Fawbush v. Gwinn

103 S.W.3d 5, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 81, 2003 WL 1936415
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket2002-SC-0430-WC
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 103 S.W.3d 5 (Fawbush v. Gwinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fawbush v. Gwinn, 103 S.W.3d 5, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 81, 2003 WL 1936415 (Ky. 2003).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

This workers’ compensation appeal concerns the average weekly wage of an individual who was employed for fewer than 13 weeks when injured and also concerns the July 14, 2000, amendments to KRS 342.730(l)(e)l and 2. Affirming decisions by an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) and the Workers’ Compensation Board (Board), the Court of Appeals determined that the claimant’s wages from a previous 13-week period in a substantially similar employment were reasonably considered under KRS 342.140(l)(e). It also determined that the claimant’s award was properly enhanced under KRS 342.730(l)(c)l although he admitted that he presently earned more than when he was injured. This appeal by the employer followed.

During most of the claimant’s work life, he was a carpenter. Although he worked as a self-employed general contractor from the late 1970’s through the late 1990’s, he later began to work for others on various short-term jobs, sometimes as an uninsured independent contractor and sometimes as an employee. On December 1, 2000, he fractured his hip in a fall from the roof of a house that he was helping to frame, and he underwent right hip replacement surgery the following day. At that point, he had been working for Elwood Fawbush as a framing carpenter for only four weeks.

The claimant testified that he had been out of work for several weeks when his roommate told him that Fawbush was looking for help. Fawbush, a home builder, hired the claimant in mid-October, 2000, to help him frame a house. They also worked on three other houses, doing trim and repair work, and he indicated at the hearing that Fawbush spoke of building an addition as well as another home in the future. The claimant testified that he was the only full-time employee and that there would be an occasional helper for a day or two at a time. The work was fairly steady, but they did not work every day because Fawbush sometimes had other things to do. Agreeing with the defense, he indicated that work weeks of 30,19½, 35 ½, and 32 hours were “about right.” Faw-bush paid him $15.00 per hour, and he earned a total of $1,755.00 over a four-week period from November 6 through December 1, 2000. The claimant testified that Fawbush had expressed an interest in hiring him again after he recovered from his injury.

When deposed, the claimant submitted evidence of his self-employment earnings in June and November, 2000, but admitted that he was not covered by workers’ compensation insurance at the time. He also introduced documentary evidence of his earnings from KC Construction, which he described as “a very small company.” The claimant testified that he worked for KC from June, 2000, through September 29, 2000, framing houses for $15.00 per hour and working about forty hours per week. He stated that he worked as an employee and was covered by workers’ compensation insurance when doing so.

[8]*8Responding to the ALJ’s request for information concerning the earnings of a similar employee, counsel for Fawbush alleged that there was no similar employee during the 13-week period before the injury but offered no testimony to that effect. Arguing that the claimant was not an employee and was not covered by insurance while working for KC, Fawbush maintained that wages from KC should not be considered when calculating his average weekly wage. Hale v. Bell Aluminum, Ky., 986 S.W.2d 152 (1998). Fawbush’s position was that the $1,755.00 the claimant earned during the four-week employment should be divided by 13 weeks, resulting in an average weekly wage of $135.00.

At the hearing, the claimant testified that he had returned to work for KC as a construction supervisor and earned $833.00 per week, an amount that exceeded his average weekly wage at the time of the injury. He pointed out, however, that he was not claiming to be totally disabled and that although the work was less strenuous than framing carpentry, it exceeded his medical restrictions. He explained that after his temporary total disability payments ceased, he had no income and relied on the generosity of friends at first. Eventually, he was forced to work because he needed an income. Although his present employer let him rest when needed and had a helper do the more strenuous work, he could only do the job when he took more than the prescribed amount of narcotic pain medication. Assured that the claimant was not alleging total disability, Fawbush agreed that his impairment was 8% and that he lacked the physical capacity to return to work as a framing carpenter. When the claim was submitted for a decision, the questions at issue concerned the proper method for calculating his average weekly wage under KRS 342.140(l)(e) and the proper method for calculating his partial disability benefit under KRS 342.730(l)(b) and (c).

Relying on the claimant’s deposition testimony and exhibit, the ALJ determined that the claimant was an employee when he worked for KC and, therefore, was a covered employee when he did so. After pointing out that the claimant did not work in an inconsistent pattern for Fawbush, the ALJ determined that the method Faw-bush proposed for calculating his average weekly wage was inappropriate. The ALJ noted that during the 18-week period immediately preceding the injury, the claimant worked two weeks for KC, earning a total of $1,200.00, and also worked four weeks for Fawbush, earning a total of $1,755.00. Whereas, during the previous 13-week period, from June 9 to September 1, 2000, the claimant had worked every week for KC and earned a total of $7,605.00. Noting that the goal of KRS 342.140(l)(e) was to obtain a realistic estimate of what the worker would expect to earn in a normal period of employment, the ALJ concluded that it would both permit and require a consideration of the claimant’s work for KC. See Huff v. Smith Trucking Co., Ky., 6 S.W.3d 819 (1999). Furthermore, relying on the most favorable 13-week period, during which time the claimant worked entirely for KC, the ALJ determined that his average weekly wage was $585.00.

Turning to the benefit calculation, the ALJ noted that the claimant had returned to work at a weekly wage that exceeded his wage at the time of the injury and also that he did not retain the physical capacity to return to framing carpentry. Furthermore, the ALJ observed that as amended effective July 14, 2000, KRS 342.730(l)(c)l and 2 are separated by the word “or,” indicating that they are mutually exclusive and that only one may be applied. Faced with having to determine which provision [9]*9to apply, the ALJ concluded that because the claimant had an impairment from his injury that permanently altered his ability to labor and earn money and because paragraph (c)l appeared first in the statute, it should be applied. "Whereupon, the employer appealed on both issues.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.3d 5, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 81, 2003 WL 1936415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fawbush-v-gwinn-ky-2003.