Pеtitioner City of Palo Alto as employer by its petition for writ of review seeks an order annulling, vacating and setting aside an order of the respondent Industrial Acei *306 dent Commission which awarded permanent disability payments to respondent Gaudin as an employee of the city.
The facts which are not in dispute reflect: That the employee as a police officer and member of the State Employees’ Retirement System was and is entitled to such retirement benefits for disability as are provided for local safety members under the provisions of the State Employees’ Retirement Law, 1 and to such benefits as workmen’s compensation or payments in lieu thereof as are authorized by special provisions of the Labor Code covering city policemen, city firemen and other local officers and employees within their scope; 2 that he received injuries on May 13,1962, (aggravated in May of 1963) arising out of and in the course of his employment which resulted in permanent disability of 41 per cent under Industrial Accident Commission procedures; and that as a result thereof he became entitled tо and has been allowed (1) a leave of absence with full salary in lieu of temporary disability payments for a period of one year terminating May 20, 1964, pursuant to the provisions of section 4850 of the Labor Code, 3 (2) medical, surgical, and hospital benefits pursuant to the provisions of sections 4852 and 4600-4605 of that code, and (3) effective May 21, 1964, 50 per cent of his final compensation for disability retirement allowance under the State Employees’ Retirement Act. The controversy is over the jurisdiction of the commission to allow permanent disability payments under sections 4658-4662 of the Labor Code. The parties stipulated to the percentage of permanent disability and that the amounts awarded as permanent disability payments, if allоwable, were properly computed.
Section 4853 of the Labor Code provides as follows: “Whenever such disability of any such officer or employee continues for a period beyond one year, such member shall thereafter be subject as to disability indemnity to the provisions of this division other than section 4850 during the remainder of the period of said disability or until the effective date of his retirement under the State Employees’ Retirement Act, and the leave of absence shall continue.”
In
City of Palo Alto
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Kidder)
(1959)
Faced with this decision, petitioner points to amendments of the provisions of section 4850 adopted in 1961 (Stats. 1961, ch. 1749, § 1, p. 3755) as manifesting an intent to change thе rule of the decision involving Kidder. The respective additions and deletions are as follows (additions are italicized and deletions are in brackets; portions relating to the persons covered are omitted) : “Whenever any . . . who is a member of the State Employees’ Retirement System is disabled, whether temporarily or permanently, by injury or illness arising out of and in the course of his duties, he shall become entitled, rеgardless of his period of service ... to leave of absence while so disabled without loss of salary, in lieu of temporary disability payments, if any, which would be payable under this chapter, for the period of such disability but not exceeding one year, or until suck earlier date as he is retired on permanent disability pension. ... If the employer is insured, the payments which, except for the provisions of this section, the insurer would be obligated to make as disability indemnity to the injured, the insurer may pay to the insured. [This section refers to temporary disability only.] ”
All parties agree that the effect of these amendments was to insure that the employee of the class covered would receive the leave of absence and his full salary for one year, if his disability continued so long, regardless of whether the disability was of temporary or permanent naturе.
4
Petitioner,
*308
however, attributes further consequences to the amendments. It correctly points out that, as recognized in
Kidder,
the words “until the effective date of his retirement” found in section 4853 must limit the application of the other provisions of division 4 of the Labor Code in some manner; that, as stated in
Kidder,
the limitation is imposed in connection with “such disability” as referred to at the beginning of section 4853; and that, as held in
Kidder,
that language must be interpreted as referring to the disability which was the subject of section 4850. At the time of the injury and at the time of the decision in
Kidder,
section 4850, as noted above, expressly recited, “This section refers to temporary disability only,”
5
and did not contain the reference “whether temporarily or permanently,” or other qualifying language of the 1961 amendments. The opinion in
Kidder
recites: “It seems apparent that the term ‘such disability’ as used in section 4853 must refer to the same disability covered in section 4850 since there is no other disability to which it might refer. By express provision in the latter section the disability therein referred to is temporary disability. We must conclude that the term ‘such disability’ as used in section 4853 refers to temporary disability оnly and not to temporary and/or permanent disability.”
