Mahlum v. Broeder

412 P.2d 572, 147 Mont. 386, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 393
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1966
Docket10904
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 412 P.2d 572 (Mahlum v. Broeder) 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
Mahlum v. Broeder, 412 P.2d 572, 147 Mont. 386, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 393 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Edwin P. Mahlum, an injured workman, is receiving compensation under section 92-703, R.C.M.1947. He brings this appeal alleging error by the district court of the eleventh judicial district, the Honorable E. B. Foot, presiding judge, when it found, concluded, and ordered that his “wages received at the time of the injury,” within the meaning of section 92-703, were to be based on the usual and normal five-day week he worked, and not on the statutory six-day week provided for in section 92-422.

Mr. Mahlum, a woodsman working as a tong slinger, was severely injured when struck by a log on November 15, 1960. No question has been raised concerning his permanent partial disability. At the time of the injury he was 40 years old, married, and the father of three minor children. Fred Broeder, Jr., the employer at the time of the accident was enrolled under *388 Plan 1 of the Industrial Accident Board, a self-insurer.

A hearing before the Industrial Accident Board was held in Kalispell on June 6,1962; by the Board’s order he was awarded 65 percent of his wage loss subject to the statutory maximum compensation of $40 per week not to exceed 500 weeks. In his original claim for benefits, he submitted that he was employed at an hourly rate of $2.05 for an eight-hour day and a five-day week, and on a piece work basis paying 80^ per thousand feet of timber handled. On this evidence the Board determined his “wages received at the time of the injury” to be $82 per week, undoubtedly computed by multiplying $2.05 per hour by eight to find the daily wage, then by five to find the weekly wage. Mr. Mahlum was not satisfied with this figure and appealed to the district court.

At the hearing before the district court on August 17, 1964, it was stipulated that Mr. Mahlum had been employed for approximately two years prior to the accident and that normally and usually he worked a five-day week. On the basis of his total earnings during this period of employment, his average daily wages were determined to be $21.40, or $107 for a five-day week. It is not disputed that Mr. Mahlum had been paid on a piece work basis of 80‡ per thousand feet of timber handled. The district court modified the Board’s order by changing the 65 percent of wage loss to 62y2 percent, in keeping no doubt with the statutory maximum of $40 per week which Mr. Mahlum has not questioned. The $40 per week amount has been raised to $46 by the 1965 amendment, and by raising the figure of his “wages received at the time of the injury” to $107 per week, computed by multiplying the average daily wage of $21.40 by the five-day week he usually and normally worked. It is Mr. Mahlum’s contention that this wage figure within the meaning of the statute should be $128.40, computed by multiplying his average daily wage of $21.40 by the statutory six-day work week of section 92-422. The applicable portion of section 92-703 provides: “where the injured employee has a wife and two (2) children, or three (3) *389 children residing within the United States who would be entitled to compensation in case of his death, sixty-two and one-half pereentum (62%%) of the difference between the wages received at the time of the injury and the wages that such injured employee is able to earn thereafter, subject to a maximum compensation of forty dollars ($40.00) per week.” (Emphasis added.)

Special attention should be given to the fact that the language of sections 92-701 and 92-702, providing for temporary and permanent total disability, are identical: “where the injured employee has a wife and two (2) children, or three (3) children residing within the United States who would be entitled to compensation in case of his death, sixty-two and one-half per centum (62%%) of the weekly wages received at the time of the injury.” (Emphasis added.)

Section 92-422 provides: “ 'Week’ means six working days, but includes Sundays.” It is Mr. Mahlum’s position that the six-day week which is used in computing the “weekly wages” that an injured workman “received at the time of the injury” under sections 92-701 and 92-702 must also be applied in computing the “wages” that an injured workman “received at the time of the injury” under section 92-703. He specifies as error: “The district court erred in establishing claimant’s pay rate at the time of injury at $107 per week, as the district court should have multiplied the claimant’s usual daily wage of $21.40 by six, and thereby established claimant’s pay rate for compensation purposes as $128.40 per week.”

As long as Mr. Mahlum is unable to return to remunerative employment the determination of this question will have no practical application. Under section 92-703 the pre-injury wages become important only when the injured workman’s post-injury wages are shown to be of the sufficient difference to make the statutory percentages applicable. But because he “will never be able to return to work in the woods, and may well spend much of the rest of his life at odd jobs or light *390 work, with a resulting wage loss,” Mr. Mahlum feels it important to him that his “pay rate at the time of injury be accurately and properly established so that his future wage loss can be accurately determined.”

Giving special attention and study to the language of the three sections in question, Judge Foot in a scholarly memorandum to his decision explains his holding as it concerns injuries covered by section 92-703, supra. It is as follows :

“* * * Section 92-701 and 92-702 each contain the language ‘of the weekly wages received at the time of injury/ whereas 92-703 says merely ‘of the difference between the wages received at the time of injury, etc/ In other words, both the sections relating to total disability refer to weekly wages but that relating to partial disability merely says wages received.
“This raises the question, what is the purpose of using the word weekly in the first two and not in the last? The first two simply allow on a graduated scale, depending on status as to dependents, a percentage of weekly wages earned, whereas the last, 92-703, allows a percentage of difference between wages received and those the workman might earn.
“The history of the workmen's Compensation Act discloses that, as enacted in 1915 and carried through until 1925, all three provisions refer only to wages (not weekly wages) received. Thus 92-701 (then section 2912) for temporary total disability was 50 per cent of wages received at injury subject to máximums and minimums, and 92-702 (2913) for permanent total disability also provided for 50 percent of wages received subject to máximums and minimums. Section 92-703 (2914) for partial disability provides for one-half the difference between wages received at injury and those the man might be able to earn.
“But the 1925 Amendment, Chapter 121, Laws of 1925, amended as follows:
“Section 10, Chapter 121 amended was amended to increase maximum and minimum amounts allowable and inserted *391

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Bluebook (online)
412 P.2d 572, 147 Mont. 386, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahlum-v-broeder-mont-1966.