Ervin Guillory v. Interstate Hotels & Resorts
This text of Ervin Guillory v. Interstate Hotels & Resorts (Ervin Guillory v. Interstate Hotels & Resorts) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
05-650
ERVIN GUILLORY
VERSUS
INTERSTATE HOTELS & RESORTS
**********
APPEAL FROM THE OFFICE OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION - DISTRICT 4 PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 04-02240 SAM L. LOWERY, WORKERS’ COMPENSATION JUDGE
OSWALD A. DECUIR JUDGE
Court composed of John D. Saunders, Oswald A. Decuir, and Glenn B. Gremillion, Judges.
AFFIRMED.
Lawrence B. Frieman Juge, Napolitano, Guilbeau, Ruli, Frieman & Whiteley 3320 W. Esplanade Avenue North Metairie, LA 70002 (504) 831-7270 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Interstate Hotels & Resorts
Richard E. Smith The Glenn Armentor Corporation 300 Stewart Street Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 233-1471 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Ervin Guillory DECUIR, Judge.
In this workers’ compensation case, the pivotal question is whether the
calculation of the average weekly wage of the claimant, who was injured in the course
and scope of his full-time employment, should include wages received from his part-
time employer.
FACTS
On November 24, 2002, Ervin Guillory was injured while in the course and
scope of his full-time employment for the Hilton Towers in Lafayette. At the time,
he was also employed part-time with Hebert’s Janitorial in Youngsville. Guillory
continues to be disabled and is unable to work at either of his jobs.
Guillory earned $6.45 an hour at the Hilton and/or an average weekly wage
(AWW) of $258.00 per week applying the forty-hour presumption. This translates
to an indemnity rate of $172.00. He earned $6.50 an hour at Hebert’s or an AWW of
$122.28, two-thirds of which would be $81.52. From the date of the accident until
March 10, 2004, the Hilton paid indemnity benefits at the rate of $306.08 per week.
It is unclear how the Hilton arrived at this rate, but when it realized its mistake it
reduced Guillory’s payment to $172.00 per week less a $44.93 credit to recover its
overpayment.
Guillory filed a workers’ compensation claim. The parties waived a trial on the
merits and submitted the case on briefs. The workers’ compensation judge rendered
judgment in favor of the Hilton, finding that the new rate was correctly calculated and
properly excluded part-time wages. In addition, the workers’ compensation judge
found the Hilton was entitled to a credit, but the $44.93 deduction was excessive.
Accordingly, he reduced the weekly credit to $15.00 and ordered the Hilton to
reimburse Guillory $29.93 per week retroactive to the date it first asserted its credit.
Guillory lodged this appeal. DISCUSSION
Guillory contends the trial court erred in concluding that the average weekly
wage calculation for an employee injured in the course and scope of his full-time
employment should not include wages from his part-time employer.
This court addressed a similar circumstance in Lott v. Louisiana Power & Light
Co., 377 So.2d 1277, 1280-1281 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1979), stating:
LSA-R.S. 23:1031 evidences the intent of the legislature to make an employer’s workmen’s compensation liability to an injured employee depend only upon the wages which that employer pays to the employee and not upon the total income of the employee.
....
It is evident, therefore, that the only time wages from other employers are included in computing the employer’s workmen’s compensation liability is when the employers are joint employers of the same employee. That is not the case here. SOMC was not a joint employer of Huey Lott with any other employer. The workmen’s compensation liability of SOMC is based only upon the wages paid by them to H. R. Lott, namely, $385.00 per month.
Able counsel for plaintiff has additionally referred us to the recent case of Jones v. Orleans Parish School Bd., supra. In that case, our learned brethren of the Fourth Circuit appear to hold that in calculating the earning differential of an employee for purposes of fixing the extent of recovery for partial disability under LSA-R.S. 23:1221(3), one must use the sum of the salaries earned by such partially disabled employee from all employment at time of injury. Although the court in Jones was concerned with the calculation of benefits due under a different section of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, we acknowledge that the holding in Jones does lend support to the position which plaintiff advocates. We respectfully disagree with the holding in Jones, supra, and decline to follow same. In our view Louisiana’s workmen’s compensation law clearly and explicitly limits the employer’s liability for workmen’s compensation benefits to a statutorily fixed percentage of the “average weekly wage” paid by the responsible employer to the employee (subject to minimum and maximum benefits). In our opinion, although our law, as presently constituted, may in certain isolated cases, such as the instant case, not fully provide for loss of earning capacity, to fix an employer’s liability for payment of benefits on all income of the employee, regardless of the source, would be patently unfair to the employer responsible for the payment of benefits.
2 Guillory argues that the legislature’s 1991 amendment of La.R.S. 23:1021(12)
makes Lott no longer relevant. The statute states in pertinent part:
(iv) A part-time employee, as defined in R.S. 23:1021(9) and who is employed by two or more different employers in two or more successive employments, shall be entitled to receive benefits as follows:
(aa) If an employee is employed by two or more different employers in two or more successive employments and the employee incurs a compensable injury under the provisions of this Chapter in one of the employments, the employer in whose service the employee was injured shall pay the benefits due the employee as provided in this Chapter.
(bb) If the employee is a part-time employee in one of the successive employments, is injured in that employment, but as a result of the injury also incurs loss of income from other successive employments, that employee shall be entitled to benefits computed by determining wages under the provisions of this Subsection using his hourly rate in employment at the time of injury and using the total hours worked for all employers of the part-time employee, but not to exceed his average, actual weekly hours worked or forty hours weekly, whichever is less.
The amendment clearly carves out an exception to Lott by allowing a part-time
employee injured at his part-time employment to cumulate wages from another
unrelated part-time or full-time employer. However, the statute specifically limits the
number of hours to be used in the calculation to forty. That limitation squarely
addresses the issue before us. Guillory was injured at his full-time job and, therefore,
any cumulation with an unrelated employer would take him beyond the forty-hour
limit.
Guillory next directs our attention to Mitchell v. Winnfield Holding Corp., 03-
677 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/17/03), 861 So.2d 931, writ denied, 04-0191 (La. 4/02/04),
869 So.2d 878, wherein this court allowed cumulation of wages from claimant’s part-
time and full-time employment. The critical distinguishing feature in Mitchell is that
the claimant was employed by one owner.
3 One critical tradeoff in the workers’ compensation scheme is that while the
employer “was deprived of the defenses afforded to him by the general law and he
was assured that, in case any of his employees were injured, they would be entitled
to no more than the amount stipulated in the statute as compensation during the
period of disability.” Atchison v. May, 201 La.
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