Maryland Casualty Co. v. Morris

22 S.E.2d 627, 68 Ga. App. 239, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
Docket29555.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 S.E.2d 627 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Morris) 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
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Morris, 22 S.E.2d 627, 68 Ga. App. 239, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 101 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

Cornell-Young Company, hereinafter called the employer, was engaged in 1934 in building a bridge over the Oconee Kiver and the highway approaches thereto in Baldwin County under a contract with the State Highway Department of Georgia. The work was a United States Public Works project. The contract under which the employer operated provided, among other things: “Skilled and unskilled labor shall not be permitted to work more than 30 hours in any one week, except that working time lost because of inclement weather or shutdowns during the period of employment in any one week may be made up during the succeeding week or weeks of any one calendar month.” C. O. Morris, hereinafter referred to as the claimant, was employed in February, 1934, to work as a carpenter upon the project, and was not permitted to work and did not actually work more than 30 hours in any one week. The following arrangement was worked out by the employer applicable to all labor in the class of Morris: One shift of workers reported for duty and worked the first three days in the week, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, ten hours per day, making the maximum of 30 hours for that week. Thereupon another shift reported and worked the same number of hours Thursday, Friday and Saturday. This second shift reported again the following Monday and worked Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Thereupon the first shift returned and worked Thursday, Friday and Saturday of one week and Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of the following week. All of the employees were paid biweekly and thus at such times were paid, on Saturday, for six days work, for three days in the week preceding the week of payment and for three days in the week of payment, no employee working more than three days in any one calendar week.

Morris, the claimant, was injured while at work on Tuesday, July 24, 1934. It is conceded that his injury resulted in total *241 disability which has continued to the present time. The accident was duly reported and on August 25, 1934, an agreement, purported to have been signed by the employee, the employer, and the insurance carrier, was entered into, though the employee denied signing the agreement and insisted that at the time he was not in-condition to appreciate what he was doing if he signed it. The agreement was dated August 21, 1934, and provided for compensation at the rate of $6 per week, beginning July 31, 1934. It was filed with the Industrial Board, and on August 27, 1934, was approved by it, and on the same day a communication, entitled “ Notice of award — approval of settlement,” was mailed to the employee, the employer, and the insurance carrier, the written approval reciting that “If any party in interest doubts that the agreement made has been made strictly according to law he may address the department with an inquiry or complaint. It will receive prompt attention.” Thereafter compensation of $6 per week was duly paid to the employee. It was reasonably established that he received a copy of this communication and he accepted the weekly payments, and on several occasions, where there was a slight delay, he wrote the carrier to forward the weekly award of $6.

On December 7, 1939, an attorney wrote the Industrial Board on behalf of the employee, contending that his regular wage at the time of his injury was $4 per day or $24 per week, and that the award should have been $12 per week, and that because of the alleged inadvertence and misapprehension of the facts a hearing should be had and the award corrected. A hearing was had on February 16, 1940, before a single director, who on September 20, 1940, made an award, finding as a fact that the employee, with the exception of certain lost time which he was allowed to make up, worked ten hours a day íot three days a week at 40 cents an hour, that his regular wage was $12 per week, and that the carrier had paid $6 per week as compensation and that such payment, for a period of 291 weeks up to the date of the request for a rehearing, was strictly in accordance with the provisions of the workmen’s compensation act. He further held that as the carrier had paid compensation in accordance with the law it was immaterial whether or not the employee had signed the agreement, and that the agreement having been formally approved by the Industrial Board, and there having been no appeal within the time required by law, the *242 order of approval, “which for all purposes is the same as an award rendered after a hearing,” could not he modified or changed, and that the question of the rate of compensation payable to the claimant was res judicata. It was ordered that the employer and insurance carrier continue the payments of compensation at the rate of $6 per week.

The findings of the single director were based on the facts hereinbefore recited, and particularly on certain testimony of the claimant, quoted in the award as follows: “Q. You were getting forty cents an hour? A. Yes, sir. Q. And worked ten hours a day? A. Yes, sir. Q. And worked three days each week? A. I worked Thursday, Friday and Saturday and Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday. Then I drew $34 that Saturday. Q. But you worked only three days in any one week? A. Yes, sir. . . Under the contract with the Government they had to pay you 40 cents an hour? A. Yes, sir. Q. And couldn’t work you more than thirty hours a week ? A. That is right. Q. So you worked three days, ten hours each day, forty cents an hour? A. Yes. Q. And you say you got $24 a week ? A. I did when I worked six days. They didn’t pay me every week. They didn’t pay me until I worked six days. Q. They paid you then $12 a week, didn’t they? A. They paid me $24 when I worked six days. Q. Isn’t it true they paid you every two weeks on the job, twice a month? A. Yes, that is what I told you. Q. And paid you $24 every two weeks? A. Exactly. Q. Which malees $12 a week? A. I worked three days this week and three days the next week, and the following Saturday they gave me $24. . . Q. You were working at another job when you were not on this job? A. Provided I could get it. Q. You knew you could only work three days a week and the rest of' the time you tried to make some more money? A. Yes, sir. Q. At the end of every two weeks they gave you a check for $24? A. That is right. . . Q. I understood you to say there were two shifts working on the bridge at the time you were working, is that correct? A. Let me see if I can put it to you any plainer. . . The job went on regularly each week. It was somebody working on the job six days that the weather would permit. I went to work on Thursday morning and worked Thursday, Friday and Saturday and laid out on Sunday, went back and worked Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Then I quit. I hunted work somewhere else. *243 You can call it a shift or anything you may. Somebody else went in there and kept the job going just like I did when I went in on Thursday morning.”

The award of the director was appealed to the board and was affirmed on December 10, 1940. The claimant appealed to the superior court of Baldwin County, and after argument in that court the judgment of the full board was reversed and the case was remanded to the board with direction that the award be modified by changing the amount of compensation from $6 to $12 per week, and that the difference be paid to the claimant, together with seven per cent, interest. The exception of the employer and insurance carrier is to that judgment.

The issues presented, as argued in the briefs of counsel, are: 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 627, 68 Ga. App. 239, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-morris-gactapp-1942.