Sonia HILYER (Widow of James H. Hilyer), Petitioner,
v.
MORRISON-KNUDSEN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY and Argonaut Insurance
Company, Respondents.
MORRISON-KNUDSEN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY and Argonaut Insurance
Company, Petitioners,
v.
Sonia HILYER (Widow of James H. Hilyer), Respondent.
DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION, UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, Petitioner,
v.
MORRISON-KNUDSEN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY and Argonaut Insurance
Company, Respondents.
Nos. 80-1388, 80-1440 and 80-1504.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued March 19, 1981.
Decided Dec. 1, 1981.
Petitions for Review of Orders of the Benefits Review Board.
Catherine A. Giacona, Atty., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C., for Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, Dept. of Labor, petitioner in No. 80-1504. Joshua T. Gillelan, II, Atty., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C., also entered an appearance for Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, Dept. of Labor.
Richаrd W. Galiher, Jr., Washington, D. C., for Morrison-Knudsen Const. Co., et al., petitioners in No. 80-1440 and respondents in No. 80-1504.
George S. Leonard, Washington, D. C., for Sonia Hilyer, cross-respondent in No. 80-1440 and petitioner in No. 80-1388.
Before ROBINSON, Chief Judge, SWYGERT,* Senior Judge, and ROBB, Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge SWYGERT.
SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge:
In these consolidated appeals we are asked to review a final order of the Benefits Review Board of the United States Department of Labor. The case presents a question of first impression concerning construction of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 901 et seq. (1976), as extended by the District of Columbia Workmen's Compensation Act, 36 D.C.Code §§ 501, 502 (1973) ("the Act" or "the Longshoremen's Act").
The claimant in this case is Sonia Hilyer. On April 19, 1974 her husband, James H. Hilyer, was fatally injured during the course of his employment with respondent Morrison-Knudsen Company.1 At the time of his death, Hilyer was a member of Local 456 of the Laborers' District Council of Washington, D.C. and Vicinity, an AFL-CIO affiliаte. In addition to the covered employees' hourly rates of pay, the collective bargaining agreement between the union and Morrison-Knudsen provided that the company would pay fixed sums of money into three union trust funds. Specifically, the company agreed to pay twenty-eight cents into the health and welfare fund, thirty-five cents into the pension fund, and five cents into the training fund, for each hour that each employee worked.
Morrison-Knudsen began paying death benefits under the Act to the claimant immediately upon her husband's death. A dispute arose, however, over the amount of benefits to which she was entitled. Hilyer had been employed by Morrison-Knudsen for only five months when he died. During the year before his death, he had also been employed as a security guard and a grocery clerk, at substantially lower wages. In figuring his average weekly wage, the company toоk into account his prior employment. The claimant contended that her husband's average weekly wage should be based only on his employment with Morrison-Knudsen. She also contended that the company's contributions to the three union trust funds should be included as part of her husband's "average weekly wage" under the Act.2
Following a hearing, an administrative law judge agreed with the claimant that the average weekly wage should reflect only the dеceased's earnings as a construction worker for Morrison-Knudsen. Accordingly, pursuant to section 10(b) of the Act, the average weekly wage was determined by reference to the average yearly wages of a fellow employee whose wages most closely resembled those of the deceased during the period he worked for Morrison-Knudsen.3 The administrative law judge further ruled, however, that the contributions to the union trust funds were not includable in the average weekly wage. At the hearing, the claimant also presented a claim for attorney's fees pursuant to section 28 of the Act. Although she requested $7,530, the administrative law judge awarded a fee of $2,988.80.
On cross-appeals to the Benefits Review Board, the Board upheld the administrative law judge's ruling with respect to the amount of benefits to which the claimant was entitled. The Board rejected the company's сontention that section 10(b) should not be applied, and also rejected the claimants' contention that fringe benefit payments should have been included in the average weekly wage. The Board remanded the case, however, ordering that the administrative law judge give detailed reasons for the substantial reduction of the attorney's fee award. On remand, the case was assigned to a different administrative law judge.4 The new administrativе law judge increased the attorney's fee award to $4,000. The claimant again appealed to the Board, contending that the award was still inadequate. The Board modified the fee award to $6,215. Both parties thereafter petitioned this court for review of the Board's order. The claimant contends that the Board should have included the employer's trust fund contributions in computing her husband's average weekly wage; the company contends that the Board's modification of the attorney's fee award was clearly erroneous.
