AMENDED OPINION
Mеmorandum Decision of the Court of Appeals, Division Two, filed April 25, 1991, vacated in part
We granted review in these consolidated workers’ compensation cases to re-examine *96 the question of whether, for purposes of determining disability benefits, a worker’s average monthly wage includes wages from concurrent dissimilar employment. See Ariz.R.Civ.App.P. 23(c)(4). We have jurisdiction pursuant to Ariz. Const. art. 6, § 5(3), A.R.S. § 12-120.24, and Ariz.R.Civ. App.P. 23.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Casper Baca Rodeo Company (“Baca”) entered into a contract with the Greenlee County Fair and Rodeo Association (“Association”) to stage the Assоciation’s annual rodeo at Duncan, Arizona in September 1988. Under the contract, Baca agreed to provide all rodeo stock and chute help. Baca, who only had bucking stock, entered into a subcontract to have Sam Trujillo provide all timed-event stock for the rodeo. 1 Trujillo, in turn, hired Jimmy Wiley as a rodeo assistant. While working at the rodeo, Wiley suffered a significant injury to his right leg resulting in a temporary total and a permanent partial disability-
Following his injury, Wiley filed workers’ compensation claims against both Baca and Trujillo. Neither Baca nor Trujillo had proсured workers’ compensation insurance and the No Insurance Section/Special Fund of the Industrial Commission of Arizona (“Commission”) processed the claims. See A.R.S. §§ 23-907, 23-1065. The administrative law judge (“AU”) found that Baca was not Wiley’s statutory employer because Baca had delegated to Trujillo his right to control Wiley’s employment. The AU found that Trujillo was responsible for Wiley’s medical, surgical, and hospital benefits as well as disability benefits.
Trujillo paid Wiley a total of $80 for two days of work as a rodeo assistant. Prior to the injury, Wiley earned $2,175 per month as a full-time electrician. In addition, he worked as a football referee, officiating three games and receiving $22.80 per game, including travel reimbursement. In determining Wiley’s pre-injury average monthly wage, however, the AU refused to include Wiley’s income as an electrician or referee because that work was dissimilar to his work as a rodeo assistant. The AU found that Wiley had received a total of $80 in wages as a rodeo assistant in the year prior to his injury. Thus, the average monthly wage used to calculate Wiley’s disability benefits was $6.67. Accordingly, Wiley’s award for temporary total disability was sixty-six and two-thirds percent of $6.67 or $4.45 per month.
Wiley and Trujillo challenged the Commission’s awards in special actions before the court of appeals. That court consolidated the special actions, set aside the finding that Baca was not Wiley’s statutory employer, and affirmed the average monthly wage determination. Wiley v. Trujillo, Nos. 2 CA-IC 90-0054, -0055, -0057 (Ariz. Ct.App. Apr. 25, 1991) (mem. dec.). Wiley petitioned this court to review the court of appeals’ decision affirming the average monthly wage determination. 2 We granted review to examine the following issues:
1. Are our previous decisions unfair and discriminatory by refusing to combine wages from concurrent “dissimilar” employment in setting an injured employee’s average monthly wage while allowing the combination of wages from concurrent “similar” employment?
2. Should the cases refusing to combine wages from concurrent “dissimilar” employment be overruled?
Essentially, the issue before us is whether Wiley’s total wages from his various jobs should be aggregated in computing his average monthly wage (and thus in determining his lost earning capacity and resulting compensation) or whether, because his jobs were dissimilar, only the income from the single job in which he was working at the time he was injured should be considered.
DISCUSSION
A. The Concurrent Dissimilar Employment Rule
Under the Arizona Workers’ Compensatiоn Act (“Act”), A.R.S. §§ 23-901 to 23-
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1091, a claimant’s average monthly wage is defined by statute.
See
A.R.S. § 23-1041. The ALJ and the court of appeals relied on our construction of this statutory provision in
Wesolowski v. Industrial Comm’n,
Under the Act, benefits are based on a claimant’s “average monthly wage at the time of injury.” A.R.S. § 23-1041(A). The average monthly wage determination directly affects the amount of benefits a claimant receives. See generally A.R.S. §§ 23-1044; 23-1045. “Monthly wage” is defined as “the average wage paid during and over the month in which the employee is killed or injured.” A.R.S. § 23-1041(D); see also A.R.S. § 23-1041(B) (monthly wage for short-term employment); A.R.S. § 23-1042 (monthly wage for permanently incapacitated minors). The statutory definition of monthly wage has remained constant — virtually to the letter — from the time it first appeared in the Act. See, e.g., A.R.S. § 23-1041(D); Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 56-952 (1939); A.R.S. § 1438 (1928); 1939 Ariz.Sess.Laws ch. 28, § 6; 1933 Ariz. Sess.Laws, 1st S.S. ch. 11, § 6; 1925 Ariz. Sess.Laws ch. 83, § 70. However, in determining the average monthly wage of claimants who hold more than one job, judicial construction of this statutory phrase has fluctuated.
