Dennis L. Carr v. Virginia Electric & Power Company

487 S.E.2d 878, 25 Va. App. 306, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 29, 1997
Docket2939964
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 487 S.E.2d 878 (Dennis L. Carr v. Virginia Electric & Power Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis L. Carr v. Virginia Electric & Power Company, 487 S.E.2d 878, 25 Va. App. 306, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 500 (Va. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

FITZPATRICK, Judge.

Dennis L. Carr (claimant) appeals a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission denying him an award of temporary partial disability benefits. He contends that the commission erred in failing to award him benefits for the time periods during which he performed light duty work but re *308 ceived no opportunities for overtime. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the decision of the commission.

I. BACKGROUND

Claimant was employed with Virginia Power (employer) as a lineman for approximately twenty-three years. During his employment as a lineman, claimant’s duties included “climb[ing] poles,” “work[ing] out of a bucket truck,” trouble shooting, building lines, and “restor[ing] service customers when they’re out of lights.” Claimant typically worked more than forty hours per week and regularly received overtime compensation. Additionally, claimant received bonus or incentive pay when he “filled other shifts” or worked “outside of his department of geographic area.” On July 5, 1995, claimant, who is left-handed, suffered a compensable injury resulting in the amputation of his left ring finger.

Subsequently, claimant was paid wages in lieu of compensation for periods of total incapacitation from July 6, 1995 through August 5,1995, and from September 26, 1995 through October 15, 1995. Claimant performed light duty work from August 6,1995 through September 25,1995, and from October 16, 1995 and continuing. Claimant testified that he returned only to light duty work “[bjecause my doctor says I can’t do line work anymore.” A letter from one of claimant’s doctors states that claimant’s injury “precludes him from performing all of his regular duties as an electrician.” Claimant’s light duty work included the following responsibilities: “some inspection work on [the] equipment, visual, just visual inspections, and ... read[ing] some meters from time to time.” During the light duty work, claimant worked “eight hours a day, 40-hour week.” He received, during his light duty work, approximately $114.16 less per week than he received at his pre-injury work. 1 However, during his light duty work, he *309 was neither offered overtime work, nor paid additional wages; nor did he receive any “shift differential.”

At the hearing on April 12, 1996 before the deputy commissioner, claimant admitted that he sometimes declined or was unavailable to work overtime, that he had been disciplined for having low acceptance rates for overtime, and that he did not know exactly how much overtime he would have been offered. Finally, claimant testified that he knew that overtime had been offered to other linemen during the time period in question, and stated that he would have accepted such an opportunity if it had been offered.

David H. Driggs (Driggs), the construction superintendent, testified that there was no way to predict how much overtime would be available to any given employee from year to year, and that, in the past, claimant failed to maintain the amount of overtime required by the company. However, Driggs also testified that, during the past ten years, overtime had always been offered to linemen.

Following the hearing, the deputy commissioner denied claimant’s request for temporary partial disability benefits for the wage loss allegedly resulting from his lack of overtime work, and found that “the reduction in earnings stems from purely economic factors unrelated to the accident. Therefore, the claimant has failed to prove a causal nexus between the accident and his loss of earnings.”

On November 4, 1996, the full commission reviewed the record and found that “the claimant was not medically restricted from working overtime and had not proven that his wage loss was due to medical restrictions from the industrial accident.” The commission made no finding or classification as to the job title of claimant’s light duty position relative to his pre-injury title of lineman. Accordingly, the commission affirmed the decision of the deputy commissioner that denied claimant temporary partial benefits for wages lost due to a lack of overtime work or shift differential.

*310 II. WAGE LOSS

Claimant contends that because he was offered light duty work without the opportunity to work overtime, shift differential, or out-of-business-area pay, he suffered a wage loss below his pre-injury wage. Additionally, claimant argues that his wage loss is properly attributable to his occupational injury, as medically imposed restrictions prevented him from performing his pre-injury job and receiving extra earnings, and it is therefore compensable under Code § 65.2-502. 2

We recently addressed the issue of the impact of economic or business conditions on a partially disabled claimant’s right to compensation. See Consolidated Stores Corporation, et al. v. Graham, 25 Va.App. 133, 486 S.E.2d 576 (1997). In that case, some time after her injury, claimant was authorized to perform light duty work. She was offered and she accepted a position as a sales clerk in which she made the same hourly wage as her pre-injury position as a “stocker.” However, “[d]ue to economic conditions, [employer] assigned [claimant] a reduced number of hours, resulting in an average weekly wage of less than $108.” Consolidated, 25 Va.App. at 135, 486 S.E.2d at 577. Although the deputy commissioner found that “any diminution in hours worked was a product of the down turn in business,” the full commission reversed and found that the claimant had not been “released to her pre-injury job and that she was not performing all her pre-injury duties” and that the “ ‘fact that the availability of light duty work is limited due *311 to economic conditions does not diminish the claimant’s right to compensation when the injury prevents her from performing her regular job.’ ” Id. at 136, 486 S.E.2d at 577.

Finding that claimant was not released to her pre-injury employment and that her light duty responsibilities as a store clerk were not commensurate with her pre-injury position of a stocker, we held that “the employer’s financial condition and the availability of alternative work do not affect the claimant’s right to compensation due to an impaired capacity to perform his pre-injury duties.” Id. at 137, 486 S.E.2d at 578 (emphasis added). In reaching this decision, we relied on Code § 65.2-502:

During a period of partial incapacity, a claimant performing work remains entitled to compensation benefits, determined in part by calculating the difference between the claimant’s average weekly wage before and after the injury. Thus, by providing suitable alternative employment to a claimant, an employer may avoid paying compensation benefits.

Id.

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487 S.E.2d 878, 25 Va. App. 306, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-l-carr-v-virginia-electric-power-company-vactapp-1997.