25 A.D.2d 590 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1966
Appeal by the employer and its insurance carrier from a decision of the Workmen’s Compensation Board wherein a finding was made that all awards for claimant’s disability were subject to a wage expectancy. Claimant, Stephen Koutsakos, at the age of 18 was employed as a helper in the roofing business. On February 26, 1959 after having worked approximately two days, he fell from a roof approximately two and one-half stories and suffered fractures of the right leg, both heels and several vertebrae. Claimant was temporarily totally disabled and completely out of work for over a year. He continued to be partially disabled thereafter and he was eventually adjudged to be permanently partially disabled. Claimant introduced testimony by a union official that he could have joined the union and eventually, after working a year and a half, have become a journeyman roofer, or at least a mechanic whose hourly rate at that time was $2.75 per hour or $110 a week. Upon review the board found that if claimant were to remain in the roofing industry he could become a union mechanic and upon reaching his majority would be earning a salary of $110 per week. All awards were based upon this wage expectancy of $110 per week on the basis of subdivision 5 of section 14 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law which provides: “If it be established that the injured employee was a minor when injured, and that under normal conditions his wages would be expected to increase, that fact may