TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
WORKERS' COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD
Tara Marshall ) Docket No. 2015 ... 01-0147
)
v. )
) State File No. 63950-2014
Mueller Company, et al. )
)
)
Appeal from the Court of Workers' )
Compensation Claims )
Audrey A. Headrick, Judge )
Affirmed and Certified as Final- Filed July 11, 2016
In this appeal of the trial court's compensation hearing order, the employee challenges
the trial court's denial of an increase in the employee's permanent partial disability
benefits following a court-approved settlement agreement. At all relevant times, the
employee continued to work for the employer. At the time of her injury, the employee's
hourly wage included a summer hours' bonus. However, when the period of
compensation set out in the settlement agreement ended in October 2015, the employee's
hourly rate of pay no longer included the bonus. Relying on Tennessee Code Annotated
section 50-6-207(3)(B) (2015), the employee contends the wages she received at the end
of the period of compensation reflected in the settlement agreement were less than her
wages at the time of her injury, entitling her to increased benefits. The trial court found
the employee was not entitled tb increased benefits, and the employee has appealed.
Having carefully reviewed the record, we affirm the trial court's decision and certify the
order as final.
Judge David F. Hensley delivered the opinion of the Appeals Board, in which Judge
Marshall L. Davidson, III, and Judge Timothy W. Conner joined.
Jeffrey W. Rufolo, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the employee-appellant, Tara Marshall
Joseph R. White, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the employer-appellee, Mueller Company
1
Factual and Procedural Background
This case involved a single issue in the trial court, which is now the issue on
appeal, namely, whether Tara Marshall ("Employee") is entitled to increased permanent
partial disability benefits beyond the benefits she received pursuant to a court-approved
settlement. The facts are undisputed. Employee sustained a work-related left leg fracture
on August 4, 2014 while in the course and scope of her employment with Mueller
Company ("Employer"), which Employer accepted as compensable and for which
benefits were voluntarily provided. Employee returned to work for Employer on
February 3, 2015. The parties ultimately entered into an agreement resolving Employee's
claim, which the trial court approved on July 31, 2015. The parties acknowledged that
the 31.5 week period represented by the .initial award of permanent partial disability
benefits would end on October 13, 2015. Because the settlement agreement was
approved prior to that date, the parties included language in the agreement stating "[t]he
determination as to whether Employee will be entitled to any additional [permanent
disability] benefits cannot be made until the initial compensation period exptres on
October 13, 2015, per Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)."
On October 13, 2015, Employee's hourly rate of pay, excluding overtime, was
$18.16. At the time of her August 14, 2014 injury, she was earning $19.56 per hour,
which included a base rate of $17.86 per hour, a "summer hours' bonus" of $1.50 per
hour, and a "shift differential" of $.20 per hour. The "summer hours' bonus" was part of
a collective bargaining agreement entered into between Employer and the union in which
1
Employee was a member, which provided, in part, as follows:
The Company and the Union (USW) have mutually agreed that the current
business environment is in a recession and for the Company to take full
advantage of the lowest energy rates offered by [TVA] we are adopting, on
a non-precedent setting basis, irregular shift hours. Beginning on Sunday
June 2nd, 2013 at 8:00 PM and ending October 4, 2013 for the Iron Melt,
Foam Molding, Cleaning Room, General Foundry Labor and No-Bake Iron
Departments.
Employees working in the [a]ffected departments will receive a $1.00 per
hour shift premium on top of their contractual shift premium during the
irregular shift schedule.
1
Although the collective bargaining agreement provided for employees working in the affected
departments to receive a $1 .00 per hour shift premium, the parties stipulated that Employee's rate of pay
at the time of her injury "included a summer hours bonus of $1.50 per hour and a $0.20 shift differential
increase in comparison to [Employee's] base rate of pay ($17.86)."
2
The parties stipulated that the collective bargaining agreement remained in effect
and applied to Employee. The parties also agreed that in 2015, the "summer hours'
bonus" ended on September 30, 2015, at which time all affected employees returned to
their regular base rate of pay.