* We address first the claimant's contention that the fringe benefits provided to her husband by means of the company's contributions to the union trust funds are a part of her husband's "average weekly wage" within the meaning of the Act. This issue has apparently not been addressed before. We begin our analysis with the specific language of the statute.
The term "wages" is defined at section 2(13) of the Act:
"Wages" means the money rate at which the service rendered is recompensed under the contract of hiring in force at the time of the injury, 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.
33 U.S.C. § 902(13). We agree with the Board that this definition "clearly implies that values received by an employеe that are readily identifiable and calculable should be included in the determination of the average weekly wage." App. I at 51. Thus, for example, vacation pay constitutes wages, Baldwin v. General Dynamics Corp., 5 BRBS 579, BRB No. 76-271 (March 15, 1977), as does overtime pay, Gray v. General Dynamics Corp., 5 BRBS 279, BRB No. 76-105 (December 21, 1976), although neither is explicitly mentioned in section 2(13).5 The question, then, is whether the benefit fund contributions are identifiable, calculablе values received by the employees. We hold that they are.
We recognize that, as Morrison-Knudsen emphasizes, the contributions are made to the union funds, not to the employees, and that the individual employees have no voice in the day-to-day operation of the funds. The company cannot seriously maintain, however, that because the union funds receive the contributions, then the funds are the beneficiaries of the сompany's payments. The beneficiaries are the employees. The funds are no more than a channel; they are merely a means by which the company provides life insurance, health insurance, retirement benefits, and career training for its employees.
Further, it is indisputable that each of these benefits has substantial economic value to the employees. If they were not provided at the company's expense, each employee would have to spend his or her own money to acquire them. The Board apparently felt that it would be impossible to determine the "value" to an employee of the insurance policies, the career training, or the pension because whether and to what extent the employee might use them is highly speculative. This reasoning ignores the fact that an insurance policy must be bought and paid for whether or not a claim is ever made upon it. The economic advantage lies in the employer's provisions of such a policy at no cost to the employee. See W. W. Cross v. NLRB,
We may only speculate whether plaintiff would have worked a full 10 years for defendant (and thereby obtained a vested interest in the pension fund) had she not been injured. However, the facts are that at the time of the injury her employer was putting aside this potential benefit for her and that the injury prevented a continuation of this potential toward a vested interest. As the result of her injury she must find some other way of providing income for retirement. The pension payment was a part of her weekly wage.
The Supreme Court's reasoning in United States v. Carter,
It is undisputed that if the collective-bargaining agreement had required the contractor to pay each employee 71/2 cents per hour above the prevailing wage rate, and the employee had, by contract with his bargaining representative, agreed to contribute that sum to the fund, the surety would have been obligated to make good any default in the contractor's payment of that extra 71/2 сents per hour.
Id. at 217,
It may be true, as the Board observed, that the sixty-eight cents per hour "would in all likelihood not buy decedent's family similar kinds of protection," App. I at 52, but the possible inadequacy of the contributions is no reason to withhold them altogether. Moreover, we think the above quotation from the Carter case supports the conclusion that the most reasonable course is to measure the value of the fringe benefits by the amount of the employer's contributions to the benefit funds. We are not persuaded by the Board's concern that "if contributions to the various funds were included in the average weekly wage, it would appear that to (calculate compensation payments under) section 10B, one would have to find a fellow employee who not only worked similar hours at a similar wage scale, but who had a similar status vis a vis union funds as well." App. I at 52. Such fears are unfounded. The benefit fund contributions are made on a per-hour basis for each employee, without regard to the employee's "status vis a vis union funds." Thus, the contributions may be included in the average weekly wage under section 10(b) simply by determining the amount of the contributions made on behalf of the fellow employee who, having worked similar hours, serves as the referent in any event.
