Westran Corporation (hereinafter defendant) and its insurer, Insurance Company of North America, appeal by leave granted from an April 29, 1982, opinion and order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board which awardеd plaintiff disability compensation benefits in the amount of $112 per week.
On August 13, 1974, plaintiff was engaged in common labor at dеfendant’s Muskegon, Michigan plant. On that day, he injured his neck and right shoulder when he was hit by a core which had been thrówn by a fellow worker. For the next three years or so, plaintiff continued in his regular employment with intermittent lost time because of pаin and medical treatment to his right shoulder and arm. Defendant voluntarily paid compensation benefits for plaintiff’s lost time.
In November of 1977, defendant offered plaintiff favored work. The job consisted of painting the structural support pоles in defendant’s plant. Plaintiff was allowed to work at his own pace and to paint with whichever hand was most comfortable. On or about December 2, 1977, defendant offered plaintiff another favored work job, this time painting yellow stripes on the floor throughout the factory with a paint-lining machine. Plaintiff refused that assignment on the ground that he would not be ablе to do it because of his injured right arm. Plaintiff did not return to work for defendant after that date and the company ceаsed voluntary compensation benefits around that time.
Thereafter, plaintiff filed a claim for compensa *70 tion benefits, but, by decision mailed May 22, 1979, the referee denied further compensation benefits, finding that "the plaintiff has received all the benefits he is entitled to, and further that he has beеn offered favored work which he has unreasonably refused”.
By opinion and order entered April 29, 1982, the appeal board affirmed the referee’s determination that plaintiff received all the compensation benefits that hе was entitled to up to June 30, 1978, but reversed the referee’s decision that plaintiff forfeited his right to future compensatiоn benefits by refusing the company’s 1977 offer of favored work. The appeal board held that defendant was entitled to suspend its payment of the benefits as long as plaintiff unjustifiably refused to continue performing suitable favored work offered by it. However, the board found that, when plaintiff asked for suitable favored work some time in June, 1978, defendant was no longer entitled to suspend compensation benefits from and after June, 1978.
It is well-settled that an injured employee who unjustifiably refuses an offer of favored work forfeits his right to compensation benefits.
Bower v Whitehall Leather Co,
"The defendant has argued, based upon cited 'forfeiture’ lаnguage contained in the recently released Supreme Court decision in
Bower v Whitehall Leather Co,
*71
"Nowhere in the Bower opinion is the term 'forfeiture,’ as it applies to the judicially-created favored work setting, specifically defined. However, during the following discussion of the impact of an 'unjustifiable refusal to accept rehabilitation pursuant to a decision of the director,’ the term 'forfeiture’ is equated with a 'loss or reduction of compensation * * * for each week of the period of refusal
" 'Further, in the area of rehabilitation, the Worker’s Disability Compensation Act itself specificаlly incorporates the factor of reasonableness in judging forfeiture:
" ' "If there is an unjustiñable refusal to accept rehabilitation pursuant to a decision of the director, the director shall order a loss or reduction of compensation in an amоunt determined by the director for each week of the period of refusal.” MCL 418.319(1); MSA 17.237(319)(1). (Emphasis added.)’ Id., p 183.
"Such a gloss is entirely consistent with a leading, and analogous, work interruption case,
Pigue v General Motors Corp,
" 'In
PPG Industries, Inc v Aites,
7 Pa Commw Ct
*72
588;
"Accordingly, we would additionally hold that the defendant was entitled to suspend its payment of weekly benefits (as opposed to payments for medical care, the right to which remained unabated) for the duration of the plaintiffs unjustified refusal to continue performing suitable favored work offered by the defendant.”
Under the circumstances of this case we agree that the decision of the appeal board was reasonable.
However, it was agreed at oral argument that the effective date of the appeal board’s order should be June 30, 1979, instead of June 30, 1978.
Affirmed.