On November 10, 2015, Employee filed a petition for benefit determination
relying on Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)(B) (2015), seeking increased
permanent partial disability benefits. The relevant portion of section 50-6-207(3)(B)
states:
If at the time the period of compensation provided by subdivision (3)(A)
ends, the employee has not returned to work with any employer or has
returned to work and is receiving wages or a salary that is less than one
hundred percent ( 100%) of the wages or salary the employee received from
his pre-injury employer on the date of injury, the injured employee may file
a claim for increased benefits. If appropriate, the injured employee's award
as determined under subdivision (3)(A) shall be increased by multiplying
the award by a factor of one and thirty-five one hundredths (1.35).
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B). 2 In addition to increased benefits resulting from an
employee's loss of employment or reduced wages after a work-related injury, an injured
worker's award may also be affected by additional factors identified in subdivisions 50-6-
207(3)(B)(i)-(iii) concerning the employee's education level, age, and the unemployment
rate in the county in which the employee was employed on the date of the work-related
injury. · Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B)(i)-(iii). The parties stipulated that, in the
event Employee is entitled to increased benefits, the amount of that increase would be
$14,634.28, which contemplates applying the 1.35 multiplier as well as a multiplier of 1.2
based upon Employee's age at the time the original period of compensation ended. See
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B)(ii).
The trial court determined that, at the time the original period of compensation
ended, Employee's "hourly pay had returned to her normal base rate of pay of $17 .86" as
provided in the collective bargaining agreement, which was not less than her base rate of
pay at the time of her injury. 3 Concluding that the phrase "if appropriate" in section 50-
2
Effective April 14, 2016, Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)(A) was amended to identify
the period of compensation determined by multiplying the employee's impairment rating by 450 weeks as
the "original award." Section 50-6-207(3)(8) was amended to identify an increased original award
resulting from modification of the original award by applying any of the relevant factors set out in that
section as the "resulting award." Hereinafter we have used the terms as defined in the 2016 amendment.
3
The pai1ies' Pre-Hearing Statements and briefs on appeal state that, at the expiration of the 31.5 week
compensation period, Employee's hourly rate was $18.16. This is an increase of $.30 over her hourly
base rate at the time of her injury.
3
6-207(3)(B) "indicates an employee is only entitled to increased benefits if the Court
finds that the statute's preceding sentence is satisfied," the trial court found that increased
benefits "are not appropriate" and denied Employee's request for increased permanent
partial disability benefits. Employee has appealed, contending that under a plain reading
of section 50-6-207(3), she is entitled to the stipulated amount of increased permanent
partial disability benefits.
Standard of Review
The standard we apply in reviewing a trial court's decision is statutorily mandated
and limited in scope. Specifically, "[t]here shall be a presumption that the findings and
conclusions of the workers' compensation judge are correct, unless the preponderance of
the evidence is otherwise." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-239(c)(7) (2015). The trial court's
decision must be upheld unless the rights of a party "have been prejudiced because
findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions of a workers' compensation judge:
(A) Violate constitutional or statutory provisions;
(B) Exceed the statutory authority of the workers' compensation judge;
(C) Do not comply with lawful procedure;
(D) Are arbitrary, capricious, characterized by abuse of discretion, or
clearly an unwarranted exercise of discretion;
(E) Are not supported by evidence that is both substantial and material
in the light of the entire record."
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-217(a)(3) (2015). Like other courts applying the standards
embodied in section 50-6-217(a)(3), we will not disturb the decision of the trial court
absent the limited circumstances identified in the statute. "The interpretation of a statute
and its application to undisputed facts involve questions of law," which we review de
nova with no presumption of correctness. Seiber v. Reeves Logging, 284 S.W.3d 294,
298 (Tenn. 2009). See also Cunningham v. Williamson Cnty. Hosp. Dist., 405 S.W.3d
41, 43 (Tenn. 2013); Payne v. D and D Electric, No. 2014-01-0023, 2016 TN Wrk.
Comp. App. Bd. LEXIS 21, at *6 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. App. Bd. May 4, 2016).
