OPINION
The issue in this case is whether a medical insurance premium an employer pays as a fringe benefit of employment should be included in calculating an injured employee’s average monthly wage under the Workers’ Compensation Act, A.R.S. §§ 23-901 to 23-1091 (the Act). The administrative law judge (ALJ) concluded it should not. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm. .
BACKGROUND
The parties stipulated to the following facts. Petitioner Joanne Lazarus injured her wrist in July 1993, while working as a vocational counselor for Community Psychology Education Services (CPES). Following the injury, she continued to work for CPES until she quit to take a job with a school district in August 1993. Lazarus did not miss work because of the industrial injury until May 1994, when she had to stop working because she was scheduled for surgery.
During Lazarus’s employment with CPES, it had paid $81.34 per month for her medical insurance under a group policy. That benefit was part of the consideration for Lazarus taking that job. She would have had to pay $162.35 per month to convert to an individual policy under the same plan. CPES would not have paid Lazarus more wages had she declined medical insurance, and it did not continue paying medical insurance premiums for her after she left that job or while she was off work for surgery in 1994.
Lazarus protested the Industrial Commission’s average monthly wage calculation of $1,066.99, contending that CPES’s $81.34 medical insurance premium should be included in the calculation. The ALJ initially agreed, concluding that the average monthly wage should be increased to $1,148.33. CPES sought special action relief, and this court set aside the award, concluding that we could not affirm it in the absence of additional facts. Community Psychology Education Services v. Industrial Comm’n, 2 CA-IC 95-0010 (memorandum decision filed July 18, 1995). On remand to the Industrial Commission, the parties stipulated to additional facts. Based on the stipulated facts and the parties’ legal memoranda, the ALJ set Lazarus’s average monthly wage at $1,066.99 after determining that it should not include the health insurance cost. The ALJ affirmed the decision upon administrative review, and Lazarus now seeks special action relief.
Compensation for injured employees is based on the “employee’s average monthly wage at the time of the injury.” A.R.S. § 23-104(A). The statute defines “average monthly wage” as “the average wage paid during and over the month in which the employee is killed or injured,” § 23-1041(D), and does not offer any further guidance as to what items constitute “wages.”
Arizona cases provide some further definition. “[P]ayments or benefits conferred upon an employee in return for his labor and services are includable in computing the average monthly wage, even though these payments or benefits do not on their face purport to be ‘wages.’ ” Moorehead v. Industrial Comm’n,
Thus, Arizona courts have considered the following to be “wages” under the statute: tips received by restaurant workers (Senor T’s) and cabdrivers (Scott); corporate stock received by an employee in lieu of cash (Harvey Auto Supply); a 40% commission on all sales made by the employee (Barron v. Ambort,
Lazarus asserts that “average monthly wage” should include the share of health insurance premiums CPES paid on her behalf because “[m]edical insurance is of economic benefit” to an employee. In Still v. Industrial Comm’n,
A majority of courts, including the United States Supreme Court, has found that an employer’s medical insurance payments are not part of the average wage calculation.
In reversing, the Supreme Court distinguished the contributions at issue from board and lodging because the latter have a present value, easily converted to a cash equivalent.
Lazarus urges us to adopt the minority view of a few courts which have included the cost of insurance premiums in the average wage computation. See Ex parte Murray,
The Arizona statute is narrower and less susceptible to such a broad interpretation. In Señor T’s, our supreme court found that § 23-1041(D) was ambiguous as to “whether tips are to be included or excluded from the definition of ‘monthly wage.’ ”
In our view, however, employer-paid health insurance premiums are distinguishable from tips, board, lodging, and other forms of compensation which Arizona courts have previously found to come within the term “wages.” “Fringe benefits or premiums made to secure them differ in character and purpose from direct payments made to employees to compensate them, directly or indirectly, for some aspect of work or to reimburse them for work related expenses.” Gajan,
In Señor T’s, the court emphasized that it was “a matter of common knowledge” that waiters and waitresses “receive a substantial portion of their earnings in the form of tips.”
Practical considerations also militate against including an employer’s group health insurance premiums in calculating an employee’s average monthly wage. As respondents note, “the premium was paid not to [Lazarus] but rather to a third party insurance carrier, she may never have realized any actual benefit from the insurance obtained by the payment of premiums, the amount of any actual benefit she may have realized is purely speculative as of the time of the computation of her average monthly wage, and the actual economic relationship between the benefit obtained and her individual efforts is similarly speculative.” In addition, calculations of average wage for employees who opt not to receive medical insurance coverage through the employer or who, like Lazarus, leave one job to take another would be problematic. Finally, as we stated in our prior decision in this case, including the employer’s premium payment in the average wage computation without knowing whether Lazarus “either purchased substitute health insurance or paid medical costs which would otherwise have been covered by the insurance ... could well result in .... the employee receiving a windfall.”
We recognize that we must construe the Act in view of its purpose “to compensate an employee for lost earning capacity and to prevent the injured employee and his dependents from becoming public charges during the period of disability.” Senor T’s,
For the foregoing reasons, we adopt the majority view and hold that, absent clear statutory authority, the cost of health insurance premiums paid by an employer should not be included in calculating average monthly wage. Therefore, we affirm the award.
Notes
. The record docs not indicate whether Lazarus paid for her own health insurance or medical costs after she left CPES or whether her new employer provided coverage.
. See Morrison-Knudsen Const. Co. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs,
. That statute defined "wages” as "the money rate at which the service rendered is recompensed ... including the reasonable value of board, rent, housing, lodging, or similar advantage received from the employer, and gratuities received in the course of employment from others than the employer.” Id. at 629,
. Several states have enacted statutes expressly providing for the inclusion of fringe benefits in the calculation of an average wage. See Ala. Code § 25-5-1(6); Colo.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 40-201; Fla.Stat.Ann. § 440.02(24); Kan.Stat.Ann. § 44-511(a)(2); Me.Rev.Stat.Ann. tit. 39-A, § 102(4)(H); Mich.Comp.Laws § 418.371(2).
