Moss v. Aluminum Co. of America

276 S.W. 1052, 152 Tenn. 249
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 1052 (Moss v. Aluminum Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss v. Aluminum Co. of America, 276 S.W. 1052, 152 Tenn. 249 (Tenn. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit to recover compensation under chapter 123 of the Acts of 1919 for the death of B. J. Moss, who was killed on August 27, 1924. He was survived by his widow, Lucile Moss, and three small children. He began working for the defendant on January 12, 1924.

The only controversy is as to the amount his widow is entitled to recover. He received his pay weekly in two envelopes, one being denominated “wages” and the other “bonus.” During his employment he received the following sums;

*251 Jan. 15. Wages .$ 10 00
Jan. 22. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75;' total . 19 50
Jan. 29. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75, metal bonus $4.90; total. 24 15
Feb. 6. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75, metal bonus $2.10; total . 2135
Feb. 12. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75, metal bonus $4.40; total . 23 65
Feb. 19. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75, metal bonus $2.40; total ..'.. 2165
Feb. 26. Wages $17.50, attendance bonus $1.75, metal bonus $3.70; total .. 22 95
Total .. $143 25

His average weekly pay was $22.75.

For the petitioner it is insisted that she should recover one-half of that sum, or $11,375 for four hundred weeks.

For the defendant it is insisted that petitioner is not entitled to include the items of bonus, but is only entitled to recover one-half of the weekly wage of $17.50, or $8.75 for four hundred weeks.

The trial court held with the defendant, and entered a decree for $8.75 for four hundred weeks, and his action in so holding is made the basis of the assignment of error filed on behalf of petitioner, Lucile Moss.

The system by which defendant compensated its employees is explained in the brief of counsel for petitioner, and acquiesced in by counsel for defendant, as follows:

“The attendance bonus represents twenty-five cents per day, paid to men who work six or more days per week. If he works less than six days per week, he does not receive any attendance bonus, and if the one day a week *252 he loses is the day following pay day or Saturday or Sunday, he does not receive any attendance bonns. All men who work in the pot rooms, in the same class of work in which Mr. Moss was employed, after being there a certain length of time receive this attendance bonus, provided they work the six days per week,.as just indicated. At the time that Mr, Moss was killed there were something like three hundred men employed in the defendant company in the same kind of work that Mr. Moss was employed at.
“As stated by Mr. B. L. Glascock, this attendance bonus is paid by the company, ‘ to encourage the men to put in regular time. ’ This attendance bonus had been put into effect by the company in July, 1923, and continued from then until after Mr. Moss was killed.
“The work that the deceased was employed in was the refining of aluminum ore into aluminum pig by means of electricity. The men employed in this work had been receiving under said conditions a metal bonus for some two or three years before Mr. Moss went to work in this department, and the receipt of such metal bonus continued until after Mr. Moss was killed. To get a full metal bonus a man must work seven days per week. If he works only six days he gets just half of the metal bonus, and if he works less than the six days per week he forfeits it all. This metal bonus depends upon the collective effort of the twelve or eighteen men who work on a certain section during any one particular week.
“When the men receive their pay, it is handed to them in two envelopes, one containing the amount which they call wages and the other the amount of the two bonuses combined. The defendant company does not set aside a *253 given amount of money to cover these bonuses. But such payments are figured as a part of the cost of the production of aluminum.
“The contract of employment between'Mr. Moss and the company was verbal, and no one who was present and heard this contract made testified in this case. The witness Wynn testified that neither the attendance bonus nor metal bonus was paid to him in lieu of wages, and Mr. Glascock, superintendent of the Aluminum Company, states that he was not present when Mr. Moss was employed, but that it is the rule of the company to consider the contract with their employees at so many cents per hour, and in this case it was 31% cents, and that in cases where bonuses are paid to employees like Mr. Moss, ‘we consider that an additional, reward for additional effort paid voluntarily by the employer.’ This witness also states that the payment of this bonus was a matter of general knowledge among the employees that were working in the pot rooms.”

Section 2 (c) of the act provides as follows:

“ ‘Average weekly wages’ shall mean the earnings of the injured employee in the employment in which he was working at the time of the injury. . . . Wherever allowances of any character made to an employee in lieu of wages are specified as part of the wage contract, they shall be deemed a part of his earnings.”

While no one testified who was present when deceased was employed, we are of the opinion that the facts and circumstances, shown by the record,’are such as to justify us in presuming that the company contracted to pay deceased these bonuses as. a part of'his compensation. We base this finding upon the fact that the agreement *254 of the parties was within the knowledge of the company, and it failed to disclose-same; that the company paid these bonuses to deceased, and to its other three hundred employees in the pot department, each week; that the sums so paid were fixed and uniform; that the employees knew they were to receive these bonuses each week; that the company had followed this uniform system of paying bonuses for several years; that a notice as to the payment of these bonuses was posted by the company in the pot room where deceased worked. In such circumstances, had deceased sued for such bonuses as he had earned, according to such schedule, the company would not be heard to say that it had no contract with him.

An industrial corporation may, at Christmas, or upon some other special occasion, make gifts to its employees, but it is unreasonable to believe that it is going to contribute thousands of dollars each week to its employees in addition to the wages contracted to be. paid.

Merely denominating these items “bonus” does not necessarily constitute them such. Likely the term was used to distinguish it from the regular fixed wage. These weekly bonuses were not gifts, but were compensation for services.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 1052, 152 Tenn. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-aluminum-co-of-america-tenn-1925.