(City of Palo Alto
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra,
On the basis of the foregoing, without reference to the other legislative history of article 7 and to the observations made thereon in the Kidder case, there is some plausibility to the argument that by the amendments the impact of the limitation in section 4853 was extended from a reference to the provisions of division 4 which рrovide payments for temporary disability to a general reference to the provisions of that division which provide for payments whether for temporary or for permanent disability or for both.
On the other hand no amendments were or have been made to section 4853 which ostensibly covers the situation whenever *309 disability continues for a period beyond the one year for which section 4850 provides special benefits. It would appear that such inaction by the Legislature is a tacit approval of the ultimate construction placed on section 4853 by Kidder, to wit, that it is no bar to the payment of permanent disability indemnity concurrently with a disability retirement pension. In any event, it compels further examination of Kidder, and the history of the development of the provisions of article 7 before accepting a conclusion that the Legislature by amending one section of a law intended to modify an established interpretation of another section.
In
Kidder
the opinion did state: “In effect, the basic question before this court is whether the disability referred to in section 4853 is permanent and/or tempоrary disability.” (
The amendments referred to were made in 1949. 6 They not only evidence an intention to remove the prohibition against payment for benefits for permanent disability, but demonstrate that the Legislature knew how to expressly prohibit them if so minded. Furthermore, it should be noted that since 1951 7 section 4850 has prescribed that the leave of absence without loss of salary is “in lieu of temporary disability payments under this chapter.” The insertion of the words “if any, which would be payable” between the words “payments” and “under” in 1961 need not be construed as changing the language to make the extra benefits payable in lieu of both temporary and permanent payments.
The conclusion that permanent disability benefits may be *310 paid despite retirement is furthеr buttressed by statutory history and judicial construction. The provisions involved in this case, article 7, were originally patterned on those contained in article 6 8 which relate to members of the California Highway Patrol. One significant distinction, however, was the express prohibition of permanent disability payments, alluded to above, which existed in the provisions of section 4853 from its аdoption in 1939 until its amendment in 1949, as contrasted with an express authorization for the payment of such benefits which was incorporated in parallel section 4803 from 1939 through 1943. 9 Provisions limiting payment of disability indemnity after the effective date of retirement, also referred to above, which were contained in section 4854 from 1939 to 1949 were dropped from the parallel seсtion 4804 in the 1943 amendments. 10
The provisions of article 6 as they read on their incorporation into the Labor Code, and prior to the amendments of 1939, have been construed as not prohibiting an award of compensation to a member of the highway patrol for permanent partial disability despite the fact that the employee had returned to work and was receiving a full salary.
(Department of Motor Vehicles
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(Dinan) (1939)
In
Department of Motor Vehicles
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Heed)
(1948)
Amendments to article 6 in 1939 and 1943 made it clear that the references in section 4803 and 4804 were to temporary disability only and deleted any mention to the date of retirement as a limiting factor.
11
The effect of these amendments was to give the disabled highway patrolman injured
*312
thereafter a right to collect a permanent disability award for a period cоncurrent with the special leave of absence with earnings without any offset for the period of the latter.
(Department of Motor Vehicles
v.
Industrial Acc. Com. (Cope)
(1947)
The article has not been amended since and it may be concluded from the decisions and the amendments that a highway patrolman in return for the year’s leave of absence with full pay has suffered no loss of benefits, except those that otherwise might be payable for temporary disability during such period as he receives such full pay.
The local officers and employees subject to the provisions of article 7 did not progress so rapidly. As noted above from 1939 to 1949 there was an express prohibition against the payment of benefits for permanent disability in section 4853, and both sections 4853 and 4854 referred to the dаte of retirement as a limiting factor. 12 A Senate Interim Committee on Workmen’s Compensation Benefits in 1947 reported a recommendation that section 4853 be amended by deleting the last paragraph with the following comment: “Under this provision firemen and policemen do not receive permanent disability awards if they receive a pension. As this provision was changed for all other employees of the State it was an apparent oversight that similar provisions relating to city firemen and policemen were not similarly changed.” (Report of Senate Interim Committee to the Senate on Workmen’s Compensation Benefits, Cal. Legislature, Fifty-Seventh Session, 1947, p. 89.)
