Lovell v. State Compensation Mutual Insurance Fund

860 P.2d 95, 260 Mont. 279, 50 State Rptr. 1043, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 258
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1993
Docket93-036
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 860 P.2d 95 (Lovell v. State Compensation Mutual Insurance Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovell v. State Compensation Mutual Insurance Fund, 860 P.2d 95, 260 Mont. 279, 50 State Rptr. 1043, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 258 (Mo. 1993).

Opinions

JUSTICE GRAY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Leslie L. Lovell (Lovell) appeals from a judgment of the Workers’ Compensation Court awarding him temporary total disability benefits of $8.26 per week. The State Compensation Mutual Insurance Fund (State Fund) cross-appeals the Workers’ Compensation Court’s imposition of a twenty percent penalty, attorney’s fees and costs. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

We phrase the issues on appeal as follows:

1) Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in refusing to consider Lovell’s earnings from other sources when determining his weekly wage rate for temporary total disability benefits?

2) Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in imposing a twenty percent penalty against the State Fund for unreasonably delaying benefits to Lovell?

3) Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in imposing attorney's fees and costs against the State Fund?

In 1988, Lovell, a twenty-eight-year-old alcoholic, worked as a painter and roofer and provided lawnmowing services in Forsyth, Montana. On or around August 9, 1988, he stopped in at the Oak Room Bar (Oak Room) in Forsyth for a drink after work. Bob Thompson (Thompson), an owner of the Oak Room, asked Lovell to help him unload a roll carpet and some tiles from a truck. Although there was no discussion of wages, the parties have stipulated that Thompson employed Lovell for a two-hour job. The carpet fell on Lovell and he suffered a serious knee injury. The State Fund has stipulated that Lovell is temporarily totally disabled.

Lovell subsequently signed a tax-withholding statement for the Oak Room and filled out a claim for workers’ compensation benefits. [283]*283Lovell testified that he did not want to sign either document, but Thompson told him that the only available insurance was through workers’ compensation and Lovell would not get his medical bills paid otherwise. At the time of Lovell’s injury, the Oak Room was enrolled under Plan Three of the Workers’ Compensation Act, with the State Fund as its insurer.

On October 27, 1988 the State Fund accepted liability for Lovell’s injury and began weekly disability benefits, retroactive to August 16, 1988, of $6.33 per week, based on Thompson’s assertion that he intended to pay Lovell $4.75 per hour for a two-hour job. On March 1, 1989, his disability benefit rate increased to $8.26 per week after Lovell sent the State Fund his W2 tax-withholding form from the Oak Room indicating he received $6.20 per hour. During this time, Lovell attempted to provide the State Fund with earnings information concerning his painting and lawnmowing jobs; the State Fund maintained that his other wages were irrelevant.

On August 13, 1991, the State Fund reduced Lovell’s disability benefits to zero after receiving a computer printout indicating that Lovell was receiving Social Security benefits. Although Lovell received Social Security benefits due to his alcoholism, the claims examiner from the State Fund assumed the benefits were for his knee injury, and applied the Social Security offset pursuant to § 39-71-701(4), MCA (1987).

Lovell submitted travel expense vouchers to the State Fund for the trips he made to obtain medical treatment and physical therapy for his injured knee. In July, September, October and December of 1991, the State Fund reduced the mileage Lovell claimed by fifty miles each month because of a “technical error” on the part of the claims examiner and, as a result, did not reimburse him for that mileage.

Due to the ongoing dispute over the amount of benefits due, Lovell filed a petition with the Workers’ Compensation Court on April 23, 1992. The State Fund apparently reimbursed Lovell for the withheld travel mileage sometime in September, 1992.

The Workers’ Compensation Court heard the case on September 21, 1992, with the parties stipulating that Lovell was employed by the Oak Room, that he had suffered an industrial injury, and that he was temporarily totally disabled. The Workers’ Compensation Court concluded that the State Fund had correctly computed Lovell’s weekly wage rate for purposes of temporary total disability benefits. The court also imposed the statutory twenty percent penalty against the State Fund for unreasonably terminating Lovell’s benefits due to [284]*284the Social Security offset in August of 1991 and for improperly denying mileage from his travel claims. On that basis, the Workers’ Compensation Court also awarded Lovell attorney’s fees and costs. This appeal followed.

Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err in refusing to consider Lovell’s earnings from other sources when determining his weekly wage rate for temporary total disability benefits?

Our review of decisions of the Workers’ Compensation Court is two-fold. We will not overturn its findings of fact if there is substantial credible evidence in the record to support them. Grenz v. Fire and Cas. of Connecticut (1991), 250 Mont. 373, 378, 820 P.2d 742, 745. The Workers’ Compensation Court’s conclusions of law will be upheld if the court’s interpretation of the law is correct. Grenz, 820 P.2d at 745. The first issue in this case turns on a question of law.

In computing Lovell’s temporary total disability benefits, the Workers’ Compensation Court determined that $12.40 was Lovell’s correct weekly wage with the Oak Room. The court applied the definition of wages found in § 39-71-123, MCA (1987), the statute in effect at the time of Lovell’s injury. Although Lovell argued that he should be allowed to aggregate his wages from other employments, the court concluded that because § 39-71-123(3)(a), MCA (1987), specifically referred to the claimant’s employment with the “same employer,” the statute precluded consideration of other wages. Relying solely on that phrase, the Workers’ Compensation Court concluded that subsection (3)(a) “seemingly precludes aggregation of wages from other sources when determining an employee’s wages.” We conclude that this interpretation was in error.

Prior to 1987, wages were defined as “the average gross earnings received by the employee at the time of injury for the usual hours of employment in a week....” Section 39-71-116(20), MCA(1985). Under this definition of wages, we allowed aggregation of earnings from separate, concurrent employments in the determination of disability benefits. See Cattyson v. Falls Mobile Home Center (1979), 183 Mont. 284, 599 P.2d 341; Gee v. Cartwheel Restaurant (1982), 197 Mont. 335, 642 P.2d 1070; Harmon v. Harmon (1986), 220 Mont. 445, 716 P.2d 605; Milender v. Carpenter (1987), 230 Mont. 1, 748 P.2d 932. This Court consistently held that:

The general rule is that earnings from concurrent employments may be combined if the employments are sufficiently similar so that a disabling injury at one employment would necessarily disable the employee in respect to the other employment.

[285]*285Milender, 748 P.2d at 933, quoting Harmon, 716 P.2d at 607.

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Bluebook (online)
860 P.2d 95, 260 Mont. 279, 50 State Rptr. 1043, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-state-compensation-mutual-insurance-fund-mont-1993.