John BERNARD v. MEAD PUBLISHING PAPER DIVISION
2001 ME 15
Supreme Judicial Court of Maine
Decided Jan. 24, 2001.
766 A.2d 576
Argued Oct. 3, 2000.
John H. King Jr. (orally), Norman, Hanson & DeTroy, LLC, Portland, for employer.
Panel: WATHEN, C.J., and CLIFFORD, RUDMAN, DANA, SAUFLEY, ALEXANDER, and CALKINS, JJ.
CLIFFORD, J.
[¶ 1] Mead Publishing Paper Division appeals from a decision of a Hearing Officer of the Workers’ Compensation Board granting the petition for restoration of John Bernard and awarding ongoing partial benefits. Mead contends: (1) that Bernard is not entitled to benefits for incapacity because he did not experience a reduction in wages following his injury and was terminated from his employment for fault, and (2) that it was error for the Hearing Officer to apply the inflation factor to adjust Bernard‘s pre-injury wage, instead of first calculating the employee‘s weekly benefits based on a comparison of his unadjusted wages and then applying the inflation factor to the amount of benefits. We affirm the Hearing Officer‘s determination of incapacity, but agree with Mead that the Hearing Officer erred in the calculation of the inflation adjustment. Accordingly, we vacate the decision.
[¶ 2] Bernard suffered a work-related injury on May 19, 1987, when he was
[¶ 3] Bernard was subsequently terminated from employment in 1998 for violating a company no-smoking policy.1 He filed a petition for restoration in September of 1998. After a good faith work search, he obtained temporary part-time employment doing carpentry and remodeling work at Harvard University in March of 1999, establishing a post-injury work-capacity of $560 per week.
[¶ 4] The Hearing Officer granted Bernard‘s petition for restoration in August of 1999. Finding that Bernard was able to adjust his post-injury work to accommodate his injury, the Hearing Officer rejected Mead‘s argument that Bernard‘s post-injury employment for seven years with no loss of earnings required a finding that he suffered no loss of earning capacity. See Dufour v. Internal Med. Assocs., 1998 ME 169, ¶¶ 6-7, 713 A.2d 339, 340. The Hearing Officer also concluded that because Bernard‘s injury occurred prior to 1993 and his entitlement to partial benefits is governed by former
[¶ 5] The parties agree that Bernard‘s average weekly wage at the time of his injury was $870.15. In order to adjust Bernard‘s benefits for inflation pursuant to former
[¶ 6] The Hearing Officer granted the employer‘s motion for further findings of fact, but did not significantly alter his decision. We granted Mead‘s petition for appellate review pursuant to
I.
[¶ 7] Mead contends that, because Bernard returned to work after his injury with no reduction in his pre-injury wage, it was error for the Hearing Officer to conclude that Bernard suffered a loss of earning capacity as a result of his injury. We rejected a similar argument in Dufour, 1998 ME 169, ¶¶ 5-7, 713 A.2d at 340-41. In Dufour, the employee suffered a carpal tunnel injury while employed as an office supervisor. Id. ¶ 2, 713 A.2d at 339. She returned to her supervisory position without a reduction of earnings and accommodated her injury by “reduc[ing] typing and keyboard work by delegating data entry
[¶ 8] Bernard, like the employee in Dufour, was a supervisor who could accommodate his physical limitations resulting from the injury by effectively delegating all but “light-duty” assignments. It was not error for the Hearing Officer to find that Bernard continues to suffer a work-incapacity, notwithstanding his return to employment at his pre-injury wage for several years following his injury.
[¶ 9] Mead contends that Bernard‘s termination for fault requires a finding that Bernard is not incapacitated as a result of his injury. As the Hearing Officer concluded, Bernard was injured in 1987 and his entitlement to partial benefits is governed by former
II.