1. Prior Judicial Construction
Our construction of the applicable statutory language has been both confusing and contradictory. We first addressed the issue of concurrent employment in
Butler v. Industrial Comm’n,
In
Wells v. Industrial Comm’n,
Wells,
however, was short-lived. In
Faulkner v. Industrial Comm’n,
The death knell came for
Wells
and
Butler
in a pair of cases decided in the mid-1960s. In
Sanchez v. Industrial Comm’n,
Faulkner is consistent with the usual rule, sometimes adopted into statute, that where employments are dissimilar the earnings will not be combined. Any inference to the contrary arising out of Wells v. Industrial Commission,63 Ariz. 264 ,161 P.2d 113 , is specifically overruled.
The Commission could not, as a basis for compensation, have combined the earnings prior to the injury of the dissimilar employments of miner and musician.
Sanchez,
We have not revisited the concurrent dissimilar employment rule in the nearly thirty years following
Sanchez
and
Wesolow-ski.
During this time, although these two cases have been criticized,
see Wiley,
mem. dec. at 4-5;
Wheeler v. Industrial Comm’n,
Wiley argues that we should overrule
Sanchez
and
Wesolowski
and combine wages from concurrent dissimilar employment. Wiley makes two arguments: (1) as a matter of statutory construction, the Act does not distinguish between wages received from similar or dissimilar employment and all wages should be combined in determining the applicable avеrage monthly wage, and (2) combining wages when employment is similar but refusing to combine wages when employment is dissimilar deprives Wiley of his rights under the United States and Arizona Constitutions. Because resolution of the first argument may obviate our need to address Wiley’s constitutional argument, we begin with the statutory question.
See State v. Yslas,
2. Statutory Interpretation
We begin, as we must, with the express language of the Act. Monthly wage “means the average wage paid during and over the month in which the employee is killed or injured.” A.R.S. § 23-1041(D). Under the definition of “monthly wage,” the wage paid clearly can come from more than one source.
See Floyd Hartshorn Plastering Co.,
The language of A.R.S. §§ 23-1041(A) and (D) does not expressly address whether wages from concurrent dissimilar employment should be combined in making the monthly wage determination. Indeed, the non-specific language of these provisions— with claims being based on the “monthly wage” and “average wage paid” — suggests little about whether all wages (i.e., from similar as well as dissimilar employment) should be combined. Thus, as to the issue of concurrent dissimilar employment, we find that these subsections are, at the very least, non-specific, ambiguous, and open to interpretation.
See, e.g., State v. Sweet,
“Statutes which are ambiguous must be construed in view of the purposes they are intended to accomplish and the evils they are designed to remedy.”
Senor T’s Restaurant,
The Arizona Constitution commands that the Act be a “just and humane compensation law” and relieve workers and their dependents from “burdensome, expensive and litigious remedies.” Ariz. Const. art. 18, § 8. As a matter of statutory interpretation, we have long held that
[t]he goal of the Act is to determine a realistic pre-injury wage base which can serve as a stаndard of comparison with the post-injury earning capacity of the injured worker; the emphasis in setting a worker’s average monthly wage is on *100 what the employee has actually earned for his labors.
Senor T’s Restaurant,
3. The Dissimilar Employment Rule and the Purposes of the Act
There can be no doubt that combining wages from concurrent dissimilar employment in determining the applicable average monthly wage furthers the purposes of compensating claimants for their real loss of earning capacity
4
and relieving employees of the burden caused by compensable injuries. Combining all wages that a claimant was receiving before the injury, from similar as well as dissimilar employment, focuses on reality — what the employee actually earned,
see Señor T’s Restaurant,
The fortuity accompanying the dissimilar employment rule is plainly unfair to the employee. In Wells, we hypothesized, and sought to prevent, such unfairness.
Where an employee is working for several different employers and is injured, in order that he may be reasonably compensated for the loss of his earning powers, his total wages must be taken into consideration. Any other construction of the statute would result in great injustice and lead to absurdities. For instance, a skilled employee might be regularly employed during different periods of a month in separate occupations on a part-time basis. If he happened to be injured in the employment that paid him the least amount оf money during the month, and his wages from the other employments could not be considered, he would receive entirely inadequate compensation which would not represent his earning capacity.
Wells,
Even administering the dissimilar employment rule has proven problematic. Although sounding like a simple doctrine, it is difficult to apply. Determining when employment is dissimilar has spawned much litigation, not only in Arizona
5
but also in other jurisdictions where the rule has been
*101
applied
6
— often with irreconcilable results.
7
Clearly the rule does not diminish litigation between the claimant and the employer— one purpose underlying the Act.
