Phillips v. Wohlfeld

10 So. 2d 258, 1942 La. App. LEXIS 242
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1942
DocketNo. 6520.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 258 (Phillips v. Wohlfeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Wohlfeld, 10 So. 2d 258, 1942 La. App. LEXIS 242 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiff instituted this suit for compensation for total and permanent disability. He made defendants his immediate employer, John F. Beasley, a sub-contractor of Nathan Wohlfeld, the contractor, and his compensation insurance carrier, Fidelity Casualty Company of New York.

Plaintiff alleged that he was employed as a steel worker by Beasley in the erection of a men's gymnasium building at the Louisiana State Normal College, at Natchitoches, Louisiana, and his wages were fixed at $10 per day for a five-day week. That in the course and scope of his employment a heavy steel beam, weighing several tons, fell on him and injured his left leg and arm and that neither limb has healed and will never heal, and that he is totally and permanently incapacitated to follow his usual line of work as a steel worker. Plaintiff prayed for compensation in the amount of $20 per week for a period of 400 weeks, beginning with the week he was injured, August 22, 1939, less a credit of 79 weeks' compensation already paid. He also prayed for $250 medical expenses he had incurred.

Defendants admit the employment and the rate of pay, as alleged by plaintiff. There is no serious dispute over the fact that plaintiff is totally and permanently incapacitated because of said accident as alleged from following his trade as a steel worker. It is defendants' contention that plaintiff is earning $40 per week as secretary and business manager of a steel worker's Union and that since he is earning more than the maximum amount of compensation allowed by the statute, he is not entitled to compensation and if entitled to compensation, it should be based on the Partial Disability clause of the Compensation Act (No. 20 of 1914, as amended, Par. 1 (c) of Sec. 8) which provides for payment in such cases of 65% of the difference between the wages at the time of injury and wages the injured employee is able to earn thereafter, which in the case at bar would be 65% of $10 or $6.50 per week.

It is admitted that plaintiff was at the time of trial and had been for about three months prior thereto earning $40 per week as secretary and business manager of a steel worker's Union, Local, in Shreveport, Louisiana; that his work required him to keep the books, which was performed principally by his wife, and to travel a great deal in looking after the interests of the members of the Local and in collecting permit fees from workers from other jurisdictions who had secured work in the area allotted by the Union to the Shreveport Local. No manual labor was required in the performance of plaintiff's duties with the Union. The position he held was awarded him by the members of the Union in their annual election of officers. He could be relieved of his duties in the same manner. *Page 260

The record makes it clear that plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for compensation. The only question for determination is whether he is entitled to compensation for total permanent disability to do any work of a reasonable character or for partial permanent disability to do any work of a reasonable character. In the first instance he should have judgment for $20 per week for a period not to exceed 400 weeks and in the second instance he should have judgment for $6.50 per week for a period not to exceed 300 weeks.

The lower court found that plaintiff was entitled to judgment for total and permanent disability and awarded judgment accordingly in the following opinion:

"Sumrall v. [E.I.] Du Pont [De Nemours ] Company [La.App.]1 So.2d 430, holds that the mere fact that plaintiff, a carpenter, was able to earn and did earn, after his injury, a considerable income as a contractor and superintendent, does not bar him from the recovery of compensation if he was disabled from doing the kind of work he was doing when injured, citing McQueen v. Union Indemnity Company, 18 La.App. 612, 136 So. 761, and Anderson v. May, La.App., 195 So. 783.

"In the former case a carpenter, after injury, worked as clerk and attendant at a store and filling station of his wife. The Court held that `work of any reasonable character means work that is reasonably of the same kind or of similar character as the one he was accustomed to perform.

"In the latter employment in a different line of work was held to be no bar to recovery for permanent disability.

"In the latest case, Lorch v. American Can Company [La.App.]5 So.2d 35, it was held that proof of inability to engage in work as a machinist which plaintiff had followed for 13 years, or any similar work, justified recovery for permanent total disability. In this case plaintiff suffered injury to one eye, not totally destroying it.

"Defendants rely upon Ulmer v. [E.I.] Du Pont [De Nemours Co., La.App.] 190 So. 175, which holds that where the injured employee continues to receive from his employer his usual wages, whether his services are commensurable with such wages or not, and where such wages are equal to or in excess of the maximum compensation that he could claim for the injury, a suit by such employee for compensation for the period during which said wages are being paid would be premature.

"In the case of Carpenter v. [E.I.] Du Pont [De Nemours ] Company [La.App.] 194 So. 99, it is held that the payment of wages under such circumstances is sufficiently akin to the payment of compensation to interrupt the running of the peremptive period.

"In Reeves v. Union Sulphur Company [La.App.] 193 So. 399, payment of full wages is held equivalent to compensation.

"The strongest decision in favor of defendants is that of the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, in the case of Carlino v. United States F. G. Co., 198 So. 278, which squarely holds that where wages equal to or in excess of maximum compensation are being paid by the employer whether the services rendered are commensurate or not with such wages, a suit for compensation is premature.

"But this case went to the Supreme Court on writs, being reported in 196 La. [400] 405, 199 So. 228. In the original opinion the view of the Court of Appeal was sustained, but on rehearing it was reversed, the Court holding that the payment of full wages could not bar an action by an injured employee to have his compensation fixed, but that compensation could not be recovered for the period during which wages equal to or in excess of the compensation had been paid. The insurer was denied credit for any excess paid by the employer, the Court holding that the wages took the place of compensation for the period in which they were paid. That payments in excess of compensation did not extend the period. The Ulmer case was discussed and overruled.

"It will be noted that in all the latter cases cited above, wages were paid by the employer, who owed compensation. In the present case wages were paid by a third person not concerned with the payment of compensation. It therefore cannot be contended that compensation has been paid in any form.

"The only ground remaining upon which defendants can succeed is that the evidence fails to establish that plaintiff was incapacitated from doing work of any reasonable character, as defined by the jurisprudence to mean, that is reasonably of the same kind or similar character that he was performing at the time of his injury, was accustomed to perform or trained to perform.

"Plaintiff had worked for 13 years and was working at the time of injury as a structural steel worker. That he is *Page 261 incapacitated from following this occupation is abundantly proven and not contested. Since his injury he has been employed by his local Union as business agent. This necessitates the keeping of books and some clerical work, which his wife does.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 258, 1942 La. App. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-wohlfeld-lactapp-1942.