Downen v. Hercules, Inc.

50 Va. App. 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 3, 2007
DocketRecord No. 1226-06-2
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Downen v. Hercules, Inc., 50 Va. App. 111 (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. DOWDEN, JR.
v.
HERCULES, INC. AND AQUALON COMPANY

Record No. 1226-06-2.

Court of Appeals of Virginia, Richmond.

July 3, 2007.
May 8, 2007.

Stephen T. Harper (Kerns, Kastenbaum & Reinhardt, on brief), for appellant.

Angela Fleming Gibbs (Charles F. Midkiff; Midkiff, Muncie & Ross, P.C., on brief), for appellees.

Before Chief Judge Felton, Judges Benton, Elder, Frank, Humphreys, Clements, Kelsey, McClanahan, Haley, Petty, and Beales.

On May 22, 2007 came the appellees, by counsel, and filed a petition requesting that the Court set aside the judgment rendered herein on May 8, 2007, and grant a rehearing en banc thereof.

On consideration whereof, the petition for rehearing en banc is granted, the mandate entered herein on May 8, 2007 is stayed pending the decision of the Court en banc, and the appeal is reinstated on the docket of this Court.

Notwithstanding the provisions of Rule 5A:35, the following briefing schedule hereby is established: Appellant shall file an opening brief upon rehearing en banc within 21 days of the date of entry of this order; appellees shall file an appellee's brief upon rehearing en banc within 14 days of the date on which the opening brief is filed; and appellant may file a reply brief upon rehearing en banc within 14 days of the date on which the appellee's brief is filed. The appellant shall attach as an addendum to the opening brief upon rehearing en banc a copy of the opinion previously rendered by the Court in this matter. It is further ordered that the appellees shall file twelve additional copies of the appendix previously filed in this case.

OPINION BY

JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS.

William C. Dowden, Jr. (claimant) appeals a decision of the Virginia Workers' Compensation Commission (commission) terminating his temporary partial disability benefits. Claimant contends the commission erred in determining he did not partially cure his unjustified refusal of selective employment offered by Hercules, Inc. (employer). For the reasons that follow, we reverse the decision of the commission and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

The relevant facts are not in dispute. Claimant began working for employer in 1969. After thirty years of employment, he voluntarily applied for early retirement on August 23, 2000, pursuant to a buy-out offer designed to assist employer in reducing its workforce. On January 31, 2001, while his application for early retirement was pending, claimant injured his back at work. Prior to his injury, claimant earned an average weekly wage of $1,243.64 per week. Upon returning to light-duty work with employer, he earned a wage of $1,002 per week. The commission subsequently awarded claimant temporary partial disability benefits from February 1, 2001, and continuing, at a rate of $161.10 per week.

After claimant returned to light-duty work, he was notified that his application for early retirement had been approved. Claimant accepted employer's offer of early retirement and retired effective May 1, 2001. Employer continued to pay claimant $161.10 per week in temporary partial disability payments through July 13, 2003. On or around that date, employer discovered claimant had accepted employment as a sales associate with a friend's seafood company on March 10, 2003, earning $200 per week.

On July 24, 2003, employer filed an application with the commission seeking termination or suspension of claimant's award and credit for benefits paid from March 10, 2003, through July 13, 2003. Employer argued that claimant unjustifiably refused selective employment by voluntarily retiring and that he failed to cure his unjustified refusal. Claimant filed a change-in-condition application on September 5, 2003, seeking a continuation of his temporary partial disability wage-loss benefits of $161.10 per week. Claimant argued that he did not refuse selective employment when he retired, but, if the commission found he did, he cured that refusal on March 10, 2003, when he procured other selective employment.

Finding that claimant's voluntary retirement constituted an unjustified refusal of selective employment pursuant to Code § 65.2-510(A) and that claimant did not effectuate a cure within six months from the date of his retirement as required by Code § 65.2-510(C), the deputy commissioner granted employer's application and denied claimant's change-in-condition application. Upon review, the full commission agreed with the deputy commissioner that claimant unjustifiably refused selective employment when he voluntarily retired. It disagreed, however, that Code § 65.2-510(C)'s six-month statute of limitations to cure the unjustified refusal began running on the date of claimant's retirement. Accordingly, the full commission remanded the case "for determination of the date the claimant's cure requirement began . . . and whether the claimant cured the unjustified refusal."

On remand, the deputy commissioner determined that, because claimant failed "to report his return to work on March 10, 2003," Code § 65.2-510(C)'s six-month statute of limitations to cure claimant's unjustified refusal began to run on that date.[1] The deputy commissioner then found that claimant failed to cure his unjustified refusal by September 10, 2003, and, thus, was not entitled to temporary partial disability benefits beyond March 10, 2003. In reaching that decision, the deputy commissioner found that claimant's employment paying $200 per week did not cure his unjustified refusal of selective employment because it was not comparable to the employment paying $1,002 per week he had refused.

Appealing the deputy commissioner's decision to the full commission, claimant asserted that his return to work selling seafood on March 10, 2003, constituted a cure of his unjustified refusal of selective employment under Code § 65.2-510(B). He argued that Code § 65.2-510(B) did not require him to obtain employment at a wage "comparable" to the wage he would have earned had he continued the selective employment offered by employer.

A majority of the full commission disagreed with claimant, holding that the employment an injured worker procures "must be at a wage comparable to that of the previously refused position" to constitute a cure under Code § 65.2-510. Accordingly, the commission affirmed the deputy commissioner's decision that claimant failed to cure his unjustified refusal of selective employment, noting as follows: "The claimant was earning $1,002 per week in his selective employment, and after his refusal, he began earning $200 per week. The evidence does not indicate that the employment he procured was comparable and effectuated a cure of his unjustified refusal of selective employment." This appeal by claimant followed.

II. ANALYSIS

The sole issue on appeal is whether claimant's acceptance on March 10, 2003, of selective employment paying $200 per week was sufficient under Code § 65.2-510(B)[2] to cure his unjustified refusal of selective employment offered by employer paying $1,002 per week. Relying on this Court's decisions in Food Lion, Inc. v. Newsome, 30 Va. App. 21, 515 S.E.2d 317 (1999), and Clements v. Riverside Walter Reed Hospital, 40 Va. App. 214, 578 S.E.2d 814

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