Hanson v. Hayes

29 N.W.2d 473, 225 Minn. 48, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 7, 1947
DocketNo. 34,522.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 N.W.2d 473 (Hanson v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Hayes, 29 N.W.2d 473, 225 Minn. 48, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 568 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Peterson, Justice.

The employe brings certiorari to review the award of the' industrial commission.

Three questions are presented for decision: (1) Whether the compensation payable to a minor during the healing period should be based upon his weekly wage at the time of his injury or upon the weekly wage he probably would earn after arriving at legal age, if uninjured; (2) whether, where the injuries sustained by the employe consist of the loss of three fingers without injury to or loss of function of the hand, the employe is entitled to compensation for loss of use of the hand as a whole occasioned by the loss of the fingers in addition to that for the loss of the fingers; and (3) whether the opinions of nonmedical witnesses experienced in the field of disability, rehabilitation, and employment are admissible to show the extent of an employe’s disability as the result of industrial accident. It is conceded that if our answer to the second question is against the employe there will be no necessity for answering the third one.

The employe, a minor 18 years old at the time of the accident, July 8, 1946, was injured while operating a punch press, necessitating amputation of the second, third, and fourth fingers of his left hand in such a manner that a short stub of each finger distal to the metacarpal bone remained. The thumb and the palm of the hand were uninjured. The index finger was fractured, but healed with no compensable injury. The healing period' was 14 2/5 weeks, for which there was paid compensation amounting to $17.33 per week based upon employe’s weekly wage of $26 at the time of injury. An award of compensation for the loss of the fingers was made for a period of 65 weeks—30 weeks for the second finger, 20 weeks for the third finger, and 15 weeks for the fourth finger—at the rate of $24 per week based upon an average weekly wage of $36, the amount which he probably would earn after arriving at legal age, if uninjured.

*50 Where a minor suffers the loss of a member, he is entitled during the healing period to compensation at the same rate as for loss of the member itself. M. S. A. 176.11, subd. 3, provides that for permanent partial disability of a member, which includes a finger or fingers (subsections [1-7]), an employe shall receive during the healing period “compensation” at the rate specified; and that “thereafter and in addition thereto” he shall be paid “compensation” according to the schedule, which provides among other things for specific compensation to be paid for loss of a finger or fingers or parts thereof.

Subd. 7 of § 176.11 provides:

“If any employee entitled to the benefits of the workmen’s compensation law is a minor * * * and sustains injuries due to an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment resulting in permanent total or permanent partial disability, the weekly earnings, for the purpose of computing the compensation to which he is entitled, shall be the weekly earnings which such minor * * * would probably earn after arriving at legal age * * *, if uninjured, which probable earnings shall be approximately the average earnings of adult journeymen workmen of the same sex below the rank of superintendent or general foremen in the department of the plant or industry in which such minor * * * was employed at the time of his injury.”

The word “compensation” is defined in § 176.01, subd. 2, as follows:

“The word ‘compensation’ indicates the money benefits to be paid on account uf injury or death.”

Payments under the workmen’s compensation act for injury, medical care, and hospitalization are compensation. Behr v. Soth, 170 Minn. 278, 212 N. W. 461. See, Fehland v. City of St. Paul, 215 Minn. 94, 9 N. W. (2d) 349; 8 Wd. & Phr. (Perm. ed.) Compensation, pp. 209-214, and Pocket Part. Hence, benefits for both the healing period and for the injuries under the schedule are compensation. Both § 176.11, subd. 3, providing for benefits during the healing period, and Id. subd. 7, providing for the benefits to be paid to minors, ex *51 pressly refer to the benefits as “compensation.” True, subd. 3, both in the provisions for compensation during the healing period and in those in the schedule for specific compensation for specific injuries, provides that the compensation shall be computed upon the daily wage “at the time of injury,” but these provisions were amended and modified by subd. 7, which was added by L. 1929, c. 250, and which, as the later law, controls. It is conceded that subd. 7 amends the provisions of the schedule, but it is contended that it did not amend those relating to the healing period. There is no basis for a distinction under which there would be one rate of compensation for the healing period and another for the injuries themselves. Subd. 7 amends subd. 3 in its entirety—the provisions relating to the healing period as well as those in the schedule. That being true, a minor is entitled to compensation for both the healing period and for injuries under the schedule computed upon his probable earnings after arriving at legal age, if uninjured.

The employer contends, however, that the word “compensation” as used in subd. 7 has acquired by practical construction thereof by the industrial commission a meaning which includes only benefits for injuries causing permanent total or permanent partial disability, and excludes those for the healing period. There was no showing of long, continued, and settled construction of the word by the commission as claimed. In support of the employer’s contention, two decisions of the commission, viz., Fitzgerald v. Powell’s, Inc. 9 Minn. Work. Comp. Dec. 400, and Bullock v. Rapin Wax Paper Co. 7 Minn. Work. Comp. Dec. 13, are cited.

A practical construction of a word can result only where the word has received a long, continued, and settled construction. 6 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 8952. Practical construction is a fact, which must be made to appear by the record; courts do not take judicial notice of it. State ex rel. Gillis v. Goodrich, 195 Minn. 644, 264 N. W. 234. Since there was no showing of long, continued, and settled construction of the word by the commission as claimed, support, if any, for such a practical construction must be found in the decisions of the commission which have been cited. These decisions do not show *52 the practical construction claimed. In neither of the cases was the point involved, and the commission did not pass on it. In the Bullock case, there was a comment by way of dictum to the effect that the rule contended for by the employer was “the proper one.” Such a dicthm falls short of the requirement of showing a long, continued, and settled construction. Hence, there is no basis for holding that there has been a practical construction as claimed.

No authority has been cited, and we have been unable to find any, that sustains the employe’s contention that he is entitled to compensation for both the loss of his fingers and for disability of his hand as a whole occasioned by'the loss of the fingers. There seem to be two classes of statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 473, 225 Minn. 48, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-hayes-minn-1947.