Daigle v. Higgins Industries

29 So. 2d 374, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 370
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 18555.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 374 (Daigle v. Higgins Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daigle v. Higgins Industries, 29 So. 2d 374, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 370 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

A rehearing was granted herein because we entertained doubt as to the correctness of our holding that plaintiff is entitled to receive compensation for the 35 weeks after the accident during which he worked for his same employer and earned and received wages about equal in amount to the wages which he earned prior to the accident.

Plaintiff was injured on May 23, 1944. We found that he had sustained fractures of bones in both hands and that the fracture of the right hand was ununited, and *Page 375 we held that the injuries rendered plaintiff permanently disabled from doing work of any reasonable character.

From the date of the accident to July 16, 1944, plaintiff did no work whatever and was paid compensation for said period.

On July 16, 1944, plaintiff returned to work and was assigned light duties for a few weeks, but was paid substantial wages approximating those which he had previously earned, and which wages each week amounted to several times the compensation to which he would have been entitled had he not returned to work.

After doing light work for a few weeks, plaintiff returned to duties somewhat similar to those in which he was engaged at the time of the accident, and he continued to work and earn his wages until March 18, 1945. During that period also the wages paid him approximated those which he had previously earned, and amounted each week to several times the amount of the compensation which would have been paid him. We found in our original opinion, and we still entertain that view, that during said period plaintiff performed valuable services and actually earned the wages paid him.

Plaintiff was discharged on March 18, 1945, and later brought this suit for compensation, praying that he be awarded the maximum weekly amount, $20 per week, for 400 weeks, subject to a credit in favor of defendants for those weeks following the accident during which he was paid compensation and did not work, and also subject to a credit in favor of defendants for certain other periods after his discharge for which he was paid compensation and received no wages, and subject also to credits in favor of defendants for payments of compensation made for several days during the period of his reemployment on which days he was unable to work.

In holding in our original opinion that plaintiff was entitled to compensation for total, permanent disability, we rendered a decree in his favor for 400 weeks commencing on the date of the accident. We held also that the defendants were entitled to a credit for the amounts which plaintiff had been paid as compensation, but we did not allow credit for those 35 weeks between July 16, 1944, and March 18, 1945, during which plaintiff was reemployed.

Defendants vehemently complain that in not allowing them credit for those weeks during which plaintiff worked for Higgins Industries, Inc., following the accident, and earned and received wages substantially greater than the compensation would have been, our original decree compels them to pay compensation for those weeks in addition to plaintiff's full wages.

[1, 2] Counsel for plaintiff contends that such plea of defendants is one of set-off and should not be entertained by us as the plea was not specially made as required by the provisions of C.P. Arts. 367 and 368. Plaintiff's counsel also cites the case of Marshall v. McCrea, 2 La. Ann. 79. We perceive no merit in such contention. In the first place, plaintiff must make out his case and can recover only such compensation as may be due him. Secondly, Sec. 18, Par. 4, of the Workmen's Compensation Act, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, Act No. 85 of 1926, provides in part: "The Judge shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence or by technical rules or (of) procedure other than as herein provided, * * *."

And as said in the case of Dawson v, Jahncke Dry Docks, Inc., 18 La. App. 368, 131 So. 743, 746, the above provision intended that the strict rules of pleading are to be relaxed in compensation cases: "These statutes have in all jurisdictions been held to be paternal in character and parties have not been held to the strict rules of pleading, or to the strict rules of evidence which are necessary in ordinary cases. In fact, it is provided in paragraph 4, section 18, of Act No. 85 of 1926, p. 122, that in compensation cases the strict rules of pleading shall be relaxed."

It is also contended by counsel for plaintiff that during the time plaintiff worked for Higgins Industries, Inc., after the accident neither the defendants, the physician for Higgins Industries, Inc., who treated plaintiff, nor plaintiff himself knew the exact nature of the injuries to plaintiff's left wrist, and that plaintiff did not learn until April 4, 1945, that his left wrist had been fractured. Counsel argues that whereas *Page 376 plaintiff worked for Higgins Industries, Inc., until March 18, 1945, the compensation due plaintiff should not commence until March 18, 1945, the date of plaintiff's discharge by Higgins Industries, Inc., or from April 4, 1945, the date of the discovery of plaintiff's exact injuries.

We notice in plaintiff's petition the allegation that as a result of the accident plaintiff sustained a fracture of the scaphoid of the left hand, which is ununited, and an impacted fracture of the distal end of the radius of the right hand.

[3] The above injuries of plaintiff, according to the allegations of the petition, and also as shown by the evidence in the record, were sustained by plaintiff immediately upon the happening of the accident and it therefore follows that any compensation which might be due plaintiff should commence as of the date of the occurrence of the accident.

Plaintiff's counsel, in his oral argument, conceded that for those weeks between July 16, 1944, and March 18, 1945, plaintiff should not be awarded compensation, since he worked and earned wages substantially in excess of what his compensation would have been had he not worked, but counsel assents that instead of a credit being allowed to defendants on the 400 weeks compensation for those weeks during that period, the 400 week period should be extended by the number of weeks between July 16, 1944, and March 18, 1945, and, therefore, after the 400 week period would normally terminate it should be extended by that number of weeks.

[4] It is firmly settled that where an employee is injured but is kept on the payroll out of charity, and his wages are paid him purely as a gratuity or a benevolence, and the wages, although not earned, amount each week to at least as much as the compensation would have been, credit on the 400 weeks of compensation is due on a week to week basis for each week such gratuitous payments are made.

It is also well settled that if during any such week the employer or his insurer pays to the injured workman gratuitous wages amounting to more than the compensation would have been, the credit is not to be given to the employer or to his insurer on a dollar for dollar basis, but credit is to be for only one week in compensation for each week in which the gratuitous wages paid him amounted to as much as the compensation would have been.

[5] It has also been held that for the purpose of interrupting prescription a gratuitous payment of unearned wages is tantamount to a payment of compensation, and that for each week during which unearned gratuitous wages are paid prescription which might otherwise accrue is interrupted.

In our original opinion we extracted and quoted language used by the Supreme Court from the case of Holliday v. Martin Veneer Co., 206 La. 897, 20 So.2d 173.

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 374, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daigle-v-higgins-industries-lactapp-1947.