St. Pierre v. St. Regis Paper Co.

386 A.2d 714, 1978 Me. LEXIS 880
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 17, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 386 A.2d 714 (St. Pierre v. St. Regis Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Pierre v. St. Regis Paper Co., 386 A.2d 714, 1978 Me. LEXIS 880 (Me. 1978).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

Charles J. St. Pierre petitioned the Industrial Accident Commission, pursuant to 39 M.R.S.A. § 102 (Supp.1973), to annul or amend an agreement for compensation he had entered into with his employer, St. Regis Paper Company (St. Regis). The commission dismissed his petition and, after obtaining the necessary pro forma decree from the Washington County Superior Court, the employee appealed to this court.

We sustain the appeal.

On April 1, 1976, petitioner St. Pierre suffered a compensable injury during his sixth week of employment by St. Regis as a laborer. Shortly thereafter, St. Regis mailed St. Pierre, who is a resident of Blue River in the Province of Quebec, a proposed agreement for compensation stating, in part, that St. Pierre’s “average weekly wage” was $174.89. The employee signed and returned the agreement as directed. In March 1977 St. Pierre filed the petition involved in the present appeal, claiming a “mutual mistake” had been made in the agreement as to the correct amount of his average weekly wage. He alleged that his average weekly earnings during the year *716 prior to his employment by St. Regis amounted to much more than the $174.89 figure and that at the time he signed the agreement “I could not read or write the English language . . . , the agreement was not explained to me, the only thing I was told relative to the agreement was that I had to sign it in order to get my benefits.”

The parties stipulated to the following facts. Prior to St. Pierre’s employment with St. Regis, he had been employed by Joseph Paradis 1 from August 1975 to February 1976. During the 20 weeks of his job with Paradis, he had earned an average of $223.82 per week. St. Pierre’s wages varied from $119.23 to $276.06 per week during his six weeks of employment by St. Regis. In the year prior to the date of St. Pierre’s injury, Maurice Bonneau, whom the parties now stipulate to be a “comparable employee” of St. Regis, had earned an average of $174.89 per week.

After ruling that subsection 2(C) of 39 M.R.S.A. § 2 stated the controlling method for computing St. Pierre’s “average weekly wages” for purposes of determining his statutory workmen’s compensation benefits, the commission dismissed the petition because it concluded that the figure of $174.89, based upon the earnings of the “comparable employee” Bonneau, correctly represented St. Pierre’s “average weekly wages” under the applicable standard of computation. Implicit in the commission’s dismissal was its conclusion that no mistake, whether of “fact” or “law,” had been made by either party in signing the compensation agreement.

After an employer and employee enter into an agreement for compensation, which is duly approved, either party may petition the commission for annulment pursuant to 39 M.R.S.A. § 102 (Supp.1973). Section 102 permits the commission to annul the agreement “provided it finds that such agreement was entered into through mistake of fact by said petitioner or through fraud.” (Emphasis added) Although petitioner St. Pierre alleged that a “mutual mistake of fact” had taken place, the statute clearly permits the commission to grant an annulment upon finding a mistake on the part of the petitioner alone. On the record before us, we find that a mistake did occur in the manner of computing St. Pierre’s average weekly wages and that in signing the compensation agreement petitioner labored under a “mistake of fact” within the meaning of section 102.

The computation of an injured employee’s “average gross weekly wages” is an essential step in determining the rate of compensation due from his employer to him, or to his dependents in the event death results from his injury. See 39 M.R.S.A. §§ 54, 55, 58 (Supp.1977). Section 2(2) of Title 39 sets forth several methods of computing the injured employee’s “ ‘average weekly wages, earnings or salary.’ ” The method of computation applicable to the employee depends upon the length of his employment by his employer at the time of injury and the degree to which his weekly wages were constant or variable. The three methods prescribed in section 2(2) “are not to be applied in the alternative as a matter of choice, but are to be applied in the order stated, to the facts as they exist in the particular case, upon the principle of resorting to the best evidence obtainable in determining the employee’s average wage.” Thibeault’s Case, 119 Me. 336, 338, 111 A. 491, 492 (1920).

Paragraph A of section 2(2) establishes the usual rule of computation. It provides:

‘Average weekly wages, earnings or salary’ of an injured employee shall be taken as the amount which he was receiving at the time of the injury for the hours and days constituting a regular full working week in the employment or occupation in which he was engaged when injured, provided such employment or occupation had continued on the part of the *717 employer for at least 200 full working days during the year immediately preceding said injury. Except that in the case of piece workers and other employees whose wages during said year have generally varied from week to week, such wages shall be averaged in accordance with the method provided under paragraph B.” (Emphasis added)

In the present case the commissipn correctly ruled that St. Pierre’s wages could not be determined by applying the first or usual method. The employment or occupation in which St. Pierre was engaged when injured had not continued “on the part of the employer,” i. e., St. Regis, 2 for at least 200 full working days during the year immediately preceding his injury. .

■ The commission next concluded that the method of computation contained in paragraph B of section 2(2) also was inapplicable to determine petitioner’s “average weekly wages.” That paragraph provides:

“In case such employment or occupation had not so continued for said 200 full working days, the ‘average weekly wages, earnings or salary’ shall be determined by dividing the entire amount of wages or salary earned therein by the injured employee during said immediately preceding year, by the total number of weeks, any part of which the employee worked, during the same period. The week in which employment began, if it began during the year immediately preceding the injury, and the week in which the injury occurred, together with the amounts earned in said weeks, shall not be considered in computations under this paragraph if their inclusion would reduce said ‘average weekly wages, earnings or salary.' ” (Emphasis added)

St. Pierre’s counsel contends that on its face paragraph B applies because “such employment or occupation had not so continued for said 200 full working days,” and to that extent we agree. Counsel goes on to argue, however, that method B would average the entire amount that St. Pierre earned during the immediately preceding year in the employ of either St. Regis or Joseph Paradis; St. Pierre in working for Paradis was, his counsel contends, working in the same “occupation” as when working for St. Regis. As to this asserted construction of paragraph B we do not agree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 A.2d 714, 1978 Me. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-pierre-v-st-regis-paper-co-me-1978.