Cohoon v. Fruehauf Trailer Corp.
This text of 570 N.W.2d 158 (Cohoon v. Fruehauf Trailer Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiffs’ appeal is before us on remand by the Supreme Court for consideration as on leave granted of an order of the Worker’s Compensation Appellate Commission (wcac) upholding a magistrate’s denial of plaintiffs’ petition for continuing dependency benefits for decedent’s thirty-six-year-old mentally incapacitated son. 452 Mich 857 (1996). We affirm and hold that the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act (wdca), MCL 418.101 et seq.) MSA 17.237(101) et seq., provides no authority to extend the five-hundred-week benefits period for dependents over the age provided in MCL 418.335; MSA 17.237(335).
i
Plaintiffs’ decedent, Carl Cohoon, died in 1981 as a result of an occupational disease. A hearing referee determined that decedent’s twenty-seven-year-old son, Michael Cohoon, bom December 18, 1954, was mentally incapacitated because of Down’s syndrome and, *205 thus, a dependent entitled to death benefits. Accordingly, the hearing referee ordered “that Defendant(s) shall pay compensation [to Michael] at the rate of $176.00 from 3-24-1981 until further order of the Bureau not to exceed 500 weeks from the date of [decedent’s] death . . . .”
After the expiration of the five-hundred-week period, plaintiffs petitioned for further benefits for Michael. Plaintiffs claimed that, despite his advanced age, Michael’s continuing incapacity entitled him to protracted benefits under MCL 418.335; MSA 17.237(335). Defendants opposed the petition on the basis that the WDCA provides no mechanism for extending the five-hundred-week benefits period for a thirty-six-year-old dependent. 1
The magistrate denied plaintiffs’ petition, stating:
Section 321 defines the benefit to be paid when death results from a personal injury of an employee and the extent to which such benefits are to be paid (500 weeks). The only ground for the extension of such benefits is for those under age dependents at the expiration of the 500 week period.
In short, Section 335 does not create an affirmative entitlement over and above that affirmatively granted in Section 321. Thus, plaintiff has been paid all the compensation to which she is entitled, and further benefits are denied.
The WCAC affirmed, and this Court denied leave to appeal. Our Supreme Court, however, remanded this case and ordered this Court to hear it as on leave granted.
*206 n
Plaintiffs claim that the WCAC misconstrued the wdca in finding no mechanism authorizing an extension of the five-hundred-week benefits period for a thirty-six-year-old mentally incapacitated dependent. We disagree.
Section 321 is the only wdca provision affirmatively authorizing the commencement of death benefits. As it applied to the 1980 injury date, that section provided that when a work-related injury causes death, the employer generally must pay weekly benefits to the decedent’s dependents 2 “for a period of 500 weeks from the date of death.” This five-hundred-week benefits period can be extended only as provided in §§ 321 and 335. The pertinent portions of these sections provided at the relevant time that
[i]f at the expiration of the 500-week period any such wholly or partially dependent person is less than 21[ 3 ] years of age, a hearing referee may order the employer to continue to pay the weekly compensation or some portion thereof until such wholly or partially dependent person reaches the age of 21. [Emphasis added.] 4
Thus, the five-hundred-week benefits period can be extended only if the dependent is below the pre *207 scribed age when the benefits period expires. See, generally, Murphy v Ameritech, 221 Mich App 591; 561 NW2d 875 (1997). Even then, each section unexceptionably limits any extension and terminates death benefits when the child reaches the prescribed age.
Plaintiffs claim, however, that § 335 authorizes protracted benefits for mentally or physically incapacitated dependents. To support this claim, plaintiffs cite the sentence in § 335 that provides: “The payment of compensation to any dependent child shall cease when the child reaches the age of 21 years, if at the age of 21 years he is neither physically nor mentally incapacitated from earning . . . .” 5 Plaintiffs construe *208 this language excluding incapacitated children from the limitation on the five-hundred-week benefits period as affirmative authority for extending death benefits for incapacitated children for as long as their dependency continues. We cannot agree.
The exclusive function of the language in § 335 regarding incapacitated persons is to exempt such persons from the automatic termination of the five-hundred-week benefits period that usually occurs when a child reaches the prescribed age. There is no indication that this qualification to a clause otherwise limiting the five-hundred-week benefits period authorizes magistrates to extend the benefits period beyond five hundred weeks. Nor does the sentence in § 335 authorizing extensions of the five-hundred-week benefits period contain an incapacitated-persons exception to the provision allowing continuations only until the dependent child reaches the prescribed age. Moreover, the language and history 6 of § 335 establishes that these two sentences serve distinct functions and, therefore, cannot be melded together to allow an indefinite term of benefits for incapacitated children. Accordingly, we conclude that the lan *209 guage in § 335 pertains only as an exception to the provision otherwise limiting the five-hundred-week period and cannot be construed as authority to extend a five-hundred-week benefits period for incapacitated persons over the prescribed age.
Plaintiffs also maintain that the wdca focuses on dependency alone and that the Legislature provided for benefits to continue as long as the deceased worker’s child remains incapacitated. However, there is no evidence that the Legislature intended benefits to continue for as long as a person remains dependent on the deceased worker’s income. On the contrary, although dependency is a precondition for receiving benefits, the wdca clearly fixes the length of time benefits may be received without regard to continued dependency. Thus, regardless of dependency in fact, the Legislature has made a policy decision that dependency benefits (as opposed to dependency itself) terminate at either the age of majority or, in the case of incapacitated persons, the end of the five-hundred-week benefits period. See Compton v Ford Motor Co, 337 Mich 654, 656; 60 NW2d 191 (1953).
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570 N.W.2d 158, 225 Mich. App. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohoon-v-fruehauf-trailer-corp-michctapp-1997.