Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Wilson

34 S.E.2d 634, 72 Ga. App. 574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 29, 1945
Docket30748, 30749.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 S.E.2d 634 (Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardware Mutual Casualty Co. v. Wilson, 34 S.E.2d 634, 72 Ga. App. 574 (Ga. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

Parker, J.

These are workmen’s compensation cases. D. W. Wilson, an employee of a garage, while earning $30 per week, was injured by receiving severe burns on his right arm, neck, and chest, on September 8, 1942, in an accident arising out of and in the course of the employment. An agreement to pay compensation of $15 á week during temporary total disability, as provided by the Code, § 114-404, was entered into between the parties and was filed with and approved by the workmen’s compensation board, and the claimant was paid for a period of 13 weeks, from September 15 through December 15, 1942.

On December 15, 1942, the claimant went back to work for the garage at wages equal to or greater than the amount he was receiving at the time of his injuries, and later on he worked at the arsenal in Augusta, Georgia, at wages greatly in excess of those he was receiving when he was injured. While employed at the arsenal he filed a claim for bodily injuries resulting from his accident, and requested a hearing to determine liability and compensation. On May 16, 1943, the director hearing the claim made an award denying compensation because of the increased earnings of the claimant, holding in effect that the claimant could Dot recover for bodily injuries producing a partial disability so long as his earnings were equal to or greater than his earnings at the time of the accident. This award was appealed to the full board by the claimant, one ground of the appeal alleging that the claimant had sustained a permanent loss of at least 50% of the use of his right arm, for which he was entitled to compensation without regard to other contentions or claims. At the hearing on the appeal the claimant moved that the case be remanded to the director for the purpose of taking additional medical testimony regarding his physical condition, and the motion was granted and the case remanded as requested. A further hearing was had on October 29, 1943, and on November 12, 1943, the board made an award directing the payment of compensation to the claimant at the rate of $15 per week for a period of 100 weeks. There was no appeal from this award and it was paid in full in a lump-sum settlement.

On July 12, 1944, on application of the claimant, a hearing was had “to determine change in condition, and whether claimant is *576 entitled to expenses incident to surgical treatment and hospitalization, and whether such would be beneficial to claimant.” Among the findings of fact made by the director, in an award dated August 9, 1944, were that the claimant operated a garage for himself from November 26, 1943, to May 12, 1944, earning $11 per week during that period; and that subsequent to May 12, 1944, and up to the time of the hearing he had no regular employment, but did various jobs around garages and earned $7.50 a week. Further findings of fact were as follows: “That the claimant would be entitled to receive compensation for a partial loss of earning capacity beginning on November 26, 1943, and not to exceed three hundred weeks from the date of the accident, which was September 8, 1942, . . that the claimant averaged $11 a week beginning as of November 26,' 1943, until May 12, 1944, or a total of twenty-four weeks. For this period he is entitled to $9.50 per week, which amount is half the difference between the sum he was able to earn at the time he was injured and during the period for which he is being paid compensation. The claimant is also entitled to recover compensation beginning May 12, 1944, at the rate of $11.25 per week, this amount being half the difference between the amount of $7.50 per week, which he- has been earning since May 12, 1944, and the amount of $30 a week he was earning at the time of the original injury. The accident occurred on September 8, 1942, and through May 12, 1944, a total of eighty-seven and one-half weeks elapsed. In addition to this eighty-seven and one-half weeks the employer is entitled to take credit for one hundred weeks which were paid for fifty per cent, disability to the arm. Therefore, beginning as of May 12, 1944, the claimant is entitled to receive compensation at the rate of $11.25 per week for a total of one hundred twelve and one-half weeks, or until there is a change in condition, at which time either party may apply for a hearing to have the matter determined.” The award was as follows: “The employer and/or the carrier'in this case will pay compensation to the claimant at the rate of $9.50 per week beginning as of November 26, 1943, up and through May 12, 1944, or a total of twenty-four weeks. Beginning as of May 12, 1944, the employer will pay to the claimant compensation at the rate of $11.25 per week not to exceed a total of one hundred twelve and one-half weeks, or until there is a change in condition.”

*577 On appeal by all of tlie parties to the board the award of the director was affirmed in its entirety on August 29, 1944. On appeal to the superior court by all of the parties the award was affirmed, and the two cases here present exceptions to that judgment. Regardless of whether these cases constitute a main bill and a cross-bill of exceptions, or present two separate bills, they will be treated together, as only one decision is necessary to dispose of both. The employer and the insurer contend that since the claimant had received compensation at the total-disability rate from the date of his injury to December 15, 1942, and since it had been adjudicated that he had no disability between December 15, 1942, and November 12, 1943, and that during this period his earnings were in excess of his earnings at the time of the accident; and since he had been paid compensation at the maximum rate of $15 per week from November 12, 1943, to October 28, 1945, the onerhundred-week period, the board was without power ox authority to hear the case in July, 1944, and make the award complained of. The employer and the insurer contend that the action of the board required them to pay the claimant total compensation greater than that provided for in the law. The claimant contends that the award was erroneous and contrary to law because the employer and the insurer were given credit for a total of 63% weeks (87% less 24), which elapsed between the-date of the accident on September 8, 1942, and November 26, 1943, and was given credit for the 100 weeks which were paid for 50% disability to the arm, as against a maximum of 300 weeks (from the date of the accident) for which the claimant could receive compensation. It will be noted from the findings of fact and the award by the director, which were affirmed by the board and by the superior court, that the director did not arrive at the deduction of 63% weeks from the 300-week period directly, but made a deduction of 87% weeks from the date of the injury to a date when the claimant’s average income decreased slightly (May 12, 1944), and then added back a period of 24 weeks, which elapsed between the date (November 26, 1943) upon which it was found that the partial loss of earning capacity began and the May 12, 1944 date. Apparently the computation was made in this way to make easier the deduction of the 100 weeks from the end of the 300-week period, but the net result, *578 as already shown, was to deduct the period of 63% weeks elapsing from the date of the injury to the date the partial loss of earning capacity was found to have begun. Thus a period of 163% weeks was deducted from the 300-week period allowed by the statute for the partial loss of earning capacity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.E.2d 634, 72 Ga. App. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardware-mutual-casualty-co-v-wilson-gactapp-1945.