Letteney's Case

707 N.E.2d 1071, 429 Mass. 280, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 127
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 5, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 707 N.E.2d 1071 (Letteney's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Letteney's Case, 707 N.E.2d 1071, 429 Mass. 280, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 127 (Mass. 1999).

Opinion

Fried, J.

Only employment referred to in G. L. c. 152, § 1 (4), may be used in determining the average weekly wage, for purposes of G. L. c. 152, § 35C, of an employee who becomes eligible for workers’ compensation benefits as a result of an industrial injury that occurred five or more years prior to the date of eligibility.

[281]*281i

The claimant’s husband, Robert Letteney (employee), had been employed at Hercules Powder Co. (Hercules), where he was exposed to asbestos. The last exposure was in 1955. The employee left the employ of Hercules in March of 1959. At that time he apparently took a job with another insured employer, where he continued to work until May of 1986, at which time he moved to Florida and went into business for himself. Mesothelioma forced him to retire from his business in 1991 and led to his death in June of 1992. The mesothelioma was the result of his exposure to asbestos during his work at Hercules. The claimant sought and was granted compensation under our workers’ compensation act, G. L. c. 152 (as in effect at the time the claimant became eligible for benefits — at the employee’s death in 1992). The only dispute relates to the level of that compensation.

An administrative judge of the Department of Industrial Accidents (department), construing G. L. c. 152, § 35C,1 awarded compensation on the basis of the last average weekly wage the claimant’s decedent earned while self-employed in Florida. Hercules and the Workers’ Compensation Trust Fund (trust fund) appealed to the department’s reviewing board (board), which reversed in a divided decision. The board based its decision on G. L. c. 152, § 1 (4), which defined an employee covered by the act as a “person in the service of another,” and excluded, among others, masters of and seamen on vessels engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, professional athletes, and drivers of leased taxi cabs. The dissenting member of the board agreed with the administrative judge from whom the appeal had been taken that this definition was relevant only to the issue of coverage, which was conceded, and not to the determination of the level of compensation for a covered injury. The administrative judge had also pointed out that the same argument, that [282]*282self-employment wages would not count in determining the . level of compensation under § 35C, would compel the conclusion that wages earned in out-of-State employment could also not be used to calculate the last average weekly wage in determining compensation. The claimant appealed. We transferred the case here on our own motion and affirm the decision of the reviewing board.

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Since its first enactment in 1911, St. 1911, c. 751, Part V, our workers’ compensation law was conceived as a system of insurance to replace in part the wages lost by workers or their dependents as a result of injuries suffered in connection with their work. See generally L. Locke, Workmen’s Compensation 1-25 (Nason & Wall Supp. 1995). There would be the time when an injury occurred, followed more or less directly by the death or disability resulting from that injury, which is what created eligibility under the scheme. See Zerofski’s Case, 385 Mass. 590, 594-595 (1982).

As part of a comprehensive revision of our workers’ compensation law, see L. Locke, Workmen’s Compensation, supra, the Legislature addressed the problem of workers suffering injuries, the disabling effects of which are felt only many years later and during which time the worker may have continued to be gainfully employed. The typical example of such an injury is asbestos exposure, the ill effects of which may become apparent only decades later. This is such a case.

General Laws c. 152, § 35C, provides the rule for such cases: Where five or more years elapse between the date of injury and the disabling effect of that injury, the wage replacement which the act provides is to be calculated not on the basis of the wages being earned at the time of the injury, but at the later time when the worker becomes eligible, that is the later time when he dies or becomes partially or totally disabled. This provision reversed the effect of our holding in Squillante’s Case, 389 Mass. 396, 397 (1983):

“Where an employee’s injury results from a gradual exposure to harmful foreign matter the date of the injury is the date of last exposure to the foreign matter. . . . Often the date of last exposure coincides with the day when the employee is no longer able to continue his work because [283]*283of the cumulative effect of such exposure. . . . Here, the last date of exposure to asbestos- occurred in 1945. The day that the employee was no longer able to work occurred in 1974, long after he had ceased his employment with [the employer]. In such a case, the date of injury is the date of last exposure, not the date of incapacity.” (Citations omitted.)

And applying the law as it then stood, we were led to the conclusion that the compensation of the claimant’s award must be made on the basis of his wages at the time of his injury. Section 35C was obviously meant to mitigate the rigors of that rule, and to calculate his lost earning capacity in terms of what he was earning at the time of his disability — in the language of the statute, at the time of his eligibility, which with the passage of time, the accrual of seniority, and the effect of inflation is likely to be considerably higher.

For a long time following his injury, the employee had been employed by another insured employer in the Commonwealth. There is no question that, due to this continued employment in Massachusetts by an employer subject to the workers’ compensation laws (although an employer different from the one for whom he was working when the injury occurred), the claimant is entitled to compensation measured by the employee’s average weekly wage from this subsequent employer, a significantly higher amount than if compensation was set at the date of injury.2 The difficulty in this case arises from the circumstance that, for his last five years in the work force (well after the date of injury, the date of last exposure), the claimant’s decedent had been self-employed in another State.

The claimant argues that the ameliorative purpose of § 35C requires that she be compensated at that higher rate, which reflects the employee’s earning capacity at the time he became disabled, and not at the lower rate calculated on earnings as of the date of injury several years earlier. Because it is the purpose [284]*284of § 35C to compensate an employee in terms of his earning capacity, what he or his survivor have lost as result of the injury, then by the board’s rule the claimant here will receive a good deal less than that. The board, Hercules, and the trust fund argue that, because self-employment (like employment out of the State) are outside what they call the “closed system” of the workers’ compensation scheme, self-employment wages should not count for purposes of calculating compensation from within the scheme. Both sides invoke the rule of plain meaning. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. One 1987 Mercury Cougar Auto., 413 Mass. 534, 537 (1992) (“It is a well-established canon of construction that, where the statutory language is clear, the courts must impart to the language its plain and ordinary meaning”); State Bd. of Retirement v. Boston Retirement Bd., 391 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
707 N.E.2d 1071, 429 Mass. 280, 1999 Mass. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/letteneys-case-mass-1999.