Evans v. AT & T TECHNOLOGIES

404 S.E.2d 183, 103 N.C. App. 45, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 576
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 21, 1991
Docket8910IC774
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 404 S.E.2d 183 (Evans v. AT & T TECHNOLOGIES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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, 404 S.E.2d 183, 103 N.C. App. 45, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 576 (N.C. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Judge.

The following holdings of the Industrial Commission’s Opinion and Award are contested by either the appeal or cross-appeal: (1) That under our Workers’ Compensation Act plaintiff employee is entitled to receive compensation for disabilities that she sustained due to an on-the-job accident while in defendant’s employment. (2) Because of wage payments that defendant made to plaintiff under its private Sickness and Disability Plan while she was disabled from her injuries and before her right to compensation was either admitted or established “the case of Foster v. Western Electric, 320 N.C. 113, entitles the defendant to a dollar-for-dollar credit on the compensation awarded herein and not on a week-to-week credit.” The first holding is challenged by defendant’s cross-appeal, the second by plaintiff’s appeal. Since no credit of any kind can possibly be due defendant unless it owes the employee workers’ compensation, we determine its cross-appeal first.

DEFENDANT’S CROSS-APPEAL

The cross-appeal is without basis for several reasons. In determining that plaintiff is entitled to receive workers’ compensation from defendant the Commission found, by detailed and exhaustive findings of fact, that on 20 February 1986 plaintiff employee suffered an injury by accident under the Workers’ Compensation Act when she slipped on a piece of paper on a factory aisleway and fell to the floor, and that as a result of the fall plaintiff was unable to work during the periods of temporary total disability stated below and has had a 10°/o permanent partial disability of the back *47 and both legs since the end of the last temporary total disability period. The findings of fact are conclusive because defendant did not except to any of them, Pratt v. Central Upholstery Co., Inc., 252 N.C. 716, 115 S.E.2d 27 (1960); and they are supported by competent evidence in any event, Brice v. Robertson House Moving, Wrecking and Salvage Company, 249 N.C. 74, 105 S.E.2d 439 (1958); and they clearly support the Commission’s conclusions of law that plaintiff is entitled to the workers’ compensation awarded. Against these established facts and the conclusions of law that they properly lead to, defendant argues only that: Its evidence on the accident, injury, and causation issues is more credible than plaintiff’s and shows that plaintiff’s fall was due to an idiopathic condition and did not contribute to her disabilities in any event because any disabilities that she has are due to preexisting arthritis. The arguments are out of place here. In workers’ compensation cases our Courts only review errors of law; the credibility and weight of evidence is determined by the Industrial Commission. G.S. 97-86; Anderson v. Lincoln Construction Co., 265 N.C. 431, 144 S.E.2d 272 (1965). Furthermore, the arguments are not supported by an appropriate cross-assignment of error; the cross-assignments cited concern other matters. See, Rule 10(b), (c) and (d), N.C. Rules of Appellate Procedure.

Plaintiff’s Appeal

The only question for determination is —In paying plaintiff the workers’ compensation awarded, what credit is due defendant employer for the payments it made to plaintiff while she was unable to work and her right to workers’ compensation was being contested? That defendant is entitled to some credit is conceded; the dispute is whether the credit due is “dollar-for-dollar” as the Commission ordered, or “week-by-week” as plaintiff contends. The only authority for allowing an employer in this state any credit against workers’ compensation payments due an injured employee is the following provision of G.S. 97-42:

Any payments made by the employer to the. injured employee during the period of his disability, or to his dependents, which by the terms of this Article were not due and payable when made, may, subject to the approval of the Industrial Commission be deducted from the amount to be paid as compensation. Provided, that in the case of disability such deductions shall be made by shortening the period during which *48 compensation must be paid, and not by reducing the amount of the weekly payment.

The laudable purpose of the statute — to encourage voluntary payments to workers while their claims to compensation are being disputed and they are receiving no wages —has been discussed in several cases. See Foster v. Western-Electric Co., 320 N.C. 113, 357 S.E.2d 670 (1987); Moretz v. Richards & Associates, Inc., 316 N.C. 539, 342 S.E.2d 844 (1986). And that the statute does not apply to obligatory payments made to employees in compliance with their terms of employment has been intimated, if not recognized, Ashe v. Barnes, 255 N.C. 310, 121 S.E.2d 549 (1961), and would seem to be obvious from its terms in any event. In most of the cases that have construed the statute the dispute was whether the payments were “due and payable” and any credit was due the employer. In this case the problem is simplified to some extent, as plaintiff concedes that some credit or offset is due defendant, not so much though because defendant is entitled thereto for making the payments, but because plaintiff is not entitled to compensation for receiving them.

The established facts from which the Commission concluded that under Foster v. Western-Electric Co., supra, defendant is entitled to a dollar-for-dollar credit, rather than a week-by-week credit, for all the payments made during the period plaintiff was unable to work follow:

Because of her accidental on-the-job injury plaintiff was temporarily totally disabled for 43 weeks altogether in two different periods, the first from 21 February 1986 to 3 March 1986, and the second from 6 February 1987 until 23 November 1987. Since the latter date she has had a 10°/o permanent partial disability of her back and both legs. For each week that plaintiff was temporarily totally disabled she is entitled to receive compensation of $294.00 and because of her permanent partial disabilities she is entitled to the same weekly compensation for an additional 70 weeks beginning on 23 November 1987. While denying that plaintiff was injured by accident and entitled to workers’ compensation, defendant paid plaintiff her full wage of $474.25 a week during the first period of temporary total disability, and paid her full weekly wage of $495.88 during the part of the second temporary total disability period from 6 February 1987 until 1 August 1987, and *49 has made no payments since then. All the payments were made under a Sickness and Disability Plan that defendant maintained for all employees.

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Bluebook (online)
404 S.E.2d 183, 103 N.C. App. 45, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-at-t-technologies-ncctapp-1991.