Memorandum Opinion. Plaintiffs employer inflicted a shotgun wound in plaintiffs neck. As a result, plaintiff is now a quadriplegic. The witnesses provided conflicting versions of the event.
Plaintiff testified that his employer, Jack White, approached him with a shotgun without provoca *49 tion and struck him twice with the barrel. A fellow employee, Adam Herring, intervened and wrestled with White over the gun. A shot was fired, wounding the plaintiff.
Jack White testified that he and plaintiff had argued over work assigned to the plaintiff which had not been finished. Plaintiff is said to have assaulted White with a wrench and knocked him over a floor jack. Herring intervened and the fight stopped. Plaintiff threatened bodily harm to White. White left to obtain his shotgun. When he returned, Herring took the gun away from him. As Herring and White walked toward White’s office with their backs to the plaintiff, White’s brother Charles saw plaintiff raising a 4x4 piece of wood so as to strike White. Charles shouted a warning. White turned, saw plaintiff with the 4x4, grabbed the gun from Herring, and shot the plaintiff — all in the matter of an instant, according to Herring. Both Herring and Charles White corroborated portions of Jack White’s testimony.
Defendants maintained that plaintiff was injured by reason of his intentional and wilful misconduct, thereby precluding Workmen’s Compensation benefits. MCLA 418.305; MSA 17.237(305). The Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board described both plaintiff and defendant as "not impressively credible”. The board concluded that plaintiff was not guilty of wilful misconduct, however, without stating which facts it chose to believe. The Court of Appeals denied leave on the meritorious question.
If it is true that plaintiff was proceeding towards White with the apparent ability to inflict bodily harm, plaintiff might well be guilty of intentional and wilful misconduct so as to preclude an award of benefits. In
Crilly v Ballou,
We are unable to discern from the opinion of the board whether it understood the applicable law, and if so, what facts it relied upon in reaching its conclusion that plaintiff was not guilty of intentional and wilful misconduct. Consequently, we remand this cause to the Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board for its statement of the law and facts supporting its conclusion.
McClary v Wagoner,
