Dеborah A. Polk (“plaintiff”) appeals from an opinion and award by the Industrial Commission resolving her claim for workers’ compensation against former employer Nationwide Recyclers, Inc. (“defendant”). 1 After careful review, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
I.
Defendant hired plaintiff to work as a wastewater operator on 3 June 2000. On 3 July 2000, plaintiff sustained a compensable injury to her elbow. Plaintiff was diagnosed with a contusion on her left elbow causing labored motion and lateral tenderness. The diagnosing doctor restricted plaintiff’s gripping and other activities at work. After seeing a seriеs of doctors and undergoing numerous tests and surgery, plaintiff was released to light duty work status on 7 May 2001. When plaintiff experienced no relief from her pain, she underwent further testing on 2 May 2002. She was released at maximum medical improvement on 1 July 2002 by her treating physician, who assigned her left arm a twelve perсent permanent partial impairment rating.
Plaintiff was out of work and received benefits for this permanent partial disability under the Workers’ Compensation Act from 5 April 2002 through 23 April 2003. When defendant could not accommodate her physical restrictions, she was terminated on 3 July 2002. Plaintiff continued to reсeive medical treatment. On 23 April 2003, plaintiff was hired as a dispatcher by Carolina By-Products.
On 4 February 2005, defendant filed Form 33, requesting that plaintiff’s claim be assigned for hearing; per the form, defendant *213 wished to begin paying permanent partial disability benefits to plaintiff and was requesting an order to do so. The deputy commissioner’s opinion and award held that plaintiff was entitled to benefits under both N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 (2007) for constructive (temporary total) disability and N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31 (2007) for her permanent partial disability, but that she was not required to make an election of these remedies. Defendant appealed to thе Full Commission, which reversed the deputy commissioner and held that plaintiff was eligible for benefits only under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31 and awarded her benefits under that statute, as well as attorney’s fees and continuing medical treatment. Plaintiff appeals to this Court.
II.
Plaintiff makes two arguments pertaining to one of the few modifications made by the Full Commission to the deputy commissioner’s order. Whereas the deputy commissioner awarded benefits to plaintiff under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29, the Full Commission held that while plaintiff was not entitled to benefits under that statute, she was entitled to benefits under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31(13) and could not delay filing for compensation under thаt statute. Plaintiff argues that the Full Commission erred in both conclusions. We consider plaintiff’s arguments in turn.
A.
Plaintiff first argues that the Full Commission’s conclusion that she failed to show she is entitled to benefits under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 was in error both because it misapplies the law and because it is based upon findings of fact that are not suрported by competent evidence in the record. Both points are without merit.
The deputy commissioner’s order stated that plaintiff’s “position with Carolina By-Products is overly modified and is not indicative of her wage-earning capacity in the competitive labor market.” Pursuant to the Supreme Court’s holding in
Peoples v. Cone Mills Corp.,
The Full Commission’s opinion distinguished Peoples and reversed this conclusion, stating:
In asserting that she is entitled to temporary total disability benefits under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 for constructive disability, *214 plaintiff has relied on Peoples [], claiming that her current job is modified and, thus, an unreliable basis for determining her wage earning capacity.... The [Supreme] Court stated “proffered employment would not accurately reflect earning capacity . . . if [it] is so'modified because of the employee’s limitations that it is not ordinarily available in the competitive job market.” [] However, the Full Commission finds the present case to be distinguished from Peoples in that the employment at issue with Carolina By-Products was actually obtained by plaintiff in the competitive market, and was not proffered by the defendant-employer. The Full Commission declines to interpret Peoples as holding that employment that was obtаined in the competitive job market, and not proffered by the defendant-employer, is insufficient evidence of wage-earning capacity. The Full Commission further finds there to be insufficient evidence to find that plaintiff’s job duties with Carolina By-Products have been modified and, thus, finds that plaintiff has shown that she is cаpable of employment in the competitive market at wages that are equal to or greater than her pre-injury average weekly wage. Thus, plaintiff has failed to show that she is entitled to temporary total disability benefits under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 for constructive disability.
Plaintiff argues that the Full Commission misapplied the law on this point. We disagree.
• N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 applies only to cases of total disability.
To support a conclusion of disability, the Commission must find: (1) that the plaintiff was incapable after his injury of earning the same wages he earned before his injury in the same employment, (2) that the plaintiff was incapable after his injury of earning the same wages he earned before his injury in any other employment and (3) that the plaintiff’s incapacity to earn was caused by his injury.
Hendrix v. Linn-Corriher Corp.,
Plaintiff argues that her position with Carolina By-Product — her post-injury employment — was so modified as to constitute make work. Plaintiff makes much of the fact that other employees had to assist her with her duties; however, as the Full Commission noted, when plaintiff was hired by Carolina By-Products after her injury, the company “was aware of her restrictions[.]” Plaintiff does not dispute the Full Commission’s conclusion that the employment with Carolina By-Products “was actually obtained by plaintiff in the competitive market, and was not proffered by the defendant-employer.”
Plaintiff argues that the position was thereafter modified to the extent that it is not indicative of her ability to find employment elsewhere.
See Peoples,
[t]he Commission is the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony. The courts may set aside findings of fact only upon the ground they lack evidentiary support. The court does not have the right to weigh the evidence and decide the issue on the basis of its weight. The court’s duty goes no further than to determine whether the record contains any evidence tending to support the finding.
