisfied.”
Burnelle contends that section 3600, subdivision (b) allows an injured employee to file, simultaneously, a worker’s compensation claim and an action at law in the superior court. The employee is free, under Burnelle’s interpretation, to pursue his worker’s compensation claim to judgment and, thereafter, to continue his action at law. Should a judgment be rendered in favor of the employee in the superior court action, the employer would be obligated to pay, in addition to the worker’s compensation benefits already paid in satisfaction of the worker’s compensation judgment, further compensation to the employee up to the net amount of the judgment. According to Burnelle, the words, ‘“the compensation’ can only mean any and all compensation including . . . [an] award by the board. Otherwise, the [L]egislature would have said some compensation or any compensation or simply the word compensation without any article or modifier.”
Continental contends that where a worker’s compensation claim has been brought to final judgment, the personal injury action and the worker’s compensation claim merge and under the doctrine of res judicata, the employee is barred from continuing his or her action at law in the superior court. According to Continental, section 3600, subdivision (b) is silent about instances where an employee has taken his worker’s action to final judgment. It is concerned with only those instances where an employee has “received” worker’s compensation benefits. Continental argues that it is well known that an employee may receive worker’s compensation benefits before a worker’s compensation action is brought or concluded, and section 3600, subdivision (b) is nothing more than a recognition of the law which permitted an employee to receive worker’s compensation benefits and at the same time bring a civil suit for damages where one of the statutory exceptions applied. Continental concludes that the statute was enacted to preclude the injustice of the double recovery against the employer when the employee has “received” some worker’s compensation benefits before the civil action is concluded.
Section 3600, subdivision (b), made effective January 1, 1983, has not yet been interpreted by the courts. A review of legislative history materials discloses no discussion as to whether the Legislature intended the interpretation urged by Burnelle or the one proposed by Continental.
Cases cited by Burnelle and Continental are of little value in our analysis. Section 3602 had not yet been rewritten, subdivision (b) had not yet been
added to section 3600, and 4558 had not yet been enacted when these cases were decided, or, the events had occurred prior to the legislative action described above and, thus, the statutes were inapplicable to the facts of the cases.
We believe the plain language of the statute supports Burnelle’s interpretation. The word “compensation” is defined to include “every benefit or payment conferred by Division 4 upon an injured employee, . .
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Opinion
FUKUTO, J.
Plaintiff, Lindsay Paul Burnelle (Burnelle), appeals from a judgment in favor of Continental Can Company, Inc. (Continental), following the hearing of Continental’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
On April 1, 1983, Burnelle was employed by Continental as a seamless can line maintainer. His job was to watch the flow of cans, remove jam ups and to perform routine maintenance on the machines. During the course of his employment, he reached into a can necking machine to remove a piece of scrap which had become lodged inside. He hit the jog button which started the machine and his hand was pinched between a hose clamp and the base of the machine.
On May 3, 1983, Burnelle filed an application for adjudication of claim with the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board alleging an injury sustained when his hand was caught in a machine.
On June 29, 1983, Burnelle filed a complaint for personal injuries against Continental in the superior court. In two separate counts, he alleges his
employer knowingly removed or knowingly failed to install a “point of operation guard” on a power press, in violation of Labor Code section 4558,
and as a result of his employer’s violation of this statute, he “suffered and continues to suffer, permanent injuries to his person, body and health, including but not limited to, severe injuries to the muscles, tissues and nerves of his hand, ...”
On June 4, 1985, pursuant to written stipulation of the parties, the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board made an award in favor of Burnelle and against Continental and its insurance carrier, Western Employer’s Insurance Company.
On December 19, 1985, Continental filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings in the personal injury action on the basis that the final judgment entered in the worker’s compensation proceedings was a merger and a bar to appellant’s personal injury action based on the doctrine of res judicata.
On April 21, 1986, the trial court granted Continental’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, and on May 1, 1986, entered its judgment.
Burnelle appeals the judgment and assigns as error an earlier discovery ruling.
Burnelle contends, “The trial court erred in granting the motion for judgment on the pleadings because Labor Code section 4558 is clearly made a cumulative remedy by Labor Code section 3600 (b) and therefore the findings and award in the workmens’ compensation action is not res judicata.”
Labor Code section 3600 provides for employer liability for injuries to employees arising out of and in the course and scope of employment. Section 3602, rewritten in 1982, provides that where conditions of compensation exist, such compensation, as provided, is the exclusive remedy against the employer for injury of the employee, except as specifically provided in that section, and in sections 3706 and 4558.
