Gorman v. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co.

12 A.2d 525, 178 Md. 71, 1940 Md. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 17, 1940
Docket[No. 41, January Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 525 (Gorman v. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorman v. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co., 12 A.2d 525, 178 Md. 71, 1940 Md. LEXIS 162 (Md. 1940).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case the workman was hurt in the course of his employment by an explosion, on January 31st, 1936, of *73 dynamite, which injured both feet, so that he was totally disabled from the time of the accident until May 8th, 1939. After the latter date, he had a permanent loss of use of his right foot. It was claimed, and the State Industrial Accident Commission found, that the workman had sustained other permanent partial disabilities. As a result of the hearing before the Commission, it was held that the workman was entitled to compensation (a) for temporary total disability to May 8th, 1939; (b) for permanent partial disability because of the loss of the use of his right foot for the period of one hundred and fifty weeks; and (c) for permanent partial disability under the sub-section which is headed by the term “Other Cases,” for a further period of fifty-five and two-thirds weeks but not thereby to exceed the sum of 81000. As the workman had received $3400, for the period of his total disability, the whole of the compensation awarded and to be paid the workman under the order is $7100. The employer and assurer entered an appeal from this order. The case was submitted to the court, without a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, wherein it was stipulated that the Commission’s findings of fact as to the workman’s disability would stand as correct, and that the employer and assurer would rely upon the theory, which was presented by their prayers, that the limit of compensation which would be payable to the workman is 85000, and that because $3400 had been paid to him by his employer for temporary total disability, the workman was not entitled to receive any more than $1600 for permanent partial disability, which is the difference between the amount already received and the asserted limit of $5000.

Four issues of fact were submitted for the court’s determination, and the court, pursuant to the agreement of the parties, found (1) that the workman’s total disability ceased as of May 8th, 1939; (2) that he sustained a permanent partial disability by the loss of the use of his right foot; (3) that he sustained a permanent partial disability under “Other Cases” in addition to the loss of *74 the use of his right foot; (4) that the extent of the permanent partial disability under “Other Cases” was for fifty-five and two-thirds weeks, but not to exceed in amount $1000.

On the same basis of facts as those upon which the Commission acted, the Circuit Court for Cecil County differed with the Commission in reference to the compensation to be awarded, and passed an order in conformity with its construction of the law. The conclusion of the court was that the employer and insurer should pay the workman at the rate of $20 a week, from the 4th of February, 1936, until the 8th day of May, for temporary total disability, and thereafter at the rate of $18 a week for permanent partial disability for a period until the total sum paid the claimant for temporary total disability and permanent partial disability should equal the sum of $5000, whereupon all payments would cease.

With no provision of the Workmen’s Compensation Law to that effect, the contention of the employer and assurer that the sum of $5000 is the limit of the total compensation to be paid to a workman who has sustained a compensable injury that had resulted in a temporary total disability which, later, had become a permanent partial disability rests, primarily, on the inference that the General Assembly of Maryland did not intend to permit the aggregate amount of compensation, to be paid during the period of temporary total disability and during the consecutive, sequential, period of permanent partial disability, to exceed the total sum of $5000, since that amount was the limit of compensation which could be awarded for a permanent total disability at the time the workman sustained his injury. Code [1935 Supp.], art. 101, sec. 36(1). It is conceded that the amendment of Acts of 1937, ch. 329, p. 639, afterwards increasing the maximum to $6000, does not apply to the present claim.

Whatever force inheres in the position that an award for a permanent total disability should not be exceeded by the aggregate awards allowable for the lesser result *75 of a temporary total disability, followed by a permanent partial disability, the court may not allow an inference to prevail against the manifest intention of the Legislature. A temporary total disability and a permanent total disability, a temporary partial disability and a permanent partial disability, are four different compensable results; and the measure of the compensation to be appropriately awarded in these instances as they may occur is not for the court to create nor to change. The court must declare the legislative intention as expressed by the statute to the exclusion of the suggested interpolations.

Thus, before the increase to §6000 by the passage of chapter 329 of the Acts of 1937, the total compensation in the event of a permanent total disability was limited to §5000. A different statutory maximum was set with reference to a temporary total disability. In such a case, sub-section (2) of section 36 of 'article 101 prescribed that compensation was not to continue more than six years from the date of the injury, nor to exceed §3750 in the aggregate. In the event of a disability partial in character but permanent in quality, the law provides by subsection (3) of section 36 that the compensation shall be sixty-six and two-thirds per centum of the average weekly wages, in no case to exceed §18 per week, and not less than a minimum of §8 per week unless the employee’s established weekly wages are less than §8 per week at the time of the injury, in which event he shall receive compensation equal to his full wages, but in no case to exceed §3750 in the aggregate and shall be paid to the employee for the period named in the schedule as follows:

“Thumb — For the loss of a thumb, fifty weeks.
❖ ❖ * ❖ #
“Foot — For the loss of a foot, one hundred and fifty weeks.”

At the conclusion of the schedule of specific periods of compensation for the loss of various members of the body; of hearing; of the permanent use of a hand, arm, foot, leg, or eye; and for amputations, there immediately *76 followed, until the passage of Chapter 487 of the Acts of 1935, this paragraph, which is here italicized:

“The compensation for the foregoing specific injuries shall be paid in addition to, and consecutively'with, the compensation hereinbefore provided in Sub-Section 2 of this Section.”

Next after this last-quoted paragraph, there followed the paragraph of sub-section (3) ,with the heading “Other Cases” and one in relation to “Disfigurements.”

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 525, 178 Md. 71, 1940 Md. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-atlantic-gulf-pacific-co-md-1940.