The employee was injured while working on a milling machine on April 29, 1920. As a result of his injury the first phalange of the ring finger on the left hand was amputated. His average weekly wages were $24.96. He was paid compensation to December 2,1920.. On a rehearing of the case it was found that the injured finger was sensitive, the stump thinly covered with skin, and that there may be a filament of “nerve caught in the end or near the surface where it strikes when the hand is working;” that the employee obtained employment in a grocery store but was unable to do the work because of the condition of his finger, and on this account cannot perform “general heavy work; ” and that he had a partial earning capacity of $12 a week. He was awarded compensation of $8.64 a week, that being two thirds of the difference between $12 and his former weekly wages of $24.96 from December 3, 1920, to January 3, 1921, to continue under the provisions of the statute. The insurer appealed from the decree ' of the Superior Court affirming the findings of the Industrial Accident Board, on the ground that there was no evidence that the employee was incapacitated from doing the work of operating a milling machine at which work he was employed when injured.
St. 1914, c. 708, § 5, G. L. c. 152, § 35, provides that while incapacity for work resulting from the injury is partial, the injured employee shall receive a weekly compensation equal to sixty-six
So ordered.