Evans v. AT & T TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

418 S.E.2d 503, 332 N.C. 78, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 374, 1992 WL 167384
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 17, 1992
Docket294PA91
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 418 S.E.2d 503 (Evans v. AT & T TECHNOLOGIES, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. AT & T TECHNOLOGIES, INC., 418 S.E.2d 503, 332 N.C. 78, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 374, 1992 WL 167384 (N.C. 1992).

Opinion

MITCHELL, Justice.

The defendant AT&T Technologies, Inc. (“AT&T”) has brought forward only two issues for review by this Court. The first is whether the deduction allowed by N.C.G.S. § 97-42 from amounts to be paid as workers’ compensation entitles the defendant-employer AT&T to full credit for all disability benefits paid to the plaintiff-employee under AT&T’s Sickness and Accident Disability Plan. A second issue — properly raised in, but not addressed by, the Court of Appeals — is whether the amount of any deduction under N.C.G.S. § 97-42 is to be based on the gross before-tax amount paid by the defendant’s disability plan or the net after-tax amount received by the employee. We conclude that AT&T must receive full credit under N.C.G.S. § 97-42 for the disability benefits paid by its disability plan and that the amount of such credit must be based on the gross before-tax amount of disability benefits paid under its disability plan for the benefit of the plaintiff-employee.

Certain relevant facts are not disputed before this Court. Ón 20 February 1986 the plaintiff Anner F. Evans was injured while she was working for AT&T at its plant in Winston-Salem. The defendant AT&T provides a Sickness and Accident Disability Plan (“Plan”) which compensates its employees when they are absent from work due to injury or disability, regardless of the cause. *80 Under that Plan, the plaintiff was paid $474.25 per week during her first two-week period of temporary total disability in 1986 and $495.88 per week during a second period of temporary total disability from 8 February 1987 to 2 August 1987. The plaintiff received no benefits under the defendant’s Plan after 2 August 1987. The plaintiff received a total of $13,290.50 in benefits under the Plan. All payments to the plaintiff under the Plan were made during a time when the defendant-employer had not accepted the plaintiff’s injuries as compensable by workers’ compensation benefits and when no determination of compensability had been made by the Industrial Commission.

On 3 April 1986 the plaintiff filed a claim with the North Carolina Industrial Commission seeking workers’ compensation benefits. A deputy commissioner entered an Opinion and Award on 23 June 1988 finding and concluding that the plaintiff had been temporarily totally disabled during two different periods. First, the plaintiff was disabled from 21 February 1986 to 3 March 1986. Later, she was disabled from 6 February 1987 through 23 November 1987 (approximately forty weeks) at which time she returned to work part-time. The deputy commissioner held that the plaintiff was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits of $294 per week for both of her periods of temporary total disability, less a deduction under N.C.G.S. § 97-42 for some, but not all, of the payments she had received under the defendant’s Plan.

The deputy commissioner also ordered that the defendant pay the plaintiff weekly benefits for permanent partial disability at a weekly rate of $294 for seventy weeks commencing 24 November 1987. Neither party before this Court disputes the award to the plaintiff on account of her permanent partial disability, and the defendant seeks no deduction from the payment of those benefits.

In an Order and Award filed 14 March 1989, the Industrial Commission, relying on Foster v. Western-Electric Co., 320 N.C. 113, 357 S.E.2d 670 (1987), amended the deputy commissioner’s award and granted the defendant AT&T full credit for all payments made to the plaintiff under AT&T’s Plan. The Commission otherwise adopted as its own the Opinion and Award of the deputy commissioner. Upon a motion to clarify filed by the defendant, the Commission entered an Order on 30 March 1989 amending its Opinion and Award of 14 March 1989 by inserting therein a *81 directive that the credit the defendant was to receive “shall be based on net after-tax wages paid plaintiff.”

The plaintiff-employee Evans appealed to the Court of Appeals and assigned as error the Commission’s holding that AT&T was entitled to full credit for all payments made to her under its Plan. The defendant AT&T cross-assigned as error, inter alia, (1) the conclusion by the Industrial Commission that the plaintiff’s injury was a compensable injury under Article I of Chapter 97 of the General Statutes of North Carolina, our Workers’ Compensation Act, and (2) the Commission’s conclusion that the credit the defendant received for payments under its Plan should be based on net after-tax wages paid to the plaintiff.

Although the Court of Appeals did not expressly affirm or reverse that part of the Commission’s Award holding that the plaintiff was entitled to workers’ compensation benefits for her injury, it seems to have agreed with the Commission’s ruling in that regard. The defendant has not brought the issue forward on appeal to this Court, and that part of the Commission’s Award must be and is left in full effect. The Court of Appeals concluded that the defendant AT&T was only entitled to partial credit under N.C.G.S. § 97-42 for the payments made under its Plan to the plaintiff, not full credit as ordered by the Commission. For that reason, the Court of Appeals reversed that part of the Opinion and Award of the Commission.

The defendant AT&T petitioned this Court seeking our discretionary review of the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that for purposes of the deduction authorized by N.C.G.S. § 97-42, AT&T could only receive credit for part of the payments made under its Plan. AT&T contended that the Court of Appeals had erred in its resulting holding reversing in part the Commission’s Award. AT&T also requested that this Court resolve one of the issues properly presented to, but not resolved by, the Court of Appeals — whether the amount AT&T is entitled to deduct from the plaintiff’s workers’ compensation benefits is the gross before-tax payment made under AT&T’s Plan or the net after-tax payment received by the plaintiff. The defendant AT&T did not seek our review of any other issues. We allowed AT&T’s petition, thereby granting review limited to the two issues it sought to raise.

In the present appeal, the plaintiff-employee argues that the defendant AT&T should only receive what the parties and the *82 Court of Appeals have denominated as a “week-for-week credit” for payments made on her behalf under AT&T’s Plan. She specifically argues that under such a “week-for-week credit” AT&T may only receive credit for — and, thus, deduct from the plaintiff’s workers’ compensation benefits for temporary total disability — an amount calculated by subtracting “from the total number of weeks during which [workers’] compensation was found otherwise due, the total number of weeks during which the Defendant [AT&T] had made wage continuation payments of at least the compensation rate.” Specifically, to apply the “week-for-week credit” advocated by the plaintiff-employee, one would first calculate the total number of weeks in which an employer had paid its employee as much or more than the weekly rate the employee was awarded as workers’ compensation benefits. The employer would then be entitled to deduct only an amount equal to

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Bluebook (online)
418 S.E.2d 503, 332 N.C. 78, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 374, 1992 WL 167384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-at-t-technologies-inc-nc-1992.