Pascoe v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board

46 Cal. App. 3d 146, 120 Cal. Rptr. 199, 40 Cal. Comp. Cases 191, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1760
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 1975
DocketCiv. 13819
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 3d 146 (Pascoe v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pascoe v. Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board, 46 Cal. App. 3d 146, 120 Cal. Rptr. 199, 40 Cal. Comp. Cases 191, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1760 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

*150 Opinion

TAMURA, Acting P. J.

Petitioner seeks review and annulment of portions of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board’s 1 decision reducing temporary total disability benefits awarded her by the referee and setting aside a penalty which the referee had assessed against the employer’s insurer. The issues raised by the petition are: (1) The proper method of determining average weekly earnings for the purpose of computing benefits; (2) the sufficiency of the evidence as to the terms of petitioner’s employment; and (3) the propriety of the penalty assessed against respondent- insurer for unreasonably refusing to pay more than the minimum benefits.

Petitioner applied for an adjudication of her worker’s compensation claim against respondents Alta Vista Convalescent Hospital and its insurer, Argonaut Insurance Company. The testimony of the only two witnesses who testified at the referee’s hearing, petitioner and Judy Gileno (nee Busick), may be summarized as follows:

On August 19, 1969, petitioner applied to Alta Vista for a position as a nurse’s aide. She was then 22 years old and had successfully completed one year of nursing school. She had previously worked at Alta Vista as a nurse’s aide in 1966 but had left to take a better job with a doctor. The hospital administrator, Judy Gileno, remembered her as a valuable employee and agreed to hire her full time as a nurse’s aide. Petitioner was to begin work in about two weeks when a position would become available. It was agreed that her hours would be adjusted to avoid conflict with her nursing classes. The hospital needed good registered nurses and so Judy Gileno had petitioner promise that in a year’s time, upon receiving her nursing license, she would continue to work for the hospital at an appropriate increase in salaiy.
On August 24th Judy Gileno telephoned petitioner and asked her to work a full shift that day in place of an aide who was ill. Petitioner agreed and while working that evening suffered the severe back injury for which she claims compensation. She finished her shift that day and a full shift the next day before seeing a doctor who advised her to cease work immediately.

Petitioner completed her nursing studies and, having passed a state *151 examination, was licensed as a registered nurse in August of 1970. Except for a short period in 1971, when she worked as a registered nurse at $5 per hour, her injury has prevented her from working in spite of three corrective surgical operations.

Petitioner was paid at the rate of $1.75 per hour for the two days she worked. Judy Gileno testified that she had agreed to pay petitioner $2.15 per hour for the first 60 days, $2.25 thereafter and $5 per hour upon receiving her license as a registered nurse. She explained that $1.75 was a part-time rate because petitioner was substituting for a sick employee. Petitioner thought she had been offered $2.15 per hour but could not be sure.

Respondents took the position that petitioner had never been hired to work full time, or at a rate higher than $1.75 per hour, and therefore qualified only for the minimum compensation benefits which she had been receiving. Respondents introduced an employer’s report of industrial injury dated August 27, 1969, which reported petitioner’s “hours worked per week” as 16 and petitioner’s wages as $1.75 per hour. Judy Gileno acknowledged she had completed and signed the form. Respondents also introduced three pages of computer-printed payroll records. The parties stipulated the wage records showed that “nurse’s aid[e]s usually have been hired at the rate of $1.65 to $1.75 per hour and have been advanced to no more than $2.00 per hour.”

The referee found: (1) The work-related injury had caused temporary total disability; (2) petitioner’s earnings were $70 per week ($1.75 x 40 hours) from August 26, 1969 to November 3, 1969, $80 per week ($2 x 40 hours) from November 4, 1969 to July 8, 1970, 2 and maximum thereafter; and (3) by paying compensation at the minimum rate of $25 per week, respondent insurer had unreasonably refused benefits. The referee made an award in accordance with his findings of earnings, together with an additional 10 percent as a penalty for unreasonable refusal to pay more than the minimum benefits.

The board granted respondent’s petition for reconsideration, annulled the referee’s award, and entered new findings to the effect that petitioner’s average weekly earnings were minimal for the entire period and that accordingly no penalty was warranted.

*152 I

Petitioner’s main contention is that the board erred in the method used to compute her indemnity benefits for the period after July of 1970. We agree.

Labor Code section 4653, as applicable to this case, provided that compensation benefits for employees suffering temporary total disability shall be 65 percent of average weekly earnings. 3 “Average weekly earnings” is a term of art in the law of workers’ compensation referring to the earnings base or earning capacity used to compute indemnity payments. (2 Hanna, Cal. Law of Employee Injuries and Workmen's Compensation (2d ed.) § 12.01[1].) The method of computing average weekly earnings is set forth in Labor Code section 4453, reproduced in the margin. 4 Subdivision (d) of that section provides that when the employment is for less than 30 hours per week or where the formula set out in the preceding subdivisions “cannot reasonably and fairly be applied,” the “average weekly earning capacity” at the time of injury must be determined. As our Supreme Court has explained: “The purpose of this provision [Lab. Code, § 4453, subd. (d)] is to equalize for compensation purposes the position of the full-time, regularly employed worker whose earning capacity is merely a multiple of his daily wage and that of the worker whose wage at the time of injury may be aberrant'or otherwise a distorted basis for estimating true earning power.” (Argonaut Ins. Co. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 57 Cal.2d 589, 594 [21 Cal.Rptr. 545, 371 *153 P.2d 281].) Accordingly, the objective in such cases is to determine “true earning power” for, as stated in another decision, “earning capacity at the time of injury is the touchstone of average earnings in California.” (West v. Industrial Acc. Com., 79 Cal.App.2d 711, 722 [180 P.2d 972].)

In light of the foregoing principles, the board erred in failing to treat separately the period after July of 1970 when petitioner, pursuant to nursing studies she was undertaking at the time of her injuiy, became a registered nurse. The disputed factual issues regarding the terms of petitioner’s employment, which we consider in a later portion of this opinion, have no bearing on the proper computation of benefits for this later period.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. App. 3d 146, 120 Cal. Rptr. 199, 40 Cal. Comp. Cases 191, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pascoe-v-workmens-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1975.