Lead Opinion
A writ оf certiorari to the Court of Appeal, issued on the application of plaintiff,
The findings of fact of the Court of Appeal (as well as of the district court), with which we agree for they are amply sustained by the evidence in the record, are as follows: On April 27, 1945, while engaged in the course and scope of his- employment as a common laborer with defendant American Bitumuls Company at a wage оf $35.20 per week, plaintiff slipped and fell against a drain barrel. As a result of the accident he sustained an injury which affected his left shoulder, arm and hand and lessened his ability, by approximately 20%, to pеrform the substantial and customary duties of a common laborer. Prior to that employment (it had endured for some three weeks) he had engaged in the cleaning and pressing business, his chosen trade or occupation; and subsequent to the accident he again followed his mentioned trade, earning as much as $25 per week.
On these facts the Court of Appeal concluded, and we think now correctly, that plaintiff is entitled to recover compensation as for partial disability under paragraph (c), subsection 1 of Section 8 of Act 20 of 1914, as amended, Act No. 242 of 1928, p. 357, which recites: “For injury producing partial disability to do work of any reasonable character, sixty-five per centum of the difference between wages at the time of injury and wages which the injured employee is аble to earn thereafter during the period of disability, not, however, beyond three hundred weeks.”
Accordingly, that court rendered judgment awarding compensation to plaintiff of $6.63 per week during the period of disability, not, however, beyond three hundred weeks. In computing the payments it took .into consideration the $25 per week which plaintiff received after the accident from his cleaning and pressing occupation.
In seeking compensation as for total disability plaintiff contends in this court, to quote from the brief of his counsel, that “ * * * when a workman is injured so that he is unable to perform the duties of the position occupied when injured, he is totally and permanently disabled, notwithstanding that his disability would not prevent his resuming other work that he had been doing prior to his employment * * at time of injury,” And he citеs in support thereof. Fluitt v. New Orleans T. & M. Railroad Company,
. [2] True, in Butzman v. Delta Shipbuilding Company, supra, one of the cases strongly relied on by plaintiff, it seems that the Court of Appeal granted total disability сompensation because, under its interpretation' of a prior decision of this court, the plaintiff was unable to perform the duties of the identical position which he occupied when injured, notwithstanding that he was аble to and did thereafter engage in work of a similar nature. If that was the basis, for the decision, however, the court erred in its holding. Our jurisprudence is settled that the clause “disability to do work of any reasonable character”, as contained in the compensation statute, means disability to perform work of the same or similar description, kind or character (not necessarily the identicаl position) to that which the claimant was accustomed to perform or was undertaking when the injury occurred. See Scott v. Hillyer, Deutsch, Edwards, Inc.,
It may be that the Court of Appeal in the instant action, when computing the partial disability payments, improperly considered the weekly income which plaintiff received after the accident from his cleaning and pressing business. According to the stаtute the payments are to be computed at “sixty-five per centum of the differ
For the reasons assigned the judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
I am in accord with the conclusion that plaintiff- has suffered a permanent partial disability and that, therefore, compensation was payable under paragraph (c), subsection 1, section 8 of Act 20 of 1914, as amended, Act No. 242 of 1928, p. 357, since plaintiff was earning a lesser wage than that received previous to the accident. However, I do not coincide in the suggestion that, if the cleaning and pressing business (in which plaintiff is engaged) is not
It is my view that paragraph (c) of subsection 1, Section 8 of the Employer’s Liability Act is not appropriate in cases where the injured employee is not either earning smaller wages as a result of his disability or where there is no- showing as to the amount he is able to earn. The paragraph provides that, for partial disability to do work of any reasonable charactеr, compensation will be paid for a period not exceeding 300 weeks at the rate of “sixty-five percentum of the difference between wages at the time of injury and zmges which the injured employee is able to earn thereafter * * * (Italics mine).
In Washington v. Holmes & Barnes, supra, the plaintiff suffered a 20% loss of the use of his arm and the Court of Appeal awarded him compensation under the above quoted partial disability provision оn the theory that he was able to earn 20% less than he was earning before the accident. Accordingly, the compensation was computed by taking 20% of 65% of the wages-earned at the time of the injury.
Aside from the fact that the Washington decision contravenes the prior holding of this court in Sweeney v. Black River Lumber Co.,
I respectfully concur in the decree.
Notes
. To the same effect is Jarrell v. Cumberland Tel. & Tel. Co.,