See Marriott Corp.,
Trujillo argues that it may appear unfair to burden one employer (and in many cases an insurance carrier)
8
with liability not directly in proportion to the specific wages and insurance premiums paid. This argument, however, applies with equal force to wages from concurrent
similar
employment that clearly can be combined.
Floyd Hartshorn Plastering Co.,
To this one employee, this one loss is everything — [the employee] has nothing against which to offset it. To the employer, and even more to the carrier, this is just one case among many. The rule operates impartially in both directions. Today this employer-carrier may be saddled with a slight extra cost; tomorrow the positions may be reversed, and the employer-carrier will be completely relieved of the cost of an injury to one of its employees in a concurrent-employment situation, when it happens to be the other employment in which the injury occurs. This is the essence of thе concept of spreading the risk in a system like workmen’s compensation.
2 Arthur Larson,
The Law of Workmen’s Compensation
§ 60.31(c), at 10-751 (1992) (footnote omitted) (hereinafter “Larson,
Workmen’s Compensation”)-,
9
see also Wheeler,
*102
Nor is the idea of putting the entire risk on one of several employers a new concept under Arizona workers’ compensation law. For example, a claimant’s last employer incurs full liability for occupational diseases. A.R.S. § 23-901.02. This certainly represents “a far more extreme case of disproportion between premium and liability, yet it is accepted as a defensible compromise on the theory that employers and carriers will on the whole come out even in time.” 2 Larson,
Workmen’s Compensation
§ 60.31(c), at 10-752. Another example is the successive injury rule.
See Morrison-Knudsen Co. v. Industrial Comm’n,
In sum, there are substantial and persuasive reasons to reject the dissimilar employment rule, and we find no statutory language or persuasive policy reason to retain it. Thus, as a matter оf first impression, we would reject the concurrent dissimilar employment rule. However, because we do have prior, contrary case law on the subject, we must determine whether the logical underpinnings of those prior decisions still withstand scrutiny.
See Ontive-ros v. Borak,
4. The Effect of Prior Case Law
The reasoning of
Faulkner
(the foundation for
Sanchez
and Wesolowski) has been questioned by the court of appeals.
See Wheeler,
Notwithstanding any criticism of
Faulkner,
its holding (that wages received from an employer
not covered by the Act
must be excluded when making the average monthly wage determination) clearly does not require that wages from сoncurrent dissimilar employment for covered employers also must be excluded when making the average monthly wage determination.
See American Uniform & Rental Serv. v. Trainer,
The
Sanchez
court applied
Faulkner
to a totally different factual situation and did so by merely stating that
Faulkner
was “consistent with” a rule that wages from concurrent dissimilar employment should not be combined. Then, without discussion,
Sanchez
summarily adopted the concurrent dissimilar employment rule.
Sanchez,
The court of appeals, although properly following
Sanchez
and
Wesolowski,
has questioned whether the dissimilar employment rule is equitable or required by the language of the Act.
See Wiley,
mem. dec. at 4-5;
Wheeler,
[It] is unnecessary from the point of view of statutory construction, unsound as a matter of accomplishing the purposes of thе legislation, inhumane from the point of view of the claimant, and logically absurd as to the distinctions on which it is based.
Id. § 60.31(c), at 10-746. For the reasons described above, we share these concerns about the rule.
In light of our “healthy respect for
stare decisis,’’ State v. Lara,
The views of the leading commentator in the field and of our own court of appeals verify this conclusion, as do more recent cases from other states. Thus, although recognizing that stare decisis is a formidable constraint, compelling reasons overcome that constraint in this case. When addressing the same issue, the Florida Supreme Court overruled precedent and rejected the concurrent dissimilar employment rule:
If the injury occurring on the part-time job has disabled the employee from working at his full-time job, his capacity as a wage earner is impaired beyond the limits of his part-time job and his compensation should be based on the combined wages. The purpose of the Act is to compensate for loss of wage earning capacity due to work-connected injury. It is the capacity of the “whole man” not the capacity of the part-time or full-time worker that is involved.
*104
American Uniform & Rental Serv.,
We endorse this view. Thus, we join the “substantial and growing minority” of jurisdictions,
see 2
Larson,
Workmen’s Compensation
§ 60.31(a), at 10-729, in holding that concurrent wages from both similar and dissimilar employment should be combined in determining a claimant’s average monthly wage,
see, e.g., MCM Parking Co. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
B. The Retroactivity of This Decision
“In civil actions, Arizona law has always been ‘that unless otherwise stated, a court opinion operates retroactively as well as prospectively.’ ”
Brannigan v. Raybuck,
1. Whether the decision establishes a new legal principle by overruling clear and reliable precedent or by deciding an issue whose resolution was not foreshadowed;
2. Whether retroactive application will further or retard operation of the new rule, considering the prior history, purpose, and effect of the new rule;
3. Whether retroactive application will produce substantially inequitable results.
Fain Land & Cattle Co. v. Hassell,
Applying the first of these factors, in light of Sanchez and Wesolowski, our holding overrules clear precedent. Although these cases had been criticized, they had not been questioned by this court. Thus, this factor weighs against retroactive application.
