247 A.2d 906 | R.I. | 1968
This is an employer’s petition for review of a decree of the workmen’s compensation commission awarding the respondent employee compensation for partial incapacity and was brought on the ground that the employee’s incapacity for work had ended. On January 18, 1968, the full commission entered a decree in which it found that the petitioner had failed to prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the employee’s incapacity had ended and ordered payment to him of partial compensation pursuant to G. L. 1956, §28-33-18, but not “* * * to exceed sixty percent of the difference between $128.00 per week and $100.00 per week.” From that decree the respondent has prosecuted an appeal to this court.
The record discloses that respondent is now employed as a schoolteacher at an annual salary of |5,200. It is not disputed that respondent is actually employed in the discharge of his teaching duties for a period of 40 weeks or that the annual salary is paid to him in 20 biweekly installments instead of in 26 biweekly installments, at his election, and that the school department considers this as being payment for services rendered over the period of 40 weeks and that •his weekly salary would amount to $130 per week.
The trial commissioner found that the weekly earnings of respondent from his school department employment were $130 a week and that, this being higher than his average weekly wage earned at the time of his injury, petitioner would not be required to pay any compensation for partial incapacity from September through June. Thereafter the trial commissioner entered a decree finding that the incapacity of respondent had not ended, and he ordered payments to respondent for partial incapacity in accordance with §28-33-18 but not to exceed $22 per week. The
Decision was rendered by the full commission on the appeal on-January 10, 1968. The full commission found, contrary to the findings of the trial commissioner, that the weekly wage of respondent was $100 a week on the basis of a 52-week year. This reflected the commission’s view that respondent was employed on an annual basis and that, regardless of how he elected to receive his compensation, under the statute he was earning a weekly wage of $100.
The question confronting us then is whether the full commission erred in construing the pertinent provision of §28-33-18 as it did. It is clear that its decision was based on its conclusion that because respondent was receiving an annual salary from the Providence school department, the statutory provision that he be paid the difference between his average weekly wage prior to injury and the weekly wage earned after the injury should be based upon a full year and averaged out to $100 a week. Section 28-33-18 provides, in pertinent part: “While the incapacity for work resulting from the injury is partial the employer shall pay the injured employee a weekly compensation equal to sixty per cent (60%) of the difference between his average weekly wages, earnings, or salary, before the injury and the weekly wages, earnings or salary which he earns thereafter, but not more than twenty-two dollars ($22.00) a week * * ))
In our opinion, the commission did not err in holding , that the statutory language “* * * weekly wages, earnings or salary which he earns thereafter * * *” contemplates
It is well settled that we do not go behind the findings of fact of the compensation commission absent a showing of fraud. Peloso, Inc. v. Peloso, 103 R. I. 294, 237 A.2d 320. It is sufficient that there be legally competent evidence in the record upon which the decision of the commission may rest. Corey v. Hassenfeld Bros., Inc., 100 R. I. 483, 217 A.2d 82. When the record discloses such supporting evidence, we have no alternative but to affirm the commission’s decree, and this is without regard to the fact that the record may also contain other evidence that is contrary to that relied upon by the commission. In the instant case the record contains evidence that the respondent was employed by the school department on an annual con
The respondent’s appeal is denied and dismissed, the decree appealed from is affirmed, and the cause is remanded to the workmen’s compensation commission for further proceedings.