Analysis
This case presents an issue of first impression involving the application of
Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-207(3)(B) (2015). Analysis of the issue is aided
by considering the historical context within which Employee makes her request for
increased benefits.
Section 50-6-207(3)(B) has as its genesis the 1992 reforms to the Workers'
Compensation Act. An important element of those reforms was that, for injuries arising
on or after August 1, 1992, an injured worker's permanent partial disability was limited
4
to 2.5 times the employee's permanent medical impairment rating if the employee had
returned to work for the pre-injury employer at a wage equal to or greater than the wage
the employee was receiving at the time of the injury. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-
24l(a)(l) (1992). Additionally, the 1992 reforms provided for "reconsideration" of an
employee's industrial disability in cases where the employee subsequently lost his or her
employment with the pre-injury employer within the time period provided by statute.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6.,24l(a)(2) (1992). The amount by which a reconsidered award
could be enlarged was governed by section 50-6-241(b) (1992).
Section 50-6-241 was further amended in 2004 to reduce the cap on the multiple
of an award of permanent partial disability from 2.5 times the impairment rating to 1.5
times the impairment rating for injuries occurring after on or after July 1, 2004, where the
employee returned to work for the pre-injury employer earning the pre-injury wage.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-24l(d)(l)(A) (2005). 4 The 2004 amendments extended
reconsideration rights to employees who, within the number of weeks applicable pursuant
to statute, either lost their employment with the pre-injury employer or suffered a
reduction in wages to a level less than the wage the employee was earning at the time of
the injury. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-24l(d)(l)(B)(i) and (ii) (2005).
Thus, after the effective date of the 2004 reforms, section 50-6-241 provided for
an employee to receive permanent partial disability benefits in excess of the 1.5 cap
under two circumstances: (1) where the employee had not returned to work for the pre-
injury employer at the pre-injury wage at the time the employee's claim was resolved, or
(2) where the employee, after returning to work for the pre-injury employer, suffered a
loss of employment or experienced a reduction in wages to a wage less than what the
employee was earning at the time of the injury, provided that such loss of employment or
reduction in wages occurred within a specified time. In 2010, statutory provisions
governing reconsideration claims were amended to provide that a reduction of
employees' hourly rate of pay or number of hours "due to economic conditions" did not
entitle the employees to "reconsideration of their claims under this section if the
reduction in pay or reduction in hours affected at least fifty percent (50%) of all hourly
employees operating at or out of the same location." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-
241(d)(l)(B)(i) and (ii) (2010).
The Workers' Compensation Reform Act of 2013 significantly altered an
employee's potential award of permanent partial disability benefits. Among some of the
most significant changes was the deletion of subsections 50-6-24l(a) and (b) for injuries
occurring on or after July 1, 2014. See 2013 Tenn. Pub. Acts 289, § 89. Permanent
partial disability benefits under. section 50-6-207(3) were restructured to provide that an
4
The 2004 amendments also provided limitations to the recovery for injuries to certain "scheduled
members." Because this distinction is no longer relevant, we omit discussion of the specific provisions
regarding these scheduled members.
5
employee shall be paid specified benefits "at the time the injured employee reaches
maximum medical improvement . . . for the period of compensation, which shall be
determined by multiplying the employee's impairment rating by four hundred fifty (450)
weeks." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(A) (2014). Further, the employee "shall receive
these benefits ... whether the employee has returned to work or not." Id. Subdivision
50-6-207(3)(B) was also added, enabling an employee to file a claim for increased
permanent partial disability benefits "[i]f at the time the period of compensation provided
in subdivision (3)(A) ends, the employee has not returned to work with any employer or
has returned to work and is receiving wages or a salary that is less than one hundred
percent (100%) of the wages or salary the employee received from his pre-injury
employer on the date of injury." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B) (emphasis added).
An employee's request for increased benefits under section 50-6-207(3)(B) is initiated
"by filing a new petition for benefit determination ... no more than one ( 1) year after the
period of compensation provided in subdivision (3)(A) ends." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-
207(3)(D).