[¶ 10] Mead also contends that the Hearing Officer erred in its computation of the inflation adjustment. Former
While the incapacity for work resulting from the injury is partial, the employer shall pay the injured employee a weekly compensation equal to 2/3 the difference, due to the injury, between his average gross weekly wages, earnings or salary before the injury and the weekly wages, earnings or salary which he is able to earn after the injury, .... This weekly compensation shall be adjusted annually so that it continues to bear the same percentage relationship to the state average weekly wage, as computed by the Maine Unemployment Insurance Commission, as it did at the time of the injury, but in no case may the annual adjustment exceed the lesser of 5% or the actual percentage increase in the state average weekly wage for the previous year. The annual adjustment required by this section shall be made on the anniversary date of the injury, ....
[¶ 11] The Hearing Officer applied the inflation adjustment to Bernard‘s pre-injury wage and arrived at an adjusted average weekly wage of $1360. To determine Bernard‘s weekly compensation rate of $533.33, the Hearing Officer calculated two-thirds of the difference between his adjusted average weekly wage of $1360, and his post-injury earning capacity of $560. As Mead contends, the express language of section 55-A provides that the employee‘s “weekly compensation shall be adjusted annually“; it does not authorize the Hearing Officer to adjust the employee‘s average weekly wage.
[¶ 12] For total incapacity benefits, it makes no difference whether the inflation factor2 is applied to the pre-injury wage or
[¶ 13] The statute provides that the inflation factor is applied to the compensation rate. Allen v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 1999 ME 57, ¶ 7, 728 A.2d 121, 123; Saunders v. MacBride Dunham Mgmt., 1998 ME 72, ¶ 5, 708 A.2d 1030, 1032; Lagasse v. Hannaford Bros. Co., 497 A.2d 1112, 1116-17 (Me.1985); Bernard v. Cives Corp., 395 A.2d 1141, 1149-52 (Me.1978), and we have applied that language in keeping with the plain meaning of the legislation. Ordinarily, partial benefits are calculated by taking two-thirds of the difference between the unadjusted pre-injury and post-injury wages, and then multiplying that result by the inflation factor.3 In calculating Bernard‘s benefits, however, the Hearing Officer applied the inflation factor to the pre-injury wage and determined Bernard‘s partial incapacity benefits by taking two-thirds of the difference between his pre-injury wage adjusted by the inflation factor, and his post-injury wages.
[¶ 14] In a very limited kind of case, when the employee‘s post-injury earnings vary from week-to-week, and the employee‘s benefits are calculated according to a “varying rates” formula, i.e., based on a weekly computation of the difference between pre- and post-injury wages, we have construed the statute to authorize the application of the inflation adjustment to the pre-injury average weekly wage pursuant to the so-called “Arnold formula.” Lagasse, 497 A.2d at 1116. Pursuant to the Arnold formula, benefits are calculated by first applying the inflation factor to the employee‘s average weekly wage and then subtracting the post-injury earning capacity from that adjusted wage.4 Id. The Arnold formula is the only exception we have recognized to the general rule requiring application of the inflation factor to the employee‘s compensation, as opposed to the pre-injury wage. Moreover, in Lagasse, 497 A.2d at 1119, we made it clear that the Hearing Officer‘s approach was merely authorized; it was not required by the statute. Thus, the Arnold approach may be used, not in all varying rates cases, but only in those unique varying rates cases where calculation of compensation cannot rationally be undertaken otherwise.
