T1 Pеtitioner, Floyd Clopton (Claimant), seeks review of a Workers' Compensation Court (WCC) order finding, among other things, that Claimant's average weekly wage for computation of temporary totаl disability (TTD) compensation did not include employer provided benefits such as pension contributions, cash offered in lieu of vacation leave and insurance premiums. We hold such benеfits are not properly included in the average weekly wage and sustain the order.
12 The trial court found Claimant sustained a compensable injury while employed by Respondent, City of Muskogee (Employer). The trial court further found Claimant had been paid TTD compensation at an incorrect rate for four different periods, and that as a result he had been underpaid in a total amount of $7,711.88. In calculating Claimant's rate of compensation pursuant to 85 0.8.2001 §§ 21 and 22, the trial court used an "average weekly wage" which included "salary", plus amounts Employer paid for "valuаble benefits" provided Claimant. These benefits included longevity pay, pension contributions, insurance premiums and cash in lieu of vacation leave.
1 3 In support of its inclusion of "valuable benefits" in Claimant's average weekly wage, the trial court cited and quoted from 85 0.S$.2001 § 3(13)
Wages "means the money rate at which the services rendered is recompensed under the contract оf hiring in force at the time of the injury, including the reasonable value of board, rent, housing, lodging, or similar advantage received from the employer." (Emphasis in trial court's order).
T4 Employer apрealed the trial court's order to a three-judge panel of the WCC. The sole substantive allegation of error in Employer's appeal was-"The trial Court's determination of Claimant's average weekly wage is based upon an erroneous interpretation of 85 O.S., Section 8(18)." Employer also asserted that other paragraphs in the order, which were based on the allеged erroneous interpretation, were "erroneous as a matter of law."
11 5 The three-judge panel ruled in favor of Employer and modified the trial court's order with a recomputed finding of Claimant's average weekly wage and rate of weekly compensation. As recomputed, Claimant's average weekly wage included longevity pay, but not the claimed value of fringе benefits. The modified order deleted those paragraphs which derived from the trial court's interpretation of $ 3(13). Because the three-judge panel's finding as to rate of compensаtion was lower than the trial court's, one of the findings deleted was Claimant's entitlement to an award for "underpayment" of TTD compensation. Claimant seeks our review of the WCC order, as modifiеd.
16 When a three-judge panel substituted decision is submitted for our consideration, it must ordinarily be reviewed by applying the traditional any-competent-evidence test of correctness. Parks v. Nоrman Municipal Hospital,
T7 The single question оn which Claimant seeks review here involves interpretation of § 3(18). Statutory construction presents a pure legal question. Upton v. State ex rel. Department of Corrections,
T8 Claimant contends here, as he did in the WCC, that "[all of the valuable benefits provided [him] by virtue of his employment should be considered in arriving at his average weekly wage." As posited by Claimant, this question is one of first impression in Oklahoma, even though the definition of
19 Our appellate courts have considered the § 8(18) meaning of "wages" in Mazzio's Corp. v. Dick,
1 10 None of the foregoing cases is instructive here. In all of the cases, the employee received monetary payments directly. Here, Claimant received fringe benefits, which had some value, not dirеct payments. Additionally, in the Court of Civil Appeals cases the employee gained no "advantage" from the payments, but was merely reimbursed for on the job vehicle expenses. In the еarlier Supreme Court cases, the travel expense for food and lodging were clearly within the definition of wages contained in § 3(13).
T11 While Oklahoma has not determined if fringe benefits should be included in "wages" used to calculate a claimant's average weekly wage, this question has been answered in a number of other jurisdictions. Often cited in those decisions is Morrison-Knudsen Construction Company v. Director, OWCP,
112 In Morrison-Knudsen, the fringe benefits were contributions paid to union trust funds for health and welfare, pensions and training. The Supreme Court held such contributions were not "wages" for the purpose of computing compensation benefits, as that term was used in the statute. The Court fоund the contributions were not "money ... recompensed", thus the question narrowed to whether they were a "similar advantage" to board, rent, housing or lodging. The Court answered that question negatively.
113 In Morrison-Knudsen, the Supreme Court reasoned that board, rent, housing or lodging are benefits with a present value readily converted into a cash equivalent, while the present value of the trust funds could not be so easily converted. Tabor v. Levi Strouss,
14 In Barnett,
Every pension plan is different, and the Commission would be required in practically every case to have thе testimony of actuaries with regard to vesting, the amounts that would be due and the present values among other factors. This would be totally unacceptable ...
1 15 The Barnett Court further noted:
The mere fact of vesting, howеver, does not eliminate other uncertainties that would result in these cases, such as present value calculations, and the possible disruption of the claims process. Nor are wеpersuaded in any event to distinguish between vested and non-vested benefits because neither is the result of specified wages that can be tied to work performance.
16 Both Tabor and Barnett cite Professor Larson, one of the most recognized authorities in the field of workers' compensation, for the observation about compensation benefits:
Whether paid voluntarily or in contested and adjudicated cases, they have always begun with a wage base calculation that made "wage" mean the "wages" that the worker lives on and not miscellaneous "values" that may or may not some day have a value to him depending on a number of uncontrollable contingencies.
€17 The Maryland Court of Special Appeals, in Barnett, makes аn additional observation we deem pertinent to the case before us. The Court stated, "Thlad it so intended, the Maryland legislature could have specified fringe benefits such as pension contributions within the 'wages' definition." Section 8(18), - the subject of the present review, was amended in 1923 to substitute "time of the injury" for "time of the accident", but the Legislature made no substantive change to the definition. Section 8 as a whole has been amended twenty-two times since that time, and the language of § 8(13) was not changed.
118 As in Maryland, our Legislature has had opportunities to add other "benefits" to those expressly enumerated, but has chosen not to. We believe this evidences the Legislature's intent to restrict the definition of wages to include those "values" which, as noted in Morrison-Knudsen, are readily converted into a cash equivalent. The contributions to pension fund, vacation days, and insurance premiums are not readily convertible, making it impractical, if not impraсtica-bie, for the WCC to assign a present value.
{19 We are persuaded by the majority view, as reflected in Morrison-Knudsen, Tabor, and Barnett If the definition of "wages" for use in calculating a claimant's average weekly wage is to be expanded to include certain "benefits" other than those in § 3(13), or similar to those expressly set forth therein, that is a decision for our Legislature.
T20 The order of the WCC is SUSTAINED.
Notes
. Renumbered 85 O.S. Supp.2005 § 3(14). Laws 2005, Ist Ex.Sess., c. 1, § 9, eff. July 1, 2005.
. Laws 1915, c. 246, art. 1, § 3.
. Tabor and Barnett interpret statutes defining wages and containing "similar advantage."