The 2013 Reform Act does not define "wages" as used in section 50-6-207(3)(B)
(2015), nor did earlier provisions of the Tennessee Workers' Compensation Act define
"wages." The Tennessee Supreme Court first addressed the term "wage" in the context
of temporary disability benefits, holding that the terms "wage" and "average weekly
wage" are not synonymous. Wilkins v. The Kellogg Co., 48 S.W.3d 148, 152-53 (Tenn.
2001). Based on the holding in Wilkins, the Supreme Court subsequently determined that
the term "wage" as used in section 50-6-24l(a)(l) did not mean "average weekly wage";
rather, it "means the hourly rate of pay for an employee who is compensated on an hourly
basis." Powell v. Blalock Plumbing & Elec. & HVAC, 78 S.W.3d 893, 898 (Tenn. 2002).
The Supreme Court's Special Workers' Compensation Panel has considered
whether an employee was entitled to an increase in permanent partial disability benefits
under section 50-06-24l(d)(l) following a layoff, during which time the employee
continued to receive employment benefits based on a collective bargaining agreement
that resulted in "take home compensation reduced by five percent." Edwards v. Saturn
Corp., No. M2007-01955-WC-R3-WC, 2008 Tenn. LEXIS 617, at *7 (Tenn. Workers'
Comp. Panel Sept. 25, 2008). Addressing whether the "wage" the employee received
during his layoff was equal to or less than the "wage" he was receiving at the time of his
injury, the Panel concluded that the legislature did not intend for the statutory cap on
permanent partial disability benefits to be removed under the circumstances of the case.
Finding the reduction in the employee's take-home pay to be analogous to an employer's
deciding to reduce the wages of its entire workforce, the Panel stated "[i]t does not appear
to this Panel that this is the type of situation that the General Assembly envisioned when
it drafted the workers' compensation laws." Id. at *29.
Two years later, in Blake v. Nissan N. Am., Inc., No. M2009-02173-WC, 2010
Tenn. LEXIS 1022 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. Panel Nov. 10, 2010), the Panel addressed
6
whether a reduction in a worker's hours was a sufficient basis to permit the trial court to
make an award in excess of the cap provided in section 50-6-24l(a)(l). The Panel
observed that Blake "falls into a middle ground" between Edwards and Powell, noting
that the employee "clearly sustained a loss of income after making a meaningful return to
work." Id. at * 12. However, the loss of income was not related to the employee's work
injury, "but instead was part of a plant-wide reduction in hours" intended to save jobs.
Id. In contrast to the 5% reduction in compensation in Edwards that was the result of a
collective bargaining agreement, Blake involved a 20% income reduction with no
connection to a collective bargaining agreement. While the appeal in Blake was pending,
the General Assembly amended section 50-6-24l(d)(l)(B) to provide that "[e]mployees
who continue in their employment after a reduction in pay or a reduction in hours due to
economic conditions shall not be entitled to reconsideration of their claims . . . if the
reduction ... affected at least 50% of all hourly employees operating at or out of the
5
same location." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-24l(d)(l)(B) (2010). The Panel in Blake
found the amendment to be consistent with the Panel's analysis in Edwards and its
determination that a general reduction in wages "caused by economic conditions and
undertaken for the purpose of saving jobs, will not automatically open previously
'capped' settlements to reconsideration." Id. at *13. Noting that the 2010 amendment
became effective after the appeal in Blake was heard and therefore was not controlling,
the Panel stated that it did, however, "inform as to the legislative intent related to how
reduction in force should impact a determination of whether or not there has been a
meaningful return to work." Id. at *13-14. The Panel determined that the amendment
supported "the application of Edwards and the lower cap, rather than Powell and the
higher cap," and concluded "that the trial court erred by finding that Employee did not
have a meaningful return to work as a result of Employer's plant-wide reduction of
working hours." Id. at* 14.
