Redfern v. Sparks-Withington Co.

268 N.W.2d 28, 403 Mich. 63, 1978 Mich. LEXIS 326
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1978
DocketDocket Nos. 54947, 55329, 56190, 56352. (Calendar Nos. 7-10)
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 268 N.W.2d 28 (Redfern v. Sparks-Withington Co.) 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
Redfern v. Sparks-Withington Co., 268 N.W.2d 28, 403 Mich. 63, 1978 Mich. LEXIS 326 (Mich. 1978).

Opinions

Levin, J.

Anna Redfern, Joseph Pastaleniec and Walter L. Legut suffered work-related injuries, and compensation for general disability was paid.

In these cases, consolidated on appeal, the workers asserted that as a consequence of their physical injuries they suffered mental illness or cognitive loss constituting "incurable insanity or imbecility” and, therefore, additional compensation should be paid for "total and permanent disability".1

[71]*71The facts and history of the litigation are set forth in fns 2-4.

The Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board declared that

—while in its judgment Redfern’s mental illness did not constitute "incurable insanity”, it was obliged by Sprute v Herlihy Mid-Continent Co, 32 Mich App 574; 189 NW2d 89 (1971), to find that she was incurably insane and to award compensation for total and permanent disability;2

[72]*72—Pastaleniec’s "condition meets” the Sprute definition of incurable insanity;3

[73]*73—although in its judgment Legut was incurably insane, he did not qualify under the Sprute definition; and that his cognitive loss did not constitute imbecility.4

[75]*75The WCAB found for Redfern because although she seemed able to function normally away from work, her mental illness, as expressed in Sprute, "totally disabled” her from working. It found against Legut, even though it said his case was most appealing,5 because he was working and thus not "disabled”,6

[76]*76In Pastaleniec, there is an additional issue, whether the claimed mental illness was caused by the work injury. The companion case of Deziel v Difco Laboratories, Inc (After Remand), 403 Mich 1; 268 NW2d 1 (1978), controls that issue.

We hold that the Court of Appeals did not, in Sprute, correctly define the term "incurable insanity”, and that the WCAB’s definition, in Legut, of "imbecility” is also incorrect.7 Our conclusions are [77]*77stated in the penultimate paragraph of this opinion. We remand to the WCAB for further consideration of all three cases in light of this opinion and, in Pastaleniec, of the Deziel opinion.

I

We seek definitions of insanity and imbecility that serve the policies of the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act.

We agree with the Court of Appeals, in Sprute, that definitions of insanity developed for other purposes, e.g., in the areas of criminal law, civil commitment, testamentary or contractual capacity, would not serve the legislative purpose. Nor do we think that medical definitions should be determinative. Insanity is a legal term which doctors relate to their- own terminology with varying and sometimes opposing definitions; there is no consensus.

Before Sprute was decided, the WCAB declared that a worker is "insane” when his injury "affects [78]*78or destroys his mental capacity to the degree that he is deranged and unfit to be employed because of the unreliability of his behavior with concomitant danger to himself and others”. Borg v Fisher Body Division of General Motors, 1969 WCABO 1246, 1258.

In Sprute the Court of Appeals declared that the WCAB’s Borg test was "too restrictive” and specifically rejected the operative phrase "because of the unreliability of his behavior with concomitant danger to himself and others”. The Court, in partial agreement with the WCAB, declared that the test should be "consistent with the basic principle that the employee’s disabling condition makes him unfit for employment. Such a test would be designed to permit the fact finder to allow compensation only when the injury has affected the employee’s mental capacity to the extent that it precludes him from gainful employment". Sprute v Herlihy Mid-Continent Co, supra, pp 578-579 (emphasis supplied).

The Court then stated a test which has been applied in subsequent cases, including the three cases now before us:

"An employee is incurably insane under MCL 412.10(b)(6); MSA 17.160(b)(6), if the occupationally-related mental or emotional illness which impairs the employee’s mental processes is of totally disabling proportions and is likely to be of long and indefinite duration, thus making gainful employment impossible.” Sprute v Herlihy Mid-Continent Co, supra, p 579.8

[79]*79Sprute says, in effect, that a worker can recover total and permanent disability benefits for incurable insanity if

(1) he has a mental or emotional illness,

(2) the illness is work related,

(3) the impairment of his mental processes is of totally disabling proportions,

(4) it is likely to be of long and indefinite duration, and

(5) gainful employment is impossible.

We accept criteria 1, 2 and 4; the incapacity must be attributable to work-related mental illness expected to be of long duration. We do not accept criteria 3 and 5, requiring that the impairment of mental processes be totally disabling9 precluding gainful employment.

II

There are two broad categories of workers’ compensation benefits: scheduled benefits and general disability benefits.10 Scheduled benefits are awarded for specific medical losses without regard to whether there is a reduction of wage earning capacity;11 in general they are payable for permanent loss of a specific anatomical member or function, e.g., a foot, hand, sight in one eye. General disability benefits are awarded for a loss of wage [80]*80earning capacity even if there is no speciñc medical loss.12

Devastating specific losses enumerated in the statute, e.g., both legs or sight of both eyes, are deemed a "total and permanent disability”.13 "Incurable insanity or imbecility” is so enumerated.

Sprute and Borg both make "unfitness” for employment a precondition to qualification for total and permanent disability benefits.

With the exception, however, of a distinctive category, "loss of industrial use” of limbs, added to the total and permanent disability definition after its original formulation,14 entitlement to compensation for total and permanent disability does not depend on whether the loss affects wage earning capacity.

Since scheduled benefits for all specific losses, major or relatively minor, are payable without regard to loss of wage earning capacity, except for the distinctive and atypical "industrial use” loss, it would not be consonant with the design of the act to regard wage earning capacity as determinative of entitlement to total and permanent disability benefits for incurable insanity and imbecility alone.

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Bluebook (online)
268 N.W.2d 28, 403 Mich. 63, 1978 Mich. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redfern-v-sparks-withington-co-mich-1978.