[¶ 15] In contending that we should authorize the application of the inflation factor to other than the compensation rate and affirm the Hearing Officer‘s application of the inflation factor to the pre-injury wage, Bernard argues that the purpose of the inflation adjustment is to protect “injured workers against shrinkage in the value of the dollar caused by inflation, while simultaneously guaranteeing that during deflationary economic conditions, the entire system would not suffer from inability to make appropriate adjustments in compensation payments.” Bernard, 395 A.2d at 1148. Bernard contends that, in cases such as his, it is fairer and more consistent with the legislative intent to apply the inflation factor to the pre-injury wage. He points out that when the employee‘s injury dates back many years, construing the statute to require that the inflation factor be applied to weekly compensation could result in the employee receiving no benefits at all if the post-injury wage is greater, due solely to the effects of inflation, than the uninflated pre-injury
[¶ 16] Our workers’ compensation law is “uniquely statutory.” Goff v. Cent. Maine Power Co., 1998 ME 269, ¶ 8, 721 A.2d 182, 185. An employee‘s entitlement to an adjustment of benefits for inflation is governed by, and limited by, express statutory language. Saunders, 1998 ME 72, ¶ 5, 708 A.2d at 1032. “[O]ur Legislature has chosen to specifically address the issue of inflation by statutory enactment.”6 Id. As we noted in Allen v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 1999 ME 57, ¶ 7, 728 A.2d 121, 123, “both former sections 54-B and 55-A expressly provided for an adjustment of the employee‘s ‘weekly compensation,’ not the employee‘s pre-injury or post-injury wage.” Except for the exceptional case of varying rates compensation where the Arnold formula may be applied, the inflation factor must be applied to the weekly compensation, and not to pre- or post-injury wages. Id.
[¶ 17] Although Bernard contends that the application of the Arnold formula in more cases would result in a compensation rate that better accounts for the effects of inflation, the plain language of the statute does not provide for a broad use of the Arnold formula, and the legislature has not seen fit to change that language. The Hearing Officer erred in first adjusting the employee‘s pre-injury wage and then determining the employee‘s compensation by calculating two-thirds of the difference between that adjusted wage and his post-injury wage. On remand, the Hearing Officer must first determine Bernard‘s rate of compensation by calculating two-thirds of the difference between his unadjusted pre- and post-injury wages, and then applying the inflation factor to that compensation rate to adjust his benefits for inflation.
The entry is:
Decision of the Hearing Officer of the Workers’ Compensation Board vacated. Remanded to the Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DANA, J., with whom CALKINS, J., joins dissents and files opinion.
DANA, J., with whom CALKINS, J., joins, dissenting.
[¶ 18] I respectfully dissent. Because the Court considers itself a prisoner of Allen v. Bath Iron Works Corp., 1999 ME 57, ¶ 7, 728 A.2d 121, 123, it produces a decision that makes no sense.7 Unlike the
[¶ 19] The Court concludes its opinion with instructions to the hearing officer as follows:
On remand ... first determine Bernard‘s rate of compensation by calculating two-thirds of the difference between his unadjusted pre- and post-injury wages, and then applying the inflation factor to that compensation rate to adjust his benefits for inflation.
The difference between Bernard‘s “unadjusted pre- and post-injury wages” is $310.15.9 Two thirds of this difference is $206.77.10 The “inflation factor” we infer from the hearing officer‘s opinion is 1.563.11 Therefore, presumably, the hearing officer will award Mr. Bernard a 1999 benefit of $323.17.
[¶ 20] Removing the implicit inflation from Mr. Bernard‘s 1999 Harvard job produces a logical result. Had Mr. Bernard obtained his job at Harvard in 1987, we assume that he would have been paid $358.30.12 The “difference” would have been $511.87.13 Applying the inflation factor to two-thirds of this difference would yield a 1999 benefit of $533.33.14
[¶ 21] It will be observed that the hearing officer produced the same result by applying the inflation factor to the 1987 pre-injury wage and then awarding two-thirds of the difference between the equally inflation-adjusted wages. The Court scolds the hearing officer for applying the inflation factor to one of the two wages, rather than to two-thirds of the difference. Unfortunately, it is the Court that permits inflation to creep into its calculations twice to the legislatively unintended detriment of the employee.15
I would affirm the hearing officer.
Notes
| Pre-injury 1987 Wage | $870.15 |
| Post-injury 1999 Wage | $560.00 |
| Difference | $310.15 |
870.15 x Inflation Factor = 1360
Inflation Factor = 1360 / 870.15
Inflation Factor = 1.562948917
1987 Wage x Inflation Factor = 560.00
1987 Wage = 560 / 1.562948917
1987 Wage = $358.30
| Pre-injury 1987 Wage | $870.15 |
| Post-injury 1987 Wage | $358.30 |
| Difference | $511.85 |
