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Snyder Oil Co. v. Embree

Colorado Court of Appeals. Division II
May 21, 1992
839 P.2d 494 (Colo. App. 1992)

Summary

In Snyder Oil v. Embree, 839 P.2d 494 (Colo.App. 1992), the Colorado Court of Appeals held that section 8-42-110(3), 3B C.R.S. (1990 Supp.), of the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act did not limit the liability of petitioners Snyder Oil Company and its insurer, the Colorado Compensation Insurance Authority, for permanent partial disability suffered by a disabled employee, respondent Frank E. Embree, at Embree's preinjury rate of pay. The court of appeals concluded that the statute was inapplicable because Embree's work-related injury resulted in a decrease in remuneration he previously received from concurrent employers.

Summary of this case from Snyder Oil Company v. Embree

Opinion

No. 91CA0158

Decided May 21, 1992. Rehearing Denied June 25, 1992. Certiorari Granted November 9, 1992 (92SC437).

Certiorari Granted on the following issues: Whether the court of appeals erred in concluding that § 8-42-110(3), 3B C.R.S. (1990 Supp.), does not apply when an employee's work-related injury causes an actual decrease in his remuneration from concurrent employers.

Review of Order from the Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado

Paul Tochtrop, for Petitioners.

Rebecca A. Koppes, for Respondent Frank Embree.

Gale A. Norton, Attorney General, Raymond T. Slaughter, Chief Deputy Attorney General, Timothy M. Tymkovich, Solicitor General, Jill M.M. Gallet, Assistant Attorney General, for Respondents Industrial Claim Appeals Office and Director, Division of Labor.


Snyder Oil Company (employer) seeks review of a final order of the Industrial Claim Appeals Panel determining permanent disability of Frank Embree (claimant) as a working unit rather than limiting such disability to a medical impairment rating. We affirm.

Claimant worked for employer while he also concurrently maintained a small dairy farm. He suffered an admitted work-related injury while working for employer which rendered him unable to perform the duties on the dairy farm as he had for 22 years prior to his injury.

Claimant returned to his employment with employer at his pre-injury rate of pay and was provided the usual wage adjustments. However, while the evidence reflected that claimant earned income estimated to be $2,000 per year from the dairy farm and, although his wife continued to work the farm after claimant's injury, his testimony disclosed that his income for the current year, including that from the dairy operation, would be reduced, in part, because of his inability to perform the farm work.

Relying on St. Mary's Church Mission v. Industrial Commission, 735 P.2d 902 (Colo.App. 1986), the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found that claimant's profits from his secondary farming operation were part of his "pre-injury rate of pay." Based on this interpretation, the ALJ concluded that the employer had not shown that the claimant was continued at his pre-injury rate of pay with the usual wage adjustments. The ALJ determined, therefore, that Colo. Sess. Laws 1990, ch. 62, § 8-42-110(3) at 499 did not limit the claimant's permanent partial disability benefits.

In affirming the ALJ's order, the Panel observed that it was unclear whether the drafters of § 8-42-110(3) had contemplated the situation in which claimant received his "pre-injury rate of pay" from multiple sources. Nevertheless, referring to Jefferson County Public Schools v. Dragoo, 765 P.2d 636 (Colo.App. 1988) and St. Mary's Church Mission v. Industrial Commission, supra, the Panel agreed that an employee's rate of pay may include the remuneration from concurrent employers and adhered to the position that § 8-42-110(3) does not apply when claimant proves that an actual wage decrease has occurred, even in a concurrent employment.

The Panel concluded, therefore, that the ALJ had properly determined that § 8-42-110(3) did not apply unless claimant receives his total pre-injury rate of pay and usual wage adjustments from all sources. We agree.

At the times pertinent here, § 8-42-110(3) provided in pertinent part:

"In any case where an employer reemploys or continues the disabled employee at work in the employment of the employer at the employee's pre-injury rate of pay and extends to the employee the usual wage adjustments, the employee's permanent partial disability award shall be limited to permanent medical impairment or a payment under section 8-42-107, whichever is less. (Repealed effective July 1, 1991, Colo. Sess. Laws 1991 at 1312)"

Employer notes that § 8-42-110(3) refers to any case in which "an employer" continues to employ or reemploys the injured worker. Therefore, it asserts that the statute was not intended to limit liability for permanent disability only when all employers of a claimant return him to employment. It argues that such a condition is one over which an individual employer has no control, particularly if, as here, the claimant is his own employer and can, to some extent, control his additional employment. Further, it contends that the interpretation adopted by the Panel frustrates the purpose of the statute to encourage reemployment of injured workers. We are not persuaded by these arguments.

In the construction of statutes, the singular includes the plural. Section 2-4-102, C.R.S. (1980 Repl. Vol. 1B); Kelln v. Department of Revenue, 719 P.2d 358 (Colo.App. 1986). Therefore, contrary to the employer's arguments, the use of the term "employer" as opposed to the term "employers" is without significance.

Furthermore, we note that, in enacting § 8-42-110(3), the General Assembly provided an economic incentive to employers to continue the employment of certain disabled employees who are capable of continuing to make positive contributions in the work place. When applicable, the statute provides a fair formula for compensation to the injured worker which is, however, inevitably in an amount less than that which a permanent partially disabled employee not continued or reemployed would receive. See Fulton v. King Soopers, 811 P.2d 421 (Colo.App. 1990), aff'd, 823 P.2d 709 (Colo. 1992).

Thus, the statute benefits those employers that recognize the value of trusted and experienced employees who, with appropriate adjustments, can continue after an industrial injury to provide their labor and expertise in the work place. Conversely, in our view, the General Assembly did not intend such employees to be penalized if injuries occasioned by their labor for their principal employer result in reduced income from other employment sources.

