Sandal v. Tallman Oil Co.

281 N.W.2d 507, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1609
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 13, 1979
Docket48527
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 281 N.W.2d 507 (Sandal v. Tallman Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandal v. Tallman Oil Co., 281 N.W.2d 507, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1609 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

OTIS, Justice.

This is an appeal by Judith A. Sandal from a Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals affirmance of an order which determined that no further dependency benefits were payable on her claim. The claim had been accepted by the decedent Owen J. Sandal’s employer and insurer, 1 and pay *508 ments had been made until Compensation Judge Joseph Murray ruled, upon approving attorneys fees, that the payments exceeded the maximum allowed under Minn.St. 176.-111, subd. 21 which applies to dependents who are also entitled to social security survivor benefits.

The employee’s widow urges that Judge Murray improperly raised the statute as an affirmative defense to her claim on behalf of the respondents and misconstrued the statute’s measure of maximum payment. She contends that where an employee dies from a secondary complication, as here alleged, maximum payment is measured by the weekly wage at the time of the complication rather than the time of the original injury. As our examination of the record convinces us that the fact and amount, of her social security benefits were not in dispute, we hold that it was proper to apply the statute and, further, that maximum payment was properly measured by the earlier wage.

Owen Sandal contracted lead poisoning at age 19 in 1959 after two years of part-time work with leaded gasoline at a service station. His first claim for workers’ compensation benefits resulted in an award for temporary total disability in 1961. On appeal, an order was issued appointing neutral medical examiners to determine Sandal’s condition and whether it was work-related. The order noted that multiple sclerosis was suspected and that ulcerative colitis had been detected.

The medical report filed with the Industrial Commission diagnosed “chronic encephalopathy, toxic,” with no multiple sclerosis. No mention was made of the colitis. The commission’s decision ultimately released in June 1962 awarded temporary total disability benefits from 1959 and continuing, with liability apportioned between two employers and their insurers.

In 1963 Sandal succeeded in redetermining the weekly wage at $75 instead of $40, but was denied an increase to the maximum rate on the ground that he had not yet sustained 350 weeks of temporary total disability, at which point it would be deemed permanent, nor established any permanent disability in fact. Moreover, he was successfully attending college and might prove gainfully employable in the future. Although Sandal was severely incapacitated, he attended college part-time and earned a degree in accounting and business administration in 1967.

He filed a claim in 1969 for permanent partial disability and was found to have been disabled for more than 350 weeks and to be permanently disabled to the extent of 30 percent in each leg, 20 percent in one arm, and 15 percent in the other. He was awarded payment for the permanent partial disability as well as the statutory maximum healing period of 104 weeks of temporary total disability, but in accordance with usual commission practice he was not allowed to recover for the balance of the 350 weeks of temporary disability in addition.

Although no appeal was taken, Sandal petitioned to set aside or amend in July 1972 on the ground that this court had recently decided that recovery for 350 weeks of temporary total disability in addition to permanent partial was permitted. See, Mechling v. Jasper Stone Co. 293 Minn. 309, 198 N.W.2d 561 (1972). The petition was denied by the court of appeals and subsequently affirmed by this court in Sandal v. Tallman Oil Co. 298 Minn. 264, 214 N.W.2d 691 (1974).

Payments under the 1969 order were made through March 1974 when notice of discontinuance was filed on the ground that Sandal had been employed for several years. He filed a new claim in 1975 for six weeks of temporary total benefits, and for permanent total and supplemental benefits, asserting that the lead poisoning resulted in chronic colitis which had degenerated into cancer of the colon by June 1975. At that *509 time Sandal allegedly was earning over $1,500 per month. Both employers and insurers denied the allegation that the complications were work-related.

Owen Sandal died on January 5, 1976, and his widow filed a dependent’s petition. Withnell and State Auto decided to accept the claim with dismissal of the petition after initially denying liability, 2 and the insurer paid temporary total disability and supplemental benefits from June 1, 1975, to January 6,1976, and dependency benefits of $50 weekly from the date of death to March 28, 1977. It also withheld 25 percent in attorneys fees.

Judge Murray requested justification of the fees as independent of the 25 percent approved in the employee’s prior claims and held them payable in an order which also determined that the insurer had no further liability at that time for fees or benefits. The memorandum stated that the widow and two children were receiving $55.29 weekly in social security benefits each, and calculated that the total of $165.87, combined with the $50 weekly from workers’ compensation, exceeded the statutory maximum of 100 percent of Sandal’s $75 weekly wage at the time of the injury causing death. The court of appeals affirmed the order and the case is here on certiorari to review that decision.

In Reichert v. Victory Granite Co. 249 Minn. 407, 410, 82 N.W.2d 497, 500 (1957), we confirmed the rule in this jurisdiction that the law in effect at the time of an employee’s death governs the determination of maximum benefits for the dependents. The version of the statute in effect at the time of Owen Sandal’s death provided in part:

“The following provisions shall apply to any dependent entitled to receive weekly compensation benefits under this section as the result of the death of an employee, and who is also receiving or entitled to receive benefits under any government survivor program:
“(a) The combined total of weekly government survivor benefits and worker’s compensation death benefits provided under this section shall not exceed 100 percent of the weekly wage being earned by the deceased employee at the time of the injury causing his death; provided, however, that no state worker’s compensation death benefit shall be paid for any week in which the survivor benefits paid under the federal program, by themselves, exceed 100 percent of such weekly wage; * * *

Minn.St.1976 § 176.111, subd. 21. The threshold issue before us is whether it was proper to invoke the statute on the facts established.

Counsel for respondents contends that the fact and amount of federal survivor’s benefits is not ascertainable from the claim petition itself and thus no issue on that matter is raised by the pleadings. Such benefits are neither determined nor paid immediately upon death, and they fluctuate with the circumstances of the dependents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 N.W.2d 507, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandal-v-tallman-oil-co-minn-1979.