149 So. 434 | La. | 1933
Plaintiff was accidentally injured whilst in the employ of defendant, and claims workman's compensation under Act No. 20 of 1914 as amended by Act No. 242 of 1928. The only question involved is the rate at which his compensation shall be allowed.
This was also the view taken by the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans, in Menzel v. Southern Stevedoring Co., 7 La. App. 703. In that case the injured employee was earning $6.40 per day at the time he was injured, but for a year previous to that time he had averaged only $3 per day. The court held that the daily rate of pay at the time of the injury was $6.40 per day and fixed the compensation accordingly. Again the Court of Appeal, Second Circuit, in King v. American Tank Equipment Corp., 144 So. 283, 289, took the same view. The court said: "Under defendant's contention [to the contrary], one injured while working only one, two, or three days a week, due to unusual economic conditions, should only be allowed compensation at 65 per cent. of his daily wage, based upon the number of days then employed, although he has become totally disabled and will never be able to work again, when if he had not been injured, he could possibly have secured employment for six days a week in the near future. The accident and injury have deprived him of the ability to work in the future, when he could secure full time employment."
This was correct. The workman's compensation statute is not a statute allowing the workman damages for injuries sustained in the course of his employment even through the negligence or fault of his employer. It is essentially insurance against the loss or diminution of earning capacity, see section 8, subsec. 1 (a) (b) (c). That earning capacity was first fixed, under the original *721 act, as the "average weekly wages" for the year preceding the injury; it is now fixed, by the amending acts, at "the daily rate of pay * * * at the time of the injury."
The view hereinabove taken was also again taken by the Court of Appeal for the parish of Orleans in Chatman v. Compania De Navegacao Lloyd Brasileiro, 19 La.App. 616, 140 So. 141; a writ of certiorari therein was denied by this court on May 23, 1932.
In the case before us the Court of Appeal followed its ruling in the case just cited, and our opinion is that its judgment is correct.
In Gousoulin et al. v. Lake Charles Stevedores, Inc., 19 La. App. 96, 139 So. 747, and in Williams v. Lake Charles Stevedores, 19 La.App. 185, 139 So. 748, the Court of Appeal, First Circuit, seems to have thought that because the compensation to the injured workmen is payable weekly therefore when a workman was not employed full time his "average weekly wages" for a past period was a fair standard for measuring his "daily wage." This would, of course, give the average daily earnings of the injured workman for the period immediately preceding the injury, but that is not the standard of compensation provided in the statute which distinctly fixes the standard of compensation as the "daily rate of pay * * * at the time of the injury." And accordingly we think that court erred and that the views of the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit and for the parish of Orleans are correct.