Plaintiff appeals a decision of the Industrial Commission denying him interest on past due benefits. Interest was denied on the ground that plaintiffs injury occurred before passage of the statute providing for interest payments. U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-78 (Supp.1983). We reverse.
On January 25, 1980, plaintiff was injured in an industrial accident in an underground coal mine. He was paid temporary total disability benefits from March 1,1980, to November 14, 1980. On July 1, 1981, plaintiff filed a claim for permanent partial disability benefits and an application for hearing with the Industrial Commission. A hearing was held on July 12, 1982. On February 4, 1983, the administrative law judge (AU) denied plaintiff’s request for a
Plaintiff then made a motion for reconsideration requesting the AU to include interest of 8% per annum on the award for past due benefits. The AU denied the motion, reasoning that since the interest provision was added to the statute effective May 12, 1981, 2 and plaintiffs injury occurred in 1980, the law in effect at the time of the injury governed the case. The ALJ relied on the following language from Kincheloe v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co.. 3 “Inasmuch as the incident here concerned occurred in 1980, we are bound to apply the law as of that date.”
U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-78 (Supp.1983) provides in pertinent part: “Awards made by the industrial commission shall include interest at the rate of 8% per annum from the date when each benefit payment would have otherwise become due and payable.”
Plaintiff argues that the statutory wording is unambiguous: inclusion of 8% interest must be made on awards from the date when the payment was due regardless of when the injury occurred.
This Court has consistently held that in worker’s compensation cases the benefits to be awarded to an injured worker are to be determined on the basis of the law as it existed at the time of the injury. 4 As the Court said in Okland Construction Co. v. Industrial Commission: 5 “[A] later statute or amendment should not be applied in a retroactive manner to deprive a party of his rights or impose greater liability upon him.”
We recognize that this rule differs from the general rule followed in this jurisdiction which is that “the substantive law to be applied throughout an action is the law in effect at the date the action was initiated.” (Emphasis added.) 6
A contrary rule to both of the above applies, however, to statutes which operate in furtherance of a remedy already existing and which neither create new rights nor destroy existing rights. Those remedial statutes are applied retrospectively to accrued or pending actions to further the legislature’s remedial purpose unless a contrary legislative intent is manifested. 7 As the Court said in State v. Higgs: 8
[Sjtatutes enacted subsequent to the initiation of a suit which do not enlarge, eliminate, or destroy vested or contractual rights apply not only to future actions, but also to accrued and pending actions as well.
(Emphasis added.) By implication, such statutes enacted before the initiation of a suit or claim automatically apply to suits or claims initiated subsequent to passage of a procedural or remedial statute.
The purpose of the worker’s compensation act is “to secure workmen ...
The AU in this case apparently assumed that payment of interest on a worker’s compensation award was analagous to a new benefit since, in denying interest on the instant award, the AU relied on a footnote in Kincheloe 12 which noted that the law in effect at the time of the injury governed.
In Kincheloe, the Court was considering whether the Second Injury Fund was liable to the plaintiff there for benefits under U.C.A., 1953, § 35-1-69. Since, as noted previously, the benefits to be awarded to an injured worker must be determined on the basis of the law as it existed at the time of the injury, the Court noted that it was bound to apply the law as of that date, even though the legislature had amended the law subsequent to Kincheloe’s injury. Thus, the issue involved in Kincheloe concerned substantive law.
This line of case law is inapposite to interest payments on worker’s compensation awards. 13 Interest on a compensation award is incident to a right and a remedy that already exists. 14 Retroactive application of the statute does not alter the substance of the compensation award. 15 Payment of interest on an unpaid benefit neither creates a new right nor destroys an existing right. Therefore, interest payments should be made on any benefits awarded after the effective date of the statute even though the injury had occurred before. According to the terms of the statute, interest must be paid on each benefit payment which comprises the award from the date that payment would have been due and payable. 16
The decision of the Industrial Commission is reversed.
Notes
.
Marshall
v.
Industrial Comm’n,
Utah,
. The amendment to the statute was passed in the legislative session which adjourned on March 12, 1981, with no specific effective date. Therefore, the statute became effective sixty days after the adjournment. Utah Const, art. VI, § 25.
. Utah,
.
Smith v. Industrial Comm’n,
Utah,
. Supra, note 4 at 210.
.
Department of Social Servs. v. Higgs,
Utah,
.
Pilcher v. Department of Social Servs.,
Utah,
. Supra note 6.
.
Marshall, supra
note 1
.
Marshall, supra
note 1,
.
Selk,
. Supra, note 3.
. "[T]he [interest] rate applied is usually the rate in effect at the time interest is assessed, rather than the rate in effect at the time of injury.” 3 Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation § 83.42(a) at 15-764 (1983) (footnotes omitted).
.
Selk, supra
note 7.
Cf. Myers v. Carr Constr. Co.,
Fla.App.,
.
Selk,
. We note that in cases not involving worker’s compensation awards
(e.g.
prejudgment interest) case law is split as to whether a statute
increasing
the interest rate requires payment of ' the new interest rate from the date of injury or from the effective date of the amendatory act.
See e.g.,
Annot.,