Anderson v. Construction Co.,
It is clear from the record that Dunhoft was plaintiff’s direct supervisor for nearly a year and had contact with her on a daily basis. He testified as to her assigned work, the work of persons in the same job, and modifications that had been made for plaintiff because of her disability. This testimony is covered in detail in the Full Commission’s findings of fact 21 and 22. We cannot say, therefore, that no evidentiary basis exists to support the Full Commission’s findings on these points.
*216 Because plaintiff has not shown that the Full Commission misapplied the law nor that its findings of fact were not based on competent evidence, we overrule these assignments of error.
B.
As this Court has noted before, the other method by which benefits may be claimed under the Workers’ Compensation Act is provided by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31. The Full Commission’s conclusion as to this statute stated:
[T]he only remedy available to plaintiff at this juncture is to receive payment for the twelve percent (12%) permanent partial disability rating to hеr left arm per N.C. Gen. Stat. § 47-31(13). [Plaintiff’s doctor] found plaintiff to be at maximum medical improvement following her second surgery on July 1, 2002, and assigned the twelve percent (12%) rating to plaintiff’s left arm. Maximum medical improvement is defined as the point [at] which the condition or injury has stabilized with respect to further improvement. . . . [Plaintiff’s doctor] testified that as of July 1, 2002, plaintiff’s injury had stabilized. Based on the evidence of record, plaintiff has provided no rational basis — in law or fact— upon which to find that plaintiff should be able to defer the only remedy available to her at this juncture, which is to receive payment for the twеlve percent (12%) permanent partial disability rating to her left arm per N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31(13).
Plaintiff argues that defendant cannot force her to elect a remedy for her disability. This argument is flawed in two respects: First, per N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-83 (2007), “upon the arising of a dispute under this Article, either party may make appliсation to the Commission for a hearing in regard to the matters at issue, and for a ruling thereon”; thus, defendant was permitted to request a hearing as to plaintiff’s benefits under the Act in the first place. Second, per the Full Commission’s ruling, plaintiff does not have two remedies between which to pick; the Full Commission hеld that she is entitled to benefits only under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31, a ruling we affirmed above. Thus, this argument is without merit.
We note that plaintiff argues at length that
Knight v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
“expressly gives the choice solely to the claimant as to when to make an election with regard to benefits for permanent injury” and states that “the right to petition the Commission to seek indemnity compensatiоn lies with the claimant, not the defendants[.]”
*217
Knight,
There is a great deal of confusion regarding what significance, if any, the concept of MMI has within the context of a lоss of wage-earning capacity pursuant to either N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 or § 97-30, and this confusion has produced two lines of case law exemplified recently in two opinions simultaneously issued by this Court. . . .
We have concluded that the primary significance of the concept of MMI is to delineate a cruсial point in time only within the context of a claim for scheduled benefits under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31, and that the concept of MMI does not have any direct bearing upon an employee’s right to continue to receive temporary disability benefits once the employee has established a loss of wage-earning capacity pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 or § 97-30.
Id.
at 13-14,
The primary significance of the concept of MMI... is to delineate when “the healing period” ends and the statutory period begins in cases involving an employee who may be entitled to benefits for a physical impairment listed in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31. In other words, MMI represents the first point in time at which the employee may elect, if the employee so chooses, to receive scheduled benefits for a specific physical impairment under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-31 (without regard to any loss of wage-earning capacity). MMI does not represent the point in time at which a loss of wage-earning capacity under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-29 or § 97-30 automatically converts from “temporary” to “permanent.”
Id.
at 16,
*218 III.
Plaintiff next argues that the Full Commission did not, as it is required to do, consider all evidence presented. Essentially, plaintiff’s argument is that the Full Commission must not have considered the evidence presented because it did not indicate having done so by making findings of fact regarding them. Part of her argument is that the deputy commissioner’s order did so, аnd thus the Full Commission erred in not including them as well. This argument is without merit.
It is true that “before finding the facts, the Industrial Commission must consider and evaluate all of the evidence^]”
Lineback v. Wake County Board of Commissioners,
However, the same does not hold true for plaintiff’s argument about the Full Commission’s failure to address the adjustment of her weekly wage in its order. The deputy commissioner’s order stated: “Defendants 2 shall complete a Form 22 and pay any arrearages thаt it may indicate.” Defendant subsequently completed a Form 22 and filed a notice of appeal as to that portion of the order. The Full Commission’s opinion and award does not address the form or that appeal, which plaintiff argues was error. We agree. The Full Commission’s opinion and award simply repeats the finding of fact as to plaintiff’s weekly wage made by the deputy commissioner’s opinion and award, with no reference to the Form 22 filed by defendant in the interim. Whereas with other omitted findings we may assume that the *219 Full Commission simply wished to affirm the deputy commissioner’s opinion and award, hеre new evidence has arisen between the hearings, and the Full Commission must address that new evidence in its opinion and award. As such, we reverse only the portion of the opinion and award that calculates plaintiff’s weekly wage and remand to the Full Commission for findings only as to this figure.
IV.
Because therе is no evidence in the record that the Full Commission considered the Form 22 filed by defendant, we remand to the Full Commission for findings only as to the calculation of plaintiff’s weekly wage. Because' the Full Commission did not otherwise err in its opinion and award, we affirm as to the remainder.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
Notes
. Although both Nationwide Recyclers, Inc., and Travelers Insurance Co. are defendants in this action, for ease of reference, we use “defendant” to refer only to Nationwide Recyclers, Inc., plaintiff’s employer.
. “Defendants” (plural) here refers to both defendant-employer and defendant Travelers Insurance Co.
