Cole v. Davol, Inc.

679 A.2d 875, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 202, 1996 WL 410704
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 19, 1996
Docket95-64-M.P., 95-492 M.P. and 94-585 M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 679 A.2d 875 (Cole v. Davol, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Davol, Inc., 679 A.2d 875, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 202, 1996 WL 410704 (R.I. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

We granted writs of certiorari on these consolidated matters to decide whether an employer can reduce workers’ compensation payments by the amount of vacation-pay benefits paid during a scheduled plant shutdown to partially incapacitated employees who have returned to light-duty work. Because these vacation benefits are payable to employees on the basis of their past service to the employer, and therefore do not relate to any present lost earning capacity, we conclude that they cannot be credited against the amount of workers’ compensation payments owed to the employees during the shutdown.

Facts

After being injured at work, the claimant employees, Susan Cole, Fred Cabral, and Veneranda Maria Carvalho, were receiving weekly workers’ compensation benefits and performing light-duty work as manufacturing-process employees at Davol, Inc. (Davol). Pursuant to a collective-bargaining agreement with Davol, they had earned credit for, and were entitled to receive, vacation-pay benefits based upon the amount of time each of them had worked at Davol. For two weeks each year Davol closed its manufacturing operations, and all qualifying employees (those who had worked the requisite number of months at Davol) received varying amounts of vacation pay during the shutdown. Even Davol’s maintenance employees who continued to work through this period received vacation pay in addition to their regular compensation.

In deciding an appeal challenging Davol’s method for calculating the employees’ post-injury earning capacities, 1 the Appellate Division of the Workers’ Compensation Court held that any vacation benefits paid to employees during the shutdown were earnings under the applicable law 2 that could be offset by the employer from the amount of the workers’ compensation payments due employees during the shutdown. The employees take exception to this conclusion and seek redress here via certiorari petitions.

Analysis

The Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA) is social legislation that should “be interpreted liberally with regard to the rights of employees.” Roy v. Providence Metalizing Co., 119 R.I. 630, 636-37, 381 *877 A.2d 1051, 1054 (1978). The “primary object” of the WCA

“is to provide economic assistance to an employee who is injured and thereby suffers a loss of earnings. The Compensation Act was intended to impose upon the employer the burden of taking care of the casualties occurring in his employment, thus preventing the injured employee from becoming a public charge. * * * [Workers’] compensation payments were never intended to provide general health and accident insurance or to afford full compensation for injuries suffered from one’s employment. * * * The * * * Act is humane legislation designed to afford a modicum of economic shelter to one who has sustained an industrial injury.” Geigy Chemical Corp., 106 R.I. at 541, 261 A.2d at 848-49.

The compensation benefit paid an employee, however, “was never intended as something being paid for nothing.” Id. at 541, 261 A.2d at 849. Rather, the benefits paid are merely a substitute for the weekly wages “an employer would have paid his[,] [her, or its] employee but for the injury.” Id.; accord Moniz v. Providence Chain Co., 618 A.2d 1270, 1271-72 (R.I.1993).

Workers’ compensation benefits are payable only for injuries that impair an employee’s earning capacity. See, supra, footnote 1. And the benchmark of earning capacity under the WCA is the amount of the employee’s post-injury earnings: if they are equal to or greater than an employee’s preinjury earnings, then it is presumed that the employee, although disabled, has not suffered the “requisite impairment of earning capacity upon which entitlement to weekly compensation benefits depends.” Kilsey, 119 R.I. at 445, 379 A.2d at 920.

That presumption, however, can be rebutted if it is shown that the “payments received during disability are an unreliable basis for estimating earning capacity.” Id. For example, in Kilsey we said:

“[T]he recovery of compensation benefits will not be precluded if the payments received by an employee are intended as a gesture of gratitude by a grateful employer for past services rendered, Trzoniec v. General Controls Co., 100 R.I. 448, 451, 216 A.2d 886, 888 (1966), or if the payments represent accumulated sick leave and vacation pay, Robidoux v. Uniroyal, Inc., 116 R.I. 594, 597-98, 359 A.2d 45, 47-48 (1976).” (Emphasis added.) 119 R.I. at 445, 379 A.2d at 920.

And two years later we noted that an employer’s right to a credit for overpayment

“depends * * * on the reasons motivating the employer to continue the employee on its payroll during the period of his incapacity. Thus, * * * a weekly payment in an amount equal to salary paid by a sympathetic employer will not be deemed a disability benefit if paid, not with the intention that the payment be in lieu of compensation benefits, but rather as a voluntary gesture of gratitude for past services.” Albert Zabbo & Sons, Inc. v. Zabbo, 122 R.I. 79, 84, 404 A.2d 487, 489 (1979).

The starting point for any analysis of vacation-pay issues in workers’ compensation cases is Robidoux. There, a workers’ compensation tribunal denied a disabled employee benefits on the ground that, because he had received accrued sick and vacation leave during his absence in an amount greater than his pre-injury wages, there had been no diminution of earning capacity. Robidoux v. Uniroyal, Inc., 116 R.I. 594, 596-97, 359 A.2d 45, 47 (1976). But in language that bears directly on the present case, we held:

“Just as * * * wages paid out of sympathy and in consideration of long service do not reflect actual earning capacity, so, too, is it now our judgment that the accumulated sick or vacation leave payment which the employee may have earned by virtue of his past services and which would otherwise be available to him when not suffering from a work-incurred disability might be lost forever if required to be included in the computation of his earning capacity.” Id. at 598, 359 A.2d at 48.

In Robidoux, we did not think that the Legislature could have intended such a result in the context of determining what should be included in calculating an injured employee’s earning capacity. Id. at 599, 359 A.2d at 48.

*878 Vacation pay is an incident of employment. Id. at 598, 359 A.2d at 48.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 A.2d 875, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 202, 1996 WL 410704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-davol-inc-ri-1996.