In enacting section 4558, the Legislature created an exception to the exclusive remedy rule, on which this action is based.
At the same time it enacted section 4558, the Legislature amended section 3600, adding subdivision (b), which provides: “Where an employee, or his or her dependents, receives the compensation provided by this division and secures a judgment for, or settlement of, civil damages pursuant to those specific exemptions to the employee’s exclusive remedy set forth in . . . Section 4558, the compensation paid under this division shall be credited against the judgment or settlement, and the employer shall be relieved from the obligation to pay further compensation to, or on behalf of, the employee or his or her dependents up to the net amount of the judgment or
settlement received by the employee or his or her heirs, or that portion of the judgment as has been satisfied.”
Burnelle contends that section 3600, subdivision (b) allows an injured employee to file, simultaneously, a worker’s compensation claim and an action at law in the superior court. The employee is free, under Burnelle’s interpretation, to pursue his worker’s compensation claim to judgment and, thereafter, to continue his action at law. Should a judgment be rendered in favor of the employee in the superior court action, the employer would be obligated to pay, in addition to the worker’s compensation benefits already paid in satisfaction of the worker’s compensation judgment, further compensation to the employee up to the net amount of the judgment. According to Burnelle, the words, ‘“the compensation’ can only mean any and all compensation including . . . [an] award by the board. Otherwise, the [L]egislature would have said some compensation or any compensation or simply the word compensation without any article or modifier.”
Continental contends that where a worker’s compensation claim has been brought to final judgment, the personal injury action and the worker’s compensation claim merge and under the doctrine of res judicata, the employee is barred from continuing his or her action at law in the superior court. According to Continental, section 3600, subdivision (b) is silent about instances where an employee has taken his worker’s action to final judgment. It is concerned with only those instances where an employee has “received” worker’s compensation benefits. Continental argues that it is well known that an employee may receive worker’s compensation benefits before a worker’s compensation action is brought or concluded, and section 3600, subdivision (b) is nothing more than a recognition of the law which permitted an employee to receive worker’s compensation benefits and at the same time bring a civil suit for damages where one of the statutory exceptions applied. Continental concludes that the statute was enacted to preclude the injustice of the double recovery against the employer when the employee has “received” some worker’s compensation benefits before the civil action is concluded.
Section 3600, subdivision (b), made effective January 1, 1983, has not yet been interpreted by the courts. A review of legislative history materials discloses no discussion as to whether the Legislature intended the interpretation urged by Burnelle or the one proposed by Continental.
Cases cited by Burnelle and Continental are of little value in our analysis. Section 3602 had not yet been rewritten, subdivision (b) had not yet been
added to section 3600, and 4558 had not yet been enacted when these cases were decided, or, the events had occurred prior to the legislative action described above and, thus, the statutes were inapplicable to the facts of the cases.
We believe the plain language of the statute supports Burnelle’s interpretation. The word “compensation” is defined to include “every benefit or payment conferred by Division 4 upon an injured employee, . . .” (§ 3207.) The term “compensation,” as used in the Workers’ Compensation Act, is a technical one and includes all payments conferred by the act upon an injured employee, and does not have the same meaning as does compensation with reference to payment to an employee of wages or salary for services performed. The latter is remuneration for work done, while the former is indemnification for injury sustained.
(Hawthorn
v.
City of Beverly Hills
(1952) 111 Cal.App.2d 723 [245 P.2d 352].) A compromise award made to an employee by an employer’s worker’s compensation insurer is “compensation” within the Workers’ Compensation Act.
(Aetna Life Ins. Co.
v.
Ind. Acc. Com.
(1952) 38 Cal.2d 599 [241 P.2d 530].)
We conclude the words “the compensation,” as that term is used in section 3600, subdivision (b), include: (1) those sums received by the employee prior to a final adjudication of his worker’s compensation claim, and (2) those sums received by the employee in the form of an award following a final adjudication of the employee’s worker’s compensation claim. Thus, where an employee has received an award under the Workers’ Compensation Act and thereafter pursues his civil action brought pursuant to section 4558 to judgment, the employer is entitled to a setoff. Any sums paid by the employer pursuant to the worker’s compensation award shall be credited against the judgment in the civil action, up to the net amount of the judgment. By providing for this setoff, we believe the Legislature intended the actions at law specifically permitted by section 4558 to be cumulative to the employee’s worker’s compensation remedy and not subject to merger and bar under the doctrine of res judicata.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 23, 1987.
The judgment is reversed. Respondent, Continental, to bear costs of appeal.
Roth, P. J., and Gates, J., concurred.