Finally, Morrison-Knudsen's reliance on United States v. Embassy Restaurant,
In conclusion, it is clear that if the value received by the employee is reasonably identifiable and calculable, then it must be included in the average weekly wage of the employee. We hold that the fringe benefits at issue here amount to value received by the employees, and that it is reasonable to measure such value by the amount of the employer's contributions to the various fringe benefit funds. Therefore, those contributions must be included as part of the employee's average weekly wage in computing the compensation due under the Act. Accordingly, that part of the Board's decision concerning fringe benefits is reversed.
II
In its cross-petition for review of the Board's order, the company contends that the Board erred in modifying the amount of attorney's fees awarded by the administrative law judge. As the Board stated:
After careful reviеw and consideration of the entire record ..., we find that the administrative law judge's award of the attorney's fee herein is an abuse of discretion and contrary to law. Normally, the Board would remand this case to the administrative law judge for a second time for reconsideration; however, since Judge Thomas' Decision was of necessity based only upon a review of the records, as would be any subsequent decision he could render, in the interest of administrative economy the Board modifies the attorney's fee award to $6215.00....
The fee award made by the administrative law judge was for services performed in connection with the proceedings before him. The pertinent regulation provides as follows:
An attorney or other representative seeking a fee for services performed on behalf of a claimant with respect to claims filed under the Act shall makе application thereof to the persons, administrative body, or court before whom the services were performed.
20 C.F.R. § 701.132 (emphasis added). The company contends that the Board, in modifying a fee award for services performed before the administrative law judge, violated its own regulation. We disagree.
Initially, we note that the claimant's attorney complied with the requirement set out in the regulation: her attorney appliеd to the administrative law judge for attorney's fees for services performed before him, and to the Board for services performed before it.8 Nothing in the regulation prohibits the Board from reviewing or revising the award set by the administrative law judge.
It is clear that the Board has the authority to review and reverse an administrative law judge's fee award if that award was an abuse of discretion. Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs v. United States Steel Corp.,
The order appealed from is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case is remanded to the Benefits Review Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Of the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 291(a)
Morrison-Knudsen's insurer, the Argonaut Insurance Company, is also a respondent here
Undеr section 9 of the Act, death benefits are computed by reference to the average weekly wage of the deceased employee
The relevant statutory language of section 10(b) reads:
Determination of pay
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the average weekly wage of the injured employee at the time of the injury shall be taken as the basis upon which to compute compensation and shall be determined as follows:
(b) If the injured employee shall not have worked in such employment during substantially the whole of such year, his average annual earnings, if a six-day worker, shall consist of three hundred times the average daily wage or salary, and, if a five-day worker, two hundred and sixty times the average daily wage or salary, which an employee of the same class working substantially the whole of such immediately preceding year in the same or in similar employment in the same or a neighboring place shall have earned in such employment during the days when so employed.
The original administrative law judge had since left the Department of Labor
Similarly, transportation provided by the employer has been held to constitute "wages" under a state workers' compensation statute. Leslie v. Reynolds,
In W. W. Cross v. NLRB,
(T)he word "wages" in § 9(a) of the Act embraces within its meaning direct and immediate economic benefits flowing from the employment relationship. And this is as far as we need to go, for so construed the word covers a group insurance program for the reason that such a program provides a financial cushion in the event of illness or injury arising outside the scope of employment at less cost than such a cushion could be obtained through contracts of insurance negotiated individually.
Id. at 878. See also Inland Steel v. NLRB,
We have discovered only one other state court case that addresses the issue whether benefit fund contributions are part of an employee's average weekly wage for purposes of a workers' compensation statute. That case, Still v. Industrial Comm'n,
The fees awarded by the Board for services performed in connection with proceedings before it are not at issue in this appeal
The instant case is distinguishable from Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs v. United States Steel Corp.,
The other cases cited by the company are also inapposite. In Ayers S.S. Co. v. Bryant,
