Miller v. S. Fair & Sons

171 N.W. 380, 206 Mich. 360, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 666
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1919
DocketDocket No. 64
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 171 N.W. 380 (Miller v. S. Fair & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. S. Fair & Sons, 171 N.W. 380, 206 Mich. 360, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 666 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

Claimant was injured March 23, 1916. His average weekly wages were $12.70. The rate of compensation agreed upon by claimant and the insurance ■ company carrying the risk, and approved [361]*361by the industrial accident board, was $6.35 per week, “subject to the terms of the act.” The statute, Act No. 10, Extra Session 1912, part 2 (2 Comp. Laws 1915, §§ 5439-5441), so far as it applies, reads:

“Sec. 9. While the incapacity for work resulting from the injury is total, the employer shall pay, or cause to be paid as hereinafter provided, to the injured employee, a weekly compensation equal to one-half his average weekly wages, * * *
“Sec. 10. While the incapacity for .work resulting from the injury is partial, the employer shall pay, or cause to be paid as hereinafter provided, to the injured employee, a weekly compensation equal to one-half the difference between his average weekly wages before the injury and the average weekly wages which he is able to earn thereafter, * * *
“Sec. 11. * * * The weekly loss in wages referred to in this act shall consist of such percentage of the average weekly earnings of the injured employee, computed according to the provisions of this section, as shall fairly represent the proportionate extent of the impairment of his earning capacity in the employment in which he was working at the time of the accident, the same to be fixed as of the time of the accident, but to be determined in view of the nature and extent of the injury.”

We have held that, reading these provisions together :

“The language of this last provision is plain, and has but one obvious meaning, designating as the test capacity to earn in the same employment in which the employee was injured. That under this rule instances may arise where it works inequitably, does not authorize the court to read exceptions into it or modify its plain language defining the basis for estimating incapacity, which at best can only be approximated. If the method ought to be changed or exceptional cases provided for, the remedy rests with the legislature.” Foley v. Railway, 190 Mich. 507, 515.

And in Jameson v. Walter S. Newhall Co., 200 Mich. 514, when claimant was permanently disabled from [362]*362pursuing the employment in which he was engaged when injured, but was nevertheless later on able to secure other and different employment, a finding that he was permanently wholly disabled, within the meaning of the act, was sustained. See, also, Mellen Lumber Co. v. Industrial Commission, 154 Wis. 114 (142 N. W. 187, L. R. A. 1916A, 374, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 997).

In the case now before us, the industrial accident board made the following finding and award on March 16, 1918:

“A petition having been filed by the applicant in the above-entitled cause, praying for reasons therein set forth that payments of compensation be continued therein, and the same having come on to' be heard before the board on February 14, 1918, and proofs and briefs having been filed and due consideration having been had thereon, the board finds as a fact from the files and testimony that said applicant is partially incapacitated as a result of the accidental injury received while in the employ of said respondents on March 23, 1916; that he has been employed part of the time since the date of the completion of the last payment of compensation, May 18, 1917; that while employed, with the exception of about two weeks following May 18, 1917, he has received reduced wages; that said applicant should receive compensation while employed, at the rate of one-half the difference between his wages before the accident and the wages he has received thereafter from the time he resumed work, May 18, 1917; that if said applicant should be at any time, either before or after the date of this order, unable to continue his work or unable to secure employment because of any disability resulting from his accidental injury, then he should be paid compensation at the rate of six dollars and thirty-five cents ($6.35) per week in accordance with the terms of the agreement approved by the board April 29, 1916, during such periods; that there is now due and payable to said applicant by said respondents compensation from the time payments were stopped, [363]*363May 18, 1917, to the date of this order in conformity with the foregoing, which sum shall be paid presently.
“It is therefore ordered and adjudged that said applicant is entitled to receive and recover from said respondents compensation equal to one-half the difference between his average weekly wages before the injury and the average weekly wages which he is able to earn thereafter, during his partial disability, in the employment in which he was engaged at the time of his injury, said payments to commence on May 18, 1917, the date of the last payment made to applicant by respondents.
“It is further ordered that at the present time applicant is entitled to receive compensation from May 18,1917, to the date of this order, less amounts earned during that period, and the sum due shall be paid forthwith.
“It is further ordered that if at any time applicant, during his disability, is unable to perform or secure work in view of said disability, then he shall receive compensation at the rate of six dollars and thirty-five cents ($6.35) per week in accordance with the terms of the agreement approved by the board April 29, 1916.”

Upon further application in the nature of application for a* rehearing, and upon the whole record, the board made the following finding and award:

“a. That the expression ‘less amounts earned during that period’ used in the third paragraph of the order of March 16, 1918, was intended to mean that the applicant was not to be paid workmen’s compensation during any time he was able to work and earn full wages and that said expression was not intended to mean that the earnings of the applicant should apply upon the compensation to which he should be entitled.
That the applicant was injured while doing the work of a common laborer such as wheeling, shoveling and mixing sand and carrying things necessary to be carried around the foundry.
“e. That the applicant at the time he was injured was not engaged in employment as a moulder and that he was not a moulder.
“d. That his average weekly wage at the time he [364]*364was injured was $12.70; that his compensation rate during total disability was and is $6.35 per week.
“e. That at a time about fourteen (14) months after the man was injured he returned to the employment in which he was injured but only worked a couple of weeks or some such time and that it does not affirmatively appear that he worked steadily during that time, and hence it may be that during all of the time since the man was injured he may be entitled to receive compensation either for total or as for partial disability.
“f. That during all of the time since March 23, 1916, during which the applicant has not been able to earn at all he shall be paid $6.35 per week.
“g.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 N.W. 380, 206 Mich. 360, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-s-fair-sons-mich-1919.