Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Williams

15 S.W.2d 553
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1929
DocketNo. 1192—5196
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 553 (Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Williams, 15 S.W.2d 553 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

CRITZ, J.

Clifford E. Williams, an employe of Humble Oil & Refining Company, was on January 12, 1927, the husband of Ruby May Williams, and on said date received injuries in the course of his employment with said company from which he died. Within the time required by law the wife of deceased gave notice of injury to the oil company and to Petroleum Casualty Company, and within six months after said injury filed \claim for compensation with the Industrial Accident Board of this state. Thereafter, on June 7, 1927, said board made an award in favor of said surviving wife, ■Ruby May Williams, for the sum of $20 per week, for a period of 360 weeks, said sum ■being the maximum amount allowed by law. Said award was based on the total earnings of deceased during the preceding year. Th'e Humble Oil & Refining Company carried compensation insurance with Petroleum Casualty Company covering its employes.

. Prom the award of the Industrial Accident Board, the casualty company appealed to the district court of liberty county, the county in which the 'injury occurred, asking that said award be annulled and set aside. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and the trial court set aside the award of the Accident Board and rendered judgment for said surviving wife, Ruby May Williams, for the sum of $15.58 for and during the full period allowed by law,. 360 weeks. •The case was duly appealed by Ruby May -Williams to the Court of Civil Appeals for .the Ninth District, at Beaumont, which court •reversed the judgment of the district court and rendered judgment for said surviving wife for jthe sum of $20 per week for the full period of 360 weeks, being the same amount allowed 'by the Board. 4 S.W.(2d) 631. The cáse is now before this court on ■writ of error granted on application of Petroleum Casualty Company, the insurer.

The one and only question involved in this appeal is the amount of compensation due.

• -The ease was tried in the district court on an agreed statement of facts, and no other testimony was heard. Attached to the agreed statement of facts is the employment or service record of the deceased, which shows that on January 12, 1927, the date of injury which resulted in death, the deceased was working under the classification of “helper,” and had been working under such classification continuously since October 1, 1926, or about 3 months and 12 days, and as such helper was drawing wages of $4.50 pear day. Said employment record further shows that during the 12 months preceding the injury the deceased had worked 229.3 days as “helper,” which includes 7 days’ vacation “on basis as helper”; 22.3 days as “derrick-man,” at $5 per day; 10 days as “gang pusher,” at $165 per month; 100 days as “gang pusher” at $180 per month; and 2 days as “pumper,” at $5 per day. The above classes of labor, or employment, were intermingled and interspersed throughout the year. It will thus be seen that, according to the agreed employment, or service record, the deceased had worked during the preceding 12 months 363.6 days for the same employer at various classes of employments.

In order to arrive at the compensation to be allowed in this case it is necessary to apply the above agreed employment record to the statute, and especially* to the subdivisions

1, 2, and 3 of section 1 of article 8309, R. O. S. of Texas 1925. Said 'subdivisions are as follows:

1. “If the injured employé shall have worked in the employment in which he was working at the time of the injury, whether for the same employer or not, substantially the whole of the year immediately preceding the injury, his average annual wages shall consist of three hundred times the average daily wage or salary which he shall have earned in such employment during the days when so employed.

“2. If the injured employé shall not have worked in such employment during substantially the whole of the year, his average annual wages shall consist of three hundred times the average daily wage or salary which an employé of the same class working substantially the whole of such immediately preceding year in the same or in a similar employment in the same or a neighboring place, shall have earned in such employment during the days when so employed.

“3. When by reason of the shortness of the'time of the employment of the employé, or other employé engaged in the same class of work in the manner and for the length of time specified in the above subsections 1 and 2, or other good and sufficient reasons it is impracticable to compute the average weekly wages as above defined, it shall be computed by the board in any manner which may seem just and fair to both parties.”

Before applying the provisions'of the statute to the service record of the deceased it is necessary for us to construe the statute [555]*555and to ascertain what is meant by a year, and also what is meant by the word substantially as used in subdivisions 1 and 2.

Both subdivisions 1 and 2 provide that the average annual wages shall consist of 300 times the average daily wages. Also, subdivision 5 of section 1 of the same article provides: “The average weekly wages of an employe shall be one fifty-second part of the average annual wages.” It is thus made clear to us that, as defined by the law itself, when an employs has worked as much as 300 days during the 12 months immediately preceding the injury he has worked a year of labor within the meaning of the statute. In our opinion it would be placing an erroneous and unjust construction upon the statute to hold that under its provisions an employe must work 365 days in order to work a year, and' at the same time compute his average annual wages by multiplying his actual average daily wages by only 300. A statute should not be given a construction that leads to an absurdity or thwarts the plain purposes of the Legislature. Trimmier v. Carlton, 116 Tex. 572, 296 S. W. 1070. This construction is further fortified by the fact that it is known of all men, and judicially known by this court, that as a general rule labor does not worlr on the Sabbath except where engaged in those occupations in which necessity compels them to do so. After we deduct 52 Sundays from the 365 days, barring leap year, we have left but 313 working days. Under article 4591, R. C. S. 1925, there are 11 legal holidays that are generally observed by our citizens in all walks of life. Thus it will be seen that the Legislature has seen fit to define 300 days as a year of labor for the average laborer.

We are further of the opinion that substantially a year, within the meaning of subdivisions 1 and 2, is exactly 300 days or close ■to, or near to 300 days. It may be slightly more than 300 days or slightly less than 300 days. That is to say substantially a year means a year or about a year, or so near a year as to be a year for all practical purposes. A reading of the three subdivisions together, and a viewing of same in the light of the entire act, will show any other construction will lead to confusion. Further, it would be doing violence to the express purpose of the act to give the word substantial an absolute literal meaning or definition, as to do so would lead to a holding that the Legislature provided a measure of compensation under subdivision 1 for about or nearly a year, or close to a year, but failed to do so for exactly a year, and further, such a construction would .lead to the conclusion that the act nowhere provides a measure of compensation for exactly a year, except under the general provisions of subdivision 3.

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