DIV. OF WORKERS'COMP, ETC. v. Brevda
This text of 420 So. 2d 887 (DIV. OF WORKERS'COMP, ETC. v. Brevda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
DIVISION OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION, BUREAU OF CRIMES COMPENSATION, Appellant,
v.
Yale Brevda, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*888 George W. Butler, Jr., Tallahassee, for appellant.
Stephen L. Rosen of Morris & Rosen, Tampa, for appellee.
*889 ERVIN, Judge.
The Bureau of Crimes Compensation appeals an order awarding certain benefits to the victim of a crime, and argues that the award entered was not made pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 960. We agree in part with appellant's arguments and so reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand for further proceedings.
Appellant first argues that the deputy commissioner erred in finding that Brevda had suffered a serious financial hardship pursuant to the terms of Section 960.13(7), Florida Statutes (1979),[1] and in not entering sufficient findings of fact to justify a lump sum award. The record, however, clearly reveals that the victim's income was adversely affected as a direct result of the assault, in that during the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1978, and ending June 30, 1979, appellee derived $21,000 in profits from his business, while in the next succeeding year his income dropped to $3,000, much of that amount having been earned in the three months before the injury which occurred on October 13, 1979. Although claimant began receiving $500 in monthly benefits from a disability insurance policy within 30 days after the assault, which sum was reduced to $250 per month in March, 1980, those amounts did not entirely compensate him for his loss of income as well as his out-of-pocket expenses for medical care and related costs.[2]
We therefore conclude that the deputy could lawfully determine that appellee suffered serious financial hardship as a result of loss of earnings or support and out-of-pocket loss incurred as a result of injury.
The more difficult question is whether the deputy was authorized, under the circumstances, to award appellee the lump sum amount of $3,500 to compensate him for his injuries. The deputy is empowered by Section 960.14(1) to convert compensation to be paid into a partial or total lump sum amount. The award, however, is limited by the provisions of Section 960.13(3), providing that any award made shall be based either on claimant's actual weekly wage, or if he cannot establish an average weekly wage, it "shall be in an amount equal to the arithmetic average between the maximum and the minimum awards listed in the applicable portions of ss. 440.15 and 440.12." The deputy appropriately determined that due to the nature of appellee's business (appellee was the owner of a business involving the design and installation of audio systems), and the incomplete documentary evidence as to his earnings, it was not possible for him to make a precise determination as to claimant's average weekly wage or his lost earnings. Yet it does not appear from his order that he complied with the alternative means of computing claimant's loss of income as required by Section 960.13(3). Accordingly, that portion of the award must be reversed and the cause remanded to the deputy in order for him to comply with the arithmetic average required by the statute. Having done so, the deputy may then, in the exercise of his discretion, impose a lump sum award. Cf. King Motor Co. v. Pollack, 409 So.2d 160 (Fla. 1st DCA 1982).
Appellant next contends that the deputy commissioner erred in directing the Bureau of Crimes Compensation to furnish to the claimant certain psychiatric treatment, *890 arguing that because Section 960.03(6) defines "victim" as "any person who suffers personal physical injury as a direct result of a crime," there was no legislative intent to compensate victims of crime for any resulting psychiatric disorders. We disagree. Section 960.08 provides that out-of-pocket loss means unreimbursed expenses or indebtedness incurred for medical care, or other services necessary as a result of the injury upon which the claim is based. We consider that a fair reading of the two statutes in pari materia authorizes a deputy to order the Bureau to pay for psychiatric treatment if such treatment is considered necessary as a result of the injury. The deputy clearly had competent and substantial evidence before him in support of such award. Dr. Hollister, a neurologist and psychiatrist, diagnosed appellant as suffering from nervous tension and memory disorders resulting from a combination of physical and psychiatric problems. His opinion was based upon his observations of appellee, as well as a history given to him by appellee. By analogy, in workers' compensation claims, an employer/carrier may be required to furnish psychiatric treatment if a claimant's psychological disorder is causally referable to a physical injury. See City of Winter Park v. Bowen, 388 So.2d 1376 (Fla. 1st DCA 1980), and Lake v. Irwin Yacht & Marine Co., 398 So.2d 902 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981).
As to appellant's contention that there is no authorization under Chapter 960 for the assessment of costs against the Bureau, appellee concedes the point, and we agree. See State, Department of Labor and Employment Security v. Cade, 400 So.2d 171 (Fla. 3d DCA 1981). Accordingly, the award granting costs is reversed.
Finally, we conclude that appellee's attorney fee could not properly be levied against the Bureau because, as of the date of the contract between appellee and his attorney, the statute authorizing such fees, Section 960.19, Florida Statutes (1979), had been repealed. Brevda, however, argues that since his injuries occurred before the effective date of the repealer, his rights to such fees had vested and could not be retroactively abrogated. In order to accept Brevda's position we would necessarily have to find the existence of a vested statutory right or contractual right at the time of injury. A fee award is of course in derogation of common law and depends for its allowance upon statute or contract. Rivera v. Deauville Hotel, Employers Service Corp., 277 So.2d 265 (Fla. 1973).
As to whether appellee had a vested statutory right to fees because his injury occurred prior to the repeal of the statute, we observe that an identical question has been raised and resolved contrary to appellee's assertion in Bureau of Crimes Compensation v. Williams, 405 So.2d 747 (Fla. 2d DCA 1981), where the court found that the claimant had no vested cause of action against the state for any recovery of fees since the right or remedy created by the statute dissolved upon repeal of the statute. The Williams court did not consider the impact, if any, that interpretations of the Workers' Compensation Act might have on the issue before it. There are obvious similarities between the Crimes Compensation Act and Chapter 440, relating to workers' compensation claims; for example, the requirement in Section 960.13(3) that any award be made pursuant to the schedule of benefits and degrees of disability set forth in Section 440.15.
On the other hand, there are obvious dissimilarities between the Workers' Compensation Law and the Crimes Compensation Act. As to the former, the acceptance of the Workers' Compensation Law by the employer, the employee, and the insurance carrier is deemed as constituting a contract between the parties that embraces the provisions of the law at the time of the injury. Sullivan v. Mayo, 121 So.2d 424, 428 (Fla. 1960).
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