This interpretation of the statute is not contrary to the concern expressed by the Supreme Court in Fulton, supra, that if the acts required to trigger the statutory limitation were outside the control of the employer, "[t]he incentive provided by the statute [to the employer] would be meaningless." Fulton v. King Soopers, supra. Our construction of § 8-42-110(3) provides an incentive to all employers to continue their employees at their pre-injury rate of pay with the usual wage adjustments in order to trigger the statutory limitation.

In Fulton, supra, the court comments on the fact that "a union decision to advance an employee is not a usual wage adjustment." Thus, the court determined, as a matter of law, that delayed union advancement is not in the nature of a wage or an adjustment to wages, such as recognized benefits and actual earnings received, and other accoutrements of employment, including loss of ability to do certain work functions. See Boice v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 800 P.2d 1339 (Colo.App. 1990).

Here, as in St. Mary's Church Mission, supra, specific earnings from concurrent employment determine whether claimant would receive or the extent to which claimant would receive a workers' compensation benefit. As the statute is applied to the primary employer here, the employer is still capable of controlling its own compliance with the statutory requirements that trigger the limitation on disability compensation, unlike the employer in Fulton, vis-a-vis decisions made independently by a labor organization.

Application of the statutory limitation in this instance would confer a benefit upon the employer but would result in a detriment to the employee. And, unlike the situation in Fulton in which the court focused on the employee's failure to prove his inability to perform his required duties and to earn wages and benefits as before his injury, here, the ALJ expressly found that the employee could no longer perform the duties required by his concurrent employment with a corresponding loss of income. The exceptional circumstances here, that the employee was self-employed in his concurrent employment, does not change the nature of this finding.

Thus, in the case of multiple employers, the equities of the Workers' Compensation Act require us to look beyond the single employer because the statute's intent is to benefit both employers and employees. See Fulton v. King Soopers, supra.

If an employee is continued or reemployed at his pre-injury rate of pay and receives the wage adjustments granted to other employees with comparable status, § 8-42-110(3) operates to limit the applicable workers' compensation award because "pre-injury rate" and "the usual wage adjustments" received by the worker leave him or her without continuing wage loss. It follows, then, that if a worker is continued or reemployed at less than the pre-injury rate, or if such worker cannot receive bonuses, raises, promotions or other "usual wage adjustments" because of, or on account of, his or her permanent partial disability, § 8-42-110(3) cannot apply and the person must be compensated for the disability.

In the St. Mary's Church Mission case, a division of this court held that, for purposes of determining average weekly wage pursuant to §§ 8-47-101(3) and 8-47-101(4), C.R.S. (1986 Repl. Vol. 3B), it was appropriate to combine the weekly wages from five part-time jobs concurrently held by the employee because the "injury clearly precluded [her] from continuing to earn as she had previously," and that such was "a fair computation of the true average weekly wage." (emphasis added) See Jefferson County Public Schools v. Dragoo, supra.

We conclude that similar reasoning must be applied under the facts here and, thus, mandates consideration of income from concurrent employment for purposes of determining whether § 8-42-110(3) is applicable. While this may result in some cost to employers, a different result would be contrary to the humanitarian purposes underlying the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act. See St. Mary's Church Mission v. Industrial Commission, supra.

Competing equities between an employer and an employee should be resolved in the worker's favor. See 2 A. Larson, Workmen's Compensation Law § 60.32(c) (1987). Thus, when a permanent partial disability suffered in the course or scope of a worker's principal employment results in reduced compensation from concurrent employers, it is appropriate to conclude that § 8-42-110(3) does not apply. To hold otherwise would be to penalize the injured employee by withholding the full measure of workers' compensation benefits, even though a covered injury received in the course of his or her principal employment has caused a deficiency in the whole person such that remuneration from concurrent employment is disadvantageously affected and the worker's overall income is reduced.

Such intent by the General Assembly cannot be discerned from the plain language of § 8-42-110(3). Indeed, the emphasis in the statute which the General Assembly placed on "pre-injury rate of pay" and "the usual wage adjustments" implies that, as a matter of policy, the pre-injury compensation from concurrent employers may not be reduced either.

Accordingly, we conclude that § 8-42-110(3) does not apply when a work-related injury causes an actual decrease in remuneration from concurrent employers. We, therefore, adopt the Panel's conclusions as our own.

The order is affirmed.

JUDGE TURSI concurs.

JUDGE ROTHENBERG dissents.


Summaries of

Snyder Oil Co. v. Embree

Colorado Court of Appeals. Division II
May 21, 1992
839 P.2d 494 (Colo. App. 1992)

In Snyder Oil v. Embree, 839 P.2d 494 (Colo.App. 1992), the Colorado Court of Appeals held that section 8-42-110(3), 3B C.R.S. (1990 Supp.), of the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act did not limit the liability of petitioners Snyder Oil Company and its insurer, the Colorado Compensation Insurance Authority, for permanent partial disability suffered by a disabled employee, respondent Frank E. Embree, at Embree's preinjury rate of pay. The court of appeals concluded that the statute was inapplicable because Embree's work-related injury resulted in a decrease in remuneration he previously received from concurrent employers.

Summary of this case from Snyder Oil Company v. Embree

competing equities between employee and employer should be resolved in favor of the employee

Summary of this case from Hartman v. Clarke County Homemakers
Case details for

Snyder Oil Co. v. Embree

Case Details

Full title:Snyder Oil Company and Colorado Compensation Insurance Authority…

Court:Colorado Court of Appeals. Division II

Date published: May 21, 1992

Citations

839 P.2d 494 (Colo. App. 1992)

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