189 A.D. 367 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
The average weekly wages of an injured employee constitute the basis upon which to compute compensation. (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 14.) In this instance the Industrial Commission used a letter, written to it by the employer, to determine the weekly wages. The employer wrote: “ Victuá Remo worked nights, working five nights a week of 12 hours each or 60 hrs. at 29c an hour, $17.40. In addition to this rate anyone in our employ a year was to receive 12% additional to which he was receiving at the time of the accident.” The employer inclosed with the letter a statement showing the earnings of the claimant during the previous year. This disclosed that the claimant worked for the employer during every week for fifty-two weeks; that he worked on the average sixty-one hours per week; that during the last ten weeks of his employment he was paid twenty-nine cents per hour, with a bonus of twelve per cent; that for the remaining forty-two weeks he was paid at a rate varying from twenty-two cents to twenty-three and one-tenth cents per hour, with a bonus. A monthly bonus was figured in as
The award should be modified accordingly.
Award modified as per opinion, and as so modified, unanimously affirmed.