Darby v. Johnson

118 So. 2d 707
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1960
Docket4951
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 118 So. 2d 707 (Darby v. Johnson) 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
Darby v. Johnson, 118 So. 2d 707 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

118 So.2d 707 (1960)

Fred DARBY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Howell JOHNSON, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 4951.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 3, 1960.

*708 Joseph E. Bass, Jr., Thomas W. Staed, Lake Charles, for appellant.

Charles C. Broussard, Sulphur, for appellee.

Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER and TATE, Judges.

TATE, Judge.

This is a compensation suit. On October 14, 1958, the plaintiff sustained an accident at work, as a result of which the index finger of his left hand was amputated. He was awarded 30 weeks' compensation for the loss of this specific member (LSA-R.S. 23:1221(4) (b)), medical expenses, and costs.

The sole issue raised by this appeal by plaintiff concerns whether the trial court erred in refusing to award him also penalties and attorney's fees under Act 432 of 1958, LSA-R.S. 23:1201.2,[1] because of the *709 allegedly arbitrary and capricious non-payment of compensation and medical expenses undoubtedly due by the defendant uninsured employer.

The undisputed facts show: On October 14, 1958, the plaintiff's left hand was injured. He was brought to the doctor, and his left index finger was amputated the same date. For five weeks, commencing with October 31st and terminating on November 28th, the plaintiff was paid compensation without incident at a weekly rate of $26. The rate was based upon a computation of 65% of weekly wages for a 40-hour week at wages of $1 per hour. In accordance with the customary manner of making wage payments, the employer's office sent these compensation checks to the plaintiff by handing them to his foreman, along with the pay checks of the other employees of the crew, and the foreman would then transmit same through co-employees to plaintiff at his home.

Following a conference with his employer, at which he was dissatisfied with the amount tendered in settlement of his claim, the plaintiff retained a lawyer, who on December 4, 1958, sent the defendant by unregistered mail a demand that the plaintiff's compensation be brought "up to date." The defendant and his office staff denied having received this letter; we are unable to say that the trial court committed manifest error in such finding. In any event, however, the compensation payment for December 4, 1958, in the amount of $26 was not given to an employee to be delivered to the plaintiff, but was held in the defendant's office until some time after this suit was filed on December 16th.

After the suit was filed, compensation payments of the rate of $26 per week were tendered to the plaintiff up through January 16, 1959, at which date an additional $26 compensation payment was also tendered, to cover the first week after the injury.[2] The tender was not accepted by the plaintiff's counsel.

Trial was had on May 7, 1959, at which time the issue of plaintiff's residual disability disappeared from the case. It was then stipulated that the sole remaining issue concerns whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover penalties for the arbitary non-payment of compensation at the weekly rate of $35 admittedly due by his employer during the period it was unpaid prior to trial.

*710 The trial court correctly held that the defendant's non-payment of compensation was not arbitrary so as to entitle plaintiff to penalties, insofar as the plaintiff contends he was entitled to penalties because of: (a) the employer's failure to transmit the check on December 5, 1958, through co-employees, as had been done with prior checks; (b) the employer's failure to issue a check on December 12, 1958, for the payment due on that date; and (c) the employer's failure to pay the plaintiff the amount due for the first week of his injury before suit was filed on December 16, 1958. In the absence of request by the employee that his compensation benefits payments be mailed to him, the employer is required to pay the compensation "at the times and places as wages were payable to the injured employee before the accident", LSA-R.S. 23:1201. As the trial court noted, and accepting its finding that the employer did not receive the notice by mail through his attorney that such payment be posted to him in care of his attorney, there is no proof in the record that the plaintiff would not have received his correct compensation prior to suit by a simple request for it at his employer's office. Under these circumstances we find no arbitrary refusal to pay compensation instanced by the above-noted particulars.

However, we must respectfully disagree with our learned brother's failure to award penalties for the arbitrary and capricious non-payment or non-tender to or for the employee of (a) compensation at the correct weekly rate of $35 and (b) a medical bill of $12.75 for treatment of the plaintiff on the day of the accident.

I. Tender of compensation at an insufficient weekly rate.

The trial court disallowed penalties for the payment of compensation at an insufficient weekly rate because no specific request was made before the suit for compensation at the correct rate and because, in paying or tendering compensation at the incorrect rate of $26, the employer testified that he was relying upon the advice of counsel.

The evidence shows that at all times the defendant employer had conducted his operations on a 5-day work week; that he usually has maintained an 8-hour work-day, but that a few months before the present accident the customary work-day of his employee was increased to 9 hours. The defendant employer testified that the compensation rate of $26 (65% of a $40 weekly wage) had been established because "on previous occasions in talking to my attorney I had learned from him that where you are working a 5-day week that compensation would be paid on the basis of 40 hours, not necessarily on any overtime that might have applied." (Tr. 131-132; see also Tr. 141.)

Plaintiff was tendered compensation at the weekly rate of $26 for the remaining period of the employer's compensation liability. In the defendant employer's formal answer, filed after an exception of prematurity was overruled, he admitted that he was liable for compensation at the weekly rate of $30.88 (which is computed as 65% of the wages, including overtime, for a 5-day work week, with a 9-hour work day), although he did not tender compensation at this rate. Thus the employer's position was that he was entitled to tender compensation based on the rate of pay for a five-day work week.

However, as the trial court noted, allthough earlier jurisprudence may have permitted the computation of compensation on the basis of a five-day work week (see Malone, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation, Section 323), the Supreme Court in Carrington v. Consolidated Underwriters, 1956, 230 La. 939, 89 So.2d 399, reiterated and clarified earlier pronouncements and held flatly that, for purposes of computing the compensation rate of an injured employee, the six-day work week must be employed. This ruling has been consistently adhered to thereafter. Malone, Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Law, Section 323.

*711 There is and can be no good faith dispute whatsoever that the employee was entitled to wages at the rate of $35 per week (the admitted rate of compensation due if a six-day week's wages are used as the basis), and not at the rate of the $26 per week tendered to the injured employee by the defendant employer.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 2d 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darby-v-johnson-lactapp-1960.