Mazzi v. Smedley Co.

112 A. 168, 95 Conn. 607, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 A. 168 (Mazzi v. Smedley Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mazzi v. Smedley Co., 112 A. 168, 95 Conn. 607, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 23 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Gager, J.

This case comes up as a reservation upon a pro forma award pursuant to the provisions of § 5383 of the General Statutes as amended by § 16 of Chapter 142 of the Public Acts of 1919. The decision of the questions raised depends upon the construction to be given to § 5353 of the General Statutes as amended by § 8 of Chapter 142 of the Acts of 1919. As a verbal scrutiny of this Act is requisite, we quote in full so much of the Act as applies, as follows: “For the purposes of said chapter, the average weekly wage shall be ascertained by dividing the total wages received by the injured workman from the employer in whose service he is injured during the twenty-six calendar weeks immediately preceding that during which he was injured, by the number of said calendar weeks during which, or any portion of which, said workman was actually employed by said employer, provided, in making such *610 computation, absence for seven consecutive calendar days, although not in the same calendar week,- shall be considered as absence for a calendar week. When the employment commenced other than at the beginning of a calendar week, such calendar week and the wages earned during such week shall be excluded in making the above computation. When the employment, previous to injury as provided above, is computed to be less than a net period of two calendar weeks, then his weekly wage shall be considered to be equivalent to the average weekly wage prevailing in the same or similar employment in the same locality at the time of injury.”

The first question is whether this is a case for the application of the rule with reference to the actual average weekly wage of the plaintiff, or of the average weekly wage prevailing in the employment, and is framed on the assumption that the statutory method of computation requires taking into account all the days of work performed by the plaintiff for the employer within the period of twenty-six weeks. This was the method actually adopted by the commissioner.

We note here, that in the statement of the question there is included, as one of the conditions: “under an employment calling for work on four days a week.” No such situation is stated in the finding, and we ignore it as manifestly a clerical error. Four days was talked about as a possible term of employment, but it is expressly found that nothing came of it.

To determine this question under the assumption stated above, it is first necessary to undertake the computation of the actual average weekly wage. Our statute assumes twenty-six calendar weeks prior to the week of the accident, as the basic period for determining the actual average wages. The plaintiff worked for the defendant for eight days in all, each *611 day’s employment constituting an independent contract. The first calendar week of employment began on Monday, March 22d. The first day’s work was Tuesday, March 23d, and the plaintiff worked four days in that week. These four days are to be excluded from the computation under the language of the statute, which reads: “When the employment commenced other than at the beginning of a calendar week, such calendar week and the wages earned during such week shall be excluded in making the above computation.” The last two days of work were May 18th and 19th. These were in the same week in which the accident happened, and are excluded from the computation, because the twenty-six weeks are those “immediately preceding that during which he was injured.” We have left two days’ work, April 8th and May 5th, a day in each of two separate calendar weeks, as the only days of which account can be taken in ascertaining the plaintiff’s average weekly wage. The plaintiff’s daily wage was $3.50, or $7 earned in two separate calendar weeks. Dividing this total wage by two, “the number of said calendar weeks during which, or any portion of which, said workman was actually employed by said employer,” we get the actual average weekly wage as $3.50. This is the same as the computation made by the commissioner, and was strictly within the language of the statute, assuming, as stated above, that all days of work are to be considered.

After the statute prescribes the method of ascertaining the actual average weekly wage, which happens in this case to be the same as the daily wage, the following provision occurs: “When the employment, previous to injury as provided above, is computed to be less than a net period of two calendar weeks, then his weekly wage shall be considered to be equivalent to the average weekly wage prevailing in the same or similar em *612 ployment in the same locality at the time of the injury.” The finding shows the average weekly wage in the employment to have been $21. The question is, therefore, reduced to this: what is here meant by the phrase “employment . . . less than a net period of two calendar weeks”? Apparently the commissioner solved the question by treating the period of twenty-six weeks as the gross time which might be taken account of in determining the weekly wage, and treating the weeks which should be actually used in determining the divisor, that is, all weeks in the twenty-six left after making the exclusions, as a net period. This would make all calendar weeks during which any work was done that could be counted, net weeks. This results, as applied to this case, in holding that one day’s work in each of two calendar weeks constitutes employment for a net period of two calendar weeks, from which it follows that the right to invoke a compensation based upon the average weekly wage prevailing in the same or similar employments, is limited to claimants whose only work has been done in but one calendar week, which could have been counted in determining the actual weekly wage, or in the same calendar week in which the accident happened.

We do not think this is a reasonable construction of the statute, and that it involves a manifest injustice which it is not to be presumed that the statute intended. Work for one day or more in a single calendar week secures the result of a compensation based upon the average weekly wage in the employment, while work by a claimant one day a week for two weeks, as in this case, limits him to a weekly wage identical with and no more than a single day’s wage. Of course, the method of' fixing the dividing line when compensation ceases to be based on the actual weekly average of wages and is to be based on the prevailing weekly *613 average, if such a distinction is to be made, must be more or less arbitrary. But the statute appears to be designed to require some substantial quantity of labor to be performed within the limited period, to establish a basis for determining a claimant’s average weekly wage, and therefore requires that the claimant shall have.been employed for at least a “net period of two calendar weeks,” by which we think is meant exactly what will first occur to the reader, two full weeks of work out of a total of twenty-six possible weeks. The use of “calendar,” here refers to the quantity of time and not the almanac period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A. 168, 95 Conn. 607, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazzi-v-smedley-co-conn-1921.