The purpose of the rule set forth today is to advance the purposes of the Act and compensate claimants for injuries covered by the Act. Retroactive application would protect the interests of claimants who were injured in the past. Furthermore, our holding above does not attempt to alter past actions, a factual impossibility.
Law v. Superior Court,
As to the third factor, to allow all claimants with concurrent dissimilar employment who were injured in the рast thirty years to reopen their wage determination would result in substantial inequities. “Numerous defendants would be subject to [additional] claims in cases they previously believed had been finalized.”
Villareal,
*105
Balancing these factors, we hold that this decision should be applied prospectively. Specifically, our holding that concurrent dissimilar wages should be combined in determining the appropriate average monthly wage applies only to claims in which the award determining the average monthly wage has not bеcome final, but it is inapplicable in cases where the award has become final and the time for appeal of that award has expired.
Cf Senor T’s Restaurant,
DISPOSITION
The portion of the court of appeals’ decision affirming the Commission’s average monthly wage determination is vacated. The Commission’s award is set aside, and these cases are remanded to the Commission for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Timed-event stock includes calves and steers for roping as well as bulldogging steers.
. No party sought review of the court of appeals’ statutory employer determination. Accordingly, that issue is not before us.
. Before the court of appeals, Trujillo argued that A.R.S. §§ 23-1041(A) and (D) governed this case. Before this court, however, Trujillo argues that A.R.S. § 23-1041 (B) also mandates the concurrent dissimilar employment rule. In setting forth guidelines for determining the average monthly wage of short-term employees, subsection (B) indicates that similar employment may be considered.
If the injured or killеd employee has not been continuously employed for the period of thirty days immediately preceding the injury or death, the average monthly wage shall be such amount as, having regard to the previous wage of the injured employee or of other employees of the same or most similar class working in the same or most similar employment in the same or neighboring locality, reasonably represents the monthly earning capacity of the injured employee in the employment in which he is working at the time of the accident. A.R.S. § 23-1041(B). Although the statute suggests a comparisоn with other individuals having a similar employment profile, it does not mandate that wages from concurrent dissimilar employment cannot be used to determine the claimant’s average monthly wage.
To read subsection (B) as requiring the dissimilar employment rule would require us to imply the phrase “of a similar type" after the second “employment" in that subsection or to replace the second “employment" with "specific job.” Naturally, we are reluctant to rewrite the statute — particularly when the text as written can be read as directing that all wages (both similar and dissimilar) should be inсluded in calculating a claimant’s average monthly wage.
See Wells,
. Subject to the statutory cap limiting the maximum average monthly wage. See A.R.S. § 23-1041(E).
.
See, e.g., Wiley,
mem. dec. at 3-5;
Wheeler,
. See 2 Arthur Larson, The Law of Workmen’s Compensation § 60.31(b), at 10-744 to 746 (1992) (citing cases).
.
Compare Floyd Hartshorn Plastering Co.,
. Because neither Trujillo nor Baca procured workers’ compensation insurance as required by law, A.R.S. § 23-902, no carrier is a party to this case. Trujillo argues that this failurе to procure insurance should prevent us from determining the ongoing validity of the dissimilar employment rule as no carrier is a party to this case. We flatly reject this argument. We cannot shirk our duty to decide disputes between litigants even though other entities may have a direct or indirect interest in the resolution of the issues. Furthermore, non-parties can present their arguments to the court via amicus appearances, see Ariz.R.Civ.App.P. 16, a mechanism utilized by an interested non-party in this case.
. Indeed, in this case, if Wiley had lost rather than injured his leg, he would have been entitled to 55% of his average monthly wage for 50 months. See A.R.S. § 23-1044(B)(15). Under the dissimilar employment rule, Wiley’s average monthly wage was $6.67. Fifty-five percent of $6.67 would have entitled Wiley to benefits of $3.67 per month or a total of $183.43 — received in payments of $3.67 per month over a period of more than four years — for the complete loss of a leg.
.
Sanchez
cited cases from Connecticut, Florida, Michigan, New York, and New Jersey. Con
*103
necticut applies the concurrent dissimilar employment rule, although the issue apparently has not been addressed since
Johnson v. Phaefflin,
. As noted above, Faulkner is not necessarily implicated by this holding. Thus, we explicitly do not determine the continuing validity of Faulkner in this case. Furthermore, in light of our ruling, we do not address Wiley’s constitutional arguments.
. The parties have not argued, and we do not decide in this case, whether
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
— U.S.-,