It is concluded that the amendments referred to in Kidder not only merit the interpretation therein adjudged on analysis of their content, but also on analysis of the general scheme of the development of the provisions of protection for employees covered.
Finally, it is noted that whatever interrelationship of benefits may exist between disability pension or death benefits and disability or death indemnity benefits in other plans, 13 or be *313 tween death benefits under the retirement act and similar benеfits under workmen’s compensation, 14 such precedents are not controlling here. Prior to 1943 the retirement law expressly provided for a reduction of a retirement allowance or death benefit payable under the retirement act to the extent that workmen’s compensation benefits were available in the case of those employees сovered by articles 6 and 7 of the Labor Code. 15 In that year the Legislature withdrew the deduction and enacted provisions for subrogation. 16 Furthermore, it is noted that section 4661 of the Labor Code has been amended to permit concurrent award of temporary and permanent disability compensation. 17 In the face of this general program and policy it would be inconsistent to now reconsider, modify, and restrict Kidder on the basis of amendments to the law which are otherwise explained as expanding its benefits.
The award is affirmed.
Sullivan, P. J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 14,1965.
Notes
Gov. Code, tit. 2, div. 5, pt. 3, particularly §§ 20019, 20020, 20038.5, 20039, 21022 and 21294.
Lab. Code, div. 4, pt. 2, ch. 2, art. 7, §§ 4850-4854.
Compare the benefits provided by Lab. Code, §§ 4653-4657.
The Legislative Counsel’s Digest appended to Assembly Bill No. 2901, as introduced April 21, 1961, recites: “Amends § 4850, Lab. C. Makes firemen and law enforcement officers who are members of the State Employees’ Retirement System who sustain permanent disability eligible to leave of absence without loss of salary, in. lieu of temporary disability payments, if any, which would be payable, for not exceeding one year or until such earlier date as they are retired on permanent disability pension.” Petitioner has directed attention to similar language found in vol. 36, Journal of the State Bar of California, p. 789, under the heading “Selected 1960-1961 California Legislation.” In the latter the author states: “This section is amended to apply to permanent as well as temporary disability (cf.
City of Palo Alto
v.
Industrial Acc. Commission of Cal.,
175 C.A.2d 83,
This language, deleted in 1961, was added in 1949, together with the sentence which precedes it. One may speculate as to whether or not it was meant to merely apply to the provisions for reimbursing the employee out of any insurance that might exist, or to all the provisions of the section, in view of the contemporaneous amendment, hereinafter discussed, deleting the prohibitions on permanent disability payments. (Stats. 1949, ch. 1143, §§ 1, 4, pp. 2042-2043.)
Stats. 1949, ch. 1143, §§ 4, 5, p. 2043.
Stats. 1951, ch. 1378, § 1, p. 3299.
Compare: Stats. 1935, ch. 449, §§1-4, pp. 1494-1495, as amended and incorporated as article 6 of the Labor Code in 1937 (Stats. 1937, chs. 90 and 848, pp. 285-287 and 2366) with Stats. 1939, ch. 926, § 1, pp. 2603-2605, which added article 7.
Stats, 1939, ch. 902, § 3, p. 2519 and Stats. 1943, ch. 1137, § 1, p. 3082.
Stats. 1943, ch. 1137, § 2, p. 3082.
Stats. 1939, ch. 902, §§ 3 and 4, p. 2519; Stats. 1943, ch. 1137, §§ 1 and 2, p. 3082.
See
Mairani
v.
City of South San Francisco
(1948)
Attention has been directed to the Los Angeles and San Francisco systems. (See:
City of Los Angeles
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(Morse)
*
(Cal.App.)
A hearing was granted by the Supreme Court on August 5, 1964.
Lab. Code § 4707.
State Employees’ Retirement Act. §101; see Stats. 1943, ch. 640, § 21.5, p. 2275, and provisions of § 101 prior thereto.
Stats. 1943, ch. 1136, § 1, p. 3081, and see §§ 21202 and 21450-21455 of the Government Code.
Stats. 1945, ch. 1335, § 1, p. 2506; Stats. 1947, ch. 1132, § 1, p. 2572 and Stats. 1949, ch. 107, § 1, p. 346.
