Miller v. Dunn Paper Co.

209 N.W.2d 519, 47 Mich. App. 471, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1316
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1973
DocketDocket 14720
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 209 N.W.2d 519 (Miller v. Dunn Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Dunn Paper Co., 209 N.W.2d 519, 47 Mich. App. 471, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1316 (Mich. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

*473 O’Hara, J.

This appeal from an order of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board specifies four issues. Éach is cast in terms of claimed legal error.

The first asserts that the board incorrectly determined as a matter of law that the injured employee was totally and permanently disabled through loss of industrial use of both legs or one arm and one leg as a result of accidental injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment.

We disagree. Despite the phrasing of the assignment of error, in reality what is involved is a conflict in medical testimony as to nature and extent of the employee’s disability. The scope of review as to this issue is so well settled in this jurisdiction that it is unnecessary to burden our opinion with citations. Reference to the statute alone is sufficient. The findings of fact of the appeal board, absent fraud, are conclusive. MCLA 418.861; MSA 17.237(861). We affirm the board’s finding.

Next appellants urge what is truly a claimed error of law. When as above the board finds an employee totally and permanently disabled as of a date between the effective dates of 1956 PA 195 and 1965 PA 44 (August 1, 1956 to September 1, 1965) is the employer or his carrier, if any, liable for benefits only for the first 500 weeks from the date of injury, with the Second Injury Fund 1 liable for all weekly benefits thereafter? The date of injury in this case was August 1, 1960. For 269 weeks therefrom, the number of weeks awarded for the specific loss of his arm, the employee was paid benefits voluntarily. He then filed an application for further benefits based on claimed total *474 disability. Upon submission of a medical report it was stipulated that if plaintiff would withdraw his application for hearing, voluntary payments would be resumed by the employer (carrier) with the fund paying differential benefits. The payments were computed on a stipulated basis of three dependents (a matter to which we will find it necessary to advert in discussion of another issue). These payments were continued for the full 500 weeks. When this period of benefit payments ended the employer’s carrier filed a form with the commission noticing the cessation of payments for the reason that its liability was terminated after 500 weeks. Thereupon plaintiff employee filed another petition designated "petition for determination of rights”. Having affirmed the board’s finding of total and permanent disability we now turn to the question of the responsibility for the payment of benefits by dates. This responsibility is legal in nature since it depends upon statutory interpretation, and the judicial function of the determination of legislative intent of various amendatory provisions of the act.

Tenet one is that an employer or his insurance carrier cannot be liable to an injured employee in any amount greater than the statutory liability imposed on the date of injury. This is because of. the constitutional proscriptions against impairing contract obligations and denial of due process.

Thus appellants could not be liable to appellee for any amount greater than their liability on August 1, 1960, the date of his injury. His injuries were severe. He lost his left arm by amputation between the elbow and shoulder and sustained injuries to both legs and his head.

At that time the employer and his insurer were limited to 500 weeks of compensation based upon *475 the number of his dependents except for permanent and total disability as defined in sections 8a and 10. 2 In that event the employee would be entitled to benefit payments for the duration of the permanent and total disability. Since the board’s inviolate finding was that the employee was, continued to be, and still is, totally and permanently disabled, someone is liable for the continuing payment of benefits.

Here enters the Second Injury Fund. It supports the legal position taken by the board in its reversal of the referee. The board held that the employer or his carrier remain liable for the basic benefit payments in the amount due the employee as of the date of his injury, with the fund liable only for differential benefits. The fund’s liability arises under the following provision of the act:

"Any permanently and totally disabled person as defined in this act who, on or after June 25, 1955, is entitled to receive payments of workmen’s compensation under this act in amounts per week of less then is presently provided in the workmen’s compensation schedule of benefits for permanent and total disability and for a lesser number of weeks than the duration of such permanent and total disability shall after the effective date of any amendatory act, by which his disability is defined as permanent and total disability or by which the weekly benefit for permanent and total disability is increased, receive weekly, without application, from the second injury fund, an amount equal to the difference between what he is now or shall hereafter be entitled to receive from his employer under the provisions of this act as the same .was in effect at the time of his injury and the amount now provided for his permanent and total disability by this or any other amendatory act.” MCLA 412.9; MSA 17.159. See cur *476 rent provisions: MCLA 418.351; MSA 17.237(351); MCLA 418.353; MSA 17.237(353); MCLA 418.355; MSA 17.237(355); MCLA 418.357; MSA 17.237(357); MCLA 418.359; MSA 17.237(359).

Appellant employer and carrier (and the referee) contend that the fund was liable not only for any differential payments due the employee prior to the expiration date of 500 weeks, but for all benefits thereafter.

Not so says the fund, (and the appeal board). The employer is liable for all basic benefits (those in effect at the time of the injury) from the date of injury for the duration of the total and permanent disability and the fund is liable only for the differential benefits. Admittedly the differing views result from the following language of the Supreme Court:

"We agree with appellant Chrysler Corporation’s contention that the legislature has made it perfectly clear that when the loss-of-use classification was added to part 2, § 10, it was the intention of the legislature that 'payments of benefits for the newly defined loss-of-use permanent and total disabilities were to be from the second injury fund so that the burden of the change could be spread among all employers.’ ” Rasar v Chrysler Corp, 382 Mich 169, 175 (1969).

The appeal board faced this question before this case, but after Rasar. It discussed the question in depth in Brandly v Darin & Armstrong, Inc, 1972 WCABO 879. Significantly, it attached a copy of its opinion in that case to its opinion herein and explicitly incorporated it into its holding here. Thus it becomes part of the appeal board’s holding in this case. We quote at length and with approval from the discussion of the author of Brandly, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
209 N.W.2d 519, 47 Mich. App. 471, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-dunn-paper-co-michctapp-1973.