Liles v. FAULKNER NEON & ELECTRIC COPANY
This text of 94 S.E.2d 790 (Liles v. FAULKNER NEON & ELECTRIC COPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Purvis Graham LILES and Mettle Pace Liles, Parents and Next of Kin of Graham Ray Liles, Deceased,
v.
FAULKNER NEON & ELECTRIC COPANY, Employer, and Iowa National Mutual Insurance Company, Carrier.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
*793 Ruark, Young & Moore, Raleigh, for defendants, appellants.
Carr & Gibbons, Wilson, for plaintiffs, appellees.
BOBBITT, Justice.
Is the evidence sufficient to support the Commission's conclusion that it would be unfair and unjust to compute decedent's "average weekly wages" by dividing his total earnings by eleven, whereby the result would be $26.88, and to warrant the finding and conclusion that the award should be based on "average weekly wages" of $34.88? The court below answered in the affirmative. We are constrained to hold that controlling statutory provisions necessitate a negative answer.
Unquestionably, decedent had the capacity to earn $34.88 per week "in the employment in which he was working at the time of the injury." The fact is that he earned "average weekly wages" of $26.88. Presumably, full-time work would have been available to him in this employment. The fact is that "he was employed in a parttime capacity." He worked whenever he was free to do so. The fact is that while attending college he was not available for full-time work.
In a common law tort action, or in a statutory action for wrongful death, earning capacity, present and prospective, is an important and proper element of damages. A workman's compensation claim, which is not based on tortious conduct, is unknown to the common law; and the basis for the award as well as the validity of the claim is determinable solely by the provisions of the statute. Under applicable statutory provisions, may an award be based on earning capacity of the injured employee in the employment in which he was working at the time of the injury?
*794 Under G.S. § 97-2(e), "average weekly wages" of the employee "in the employment in which he was working at the time of the injury" must be related to his earnings rather than to his earning capacity. The word "average" is defined by Webster as "`a mean proportion, medial sum or quantity made out of unequal sums or quantities.'" Stevens v. Black, Sivalls & Bryson, 39 N.M. 124, 42 P.2d 189, 190. Within the statutory limits, the method for determining such "average weekly wages" depends on the facts of each case.
If the employee has worked in such employment during the period of fifty-two weeks immediately preceding the day of injury, the prescribed (first) method is to divide his total earnings during that period by fifty-two. The "average weekly wages" so determined may exceed the employee's weekly wages at the time of his injury, for example, where his compensation during the early part of the 52-week period exceeds his compensation during the latter part thereof. Honeycutt v. Carolina Asbestos Co., 235 N.C. 471, 70 S.E.2d 426. The Commission found that "it would be impractical to compute his (decedent's) average weekly wages by basing same on his average earnings for the previous 52 weeks." Obviously, it would be impossible to do so.
The said first method does not apply when as here the period of employment prior to injury is less than fifty-two weeks. In such case the prescribed (second) method is to divide the employee's earnings over the period of employment by the number of weeks or parts thereof during which the employee earned wages, subject to the proviso that by such method results fair and just to both parties will be obtained. If determined by this method, decedent's "average weekly wages" were $26.88.
If results fair and just to both parties will not be obtained by application of the said second method, another (third) method is prescribed, viz.: "Where, by reason of a shortness of time during which the employee has been in the employment of his employer or the casual nature or terms of his employment, it is impractical to compute the average weekly wages as above defined, regard shall be had to the average weekly amount which during the fifty-two weeks previous to the injury was being earned by a person of the same grade and character employed in the same class of employment in the same locality or community." (Italics added.)
A further provision is in these words: "But where for exceptional reasons the foregoing would be unfair, either to the employer or employee, such other method of computing average weekly wages may be resorted to as will most nearly approximate the amount which the injured employee would be earning were it not for the injury." (Italics added.) This provision, while it prescribes no precise method for computing "average weekly wages," sets up a standard to which results fair and just to both parties must be related.
The Commission undertook to apply the said third method. Careful consideration of the evidence impels the conclusion that there is no factual basis for its application. There is no evidence as to the average weekly amount being earned during the fifty-two weeks previous to decedent's injury by a person of the same grade and character employed in the same class of employment. Nor is there evidence as to the average weekly amount a part-time worker, employed as a helper, had earned during the fifty-two weeks previous to decedent's injury, while working for this employer or any other in the same locality or community. A person of the same grade and character employed in the same class of employment would be a part-time, not a full-time worker. This construction is in accord with decisions in other jurisdictions having similar statutory provisions. In re Rice, 229 Mass. 325, 118 N.E. 674, Ann.Cas.918E, 1052; White v. Pinkerton Co., 155 Tenn. 229, 232, 291 S.W. 448; Ruppert v. Plattdeutsche Volksfest *795 Verein, 263 N.Y. 338, 189 N.E. 240; Barlog v. Board of Water Com'rs, 239 App. Div. 225, 267 N.Y.S. 822; Derion v. Gilford Mfg. Co., 282 App.Div. 788, 122 N.Y. S.2d 444; State Road Commission v. Industrial Commission, 56 Utah 252, 190 P. 544; Brisendine v. Skousen Bros., 48 Ariz. 416, 62 P.2d 326, 112 A.L.R. 1089. There is no evidence that any part-time worker, the nature of whose employment was similar to that of decedent, earned "average weekly wages" over his period of employment greater than $26.88. The inescapable fact is that the Commission determined the "average weekly wages" of a part-time employee to be the amount he would have earned had he been a full-time employee.
In Munford v. West Construction Co., 203 N.C. 247, 165 S.E. 696, decedent had been employed some three months at the time of his injury. The Commission had found as a fact that decedent's work "in the beginning of his employment * * * was not regular, but later he was assigned a truck and placed upon regular duty." Based thereon, the Commission made a further unchallenged finding of fact that results fair and just to both parties would not be obtained by said second method; and this Court upheld an award based on the average weekly amount earned by a person of the same grade and character employed in the same class of employment, to wit, a full-time truck driver.
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94 S.E.2d 790, 244 N.C. 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liles-v-faulkner-neon-electric-copany-nc-1956.