In 2012, the Panel addressed a reconsideration claim filed after a 2009 collective
bargaining agreement that resulted in a $2.50 per hour wage reduction for all union
employees. Robinson v. Bridgestone Ams. Tire Operations, LLC, No. M2011-02238-
WC-R3-WC, 2012 Tenn. LEXIS 840 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. Panel Nov. 21, 2012).
Because of the reduction, the employee's hourly rate was $0.98 less than it was at the
time of his 2005 work-related injury. The employee asserted that "the across-the-board
reduction in wages in 2009 triggered his right to a reconsideration of his 2006
settlement." Id at *3. Relying on Edwards and Blake, the Panel stated that the purpose
of the two-tiered benefit system created in section 50-6-241 "is to protect the interests of
several categories of employees, including ( 1) those who are unable to return to work for
their employer because of their injuries, (2) those who are able to return, but at a lesser
wage because of the effects of their injuries, and (3) those who, for reasons outside their
control, are placed into the job market to compete against unimpaired applicants." Id. at
5
The amendment to subdivisions 50-6-241 ( d)(l )(B)(i) and (ii) applied to reconsideration of claims that
were approved or adjudicated on or after July 1, 2010. 2010 Tenn. Pub. Acts 1034, § 3.
7
* 11. The Panel found no basis in the statute or in the case law "to conelude that the
General Assembly intended to grant a windfall to employees who returned to work at
their pre-injury wage and continued to work for their pre-injury employer, but who, at
some later time, are affected by an across-the-board reduction of pay as part of the
employer's even-handed attempts to address deteriorating market conditions such as
those that affected the automotive industry beginning in 2008." Id. at* 12.
Lastly, the most recent appellate opinion addressing the effect of a reduction in an
employee's wage on the right to increased benefits pursuant to section 50-6-241 is Young
v. Bridgestone Ams. Tire Operations, LLC, No. M2011-02551-WC-R3-WC, 2013 Tenn.
LEXIS 10 (Tenn. Workers' Comp. Panel Jan. 10, 2013). Unlike the Edwards and
Robinson cases, which involved reconsideration claims, the issue in Young concerned
whether the 1.5 multiplier in section 50-6-241 applied to the employee's permanent
partial disability award. The employee contended that, because his hourly wage was
reduced to a rate less than he earned at the time of his injury due to a collective
bargaining agreement, his permanent partial disability benefits should not be capped by
the 1.5 multiplier in section 50-6-24l(d)(l)(A). The trial court found the wage reduction
"was not as a result of his being injured or unable to work," and that the award of
permanent partial disability benefits was capped at 1.5 times his medical impairment
rating. Id. at *4. Discussing Edwards, Blake, and Robinson, the Panel adopted
Robinson's analysis, citing in particular the rationale behind the two-tiered system
created in section 50-6-241. Id. at * 11. The Panel concluded that the trial court correctly
applied section 50-6-24l(d)(l)(A) to limit the employee's award of permanent disability
benefits. Id. at *12.
Having reviewed the statutes and the case law existing prior to the 2013 Reform
Act, we tum to the instant case. Employee asserts the trial court "relied heavily" on
Edwards, Robinson, and Young "to deny an award of increased benefits," contending the
employees in those cases were "denied an increase in additional permanent benefits due
to the state of the economy" and that "the basis for these decisions was found in the 2010
[a]mendment" to section 50-6-24l(d)(l)(B)(i). Employee's assertion that the basis for
these decisions is found in the 2010 amendment is incorrect, as the 2010 amendment was
not applicable to any of these cases. Young and Edwards were decided prior to the 2010
amendment, and Robinson involved reconsideration of a settlement approved prior to the
July 1, 2010 effective date of the 2010 amendment.
Employee contends section 50-6-207 of the 2013 Reform Act is controlling and
that the deletion of the language from the 2010 amendment concerning "economic
conditions" confirms that the General Assembly did not intend economic considerations
to affect a request to enlarge benefits. Advocating a "plain reading of the statute,"
Employee concludes that she "is entitled to her stipulated amount of increased benefits"
because, while she was employed by Employer on the date the original period of
compensation ended, she was "receiving wages or a salary that is less than one hundred
8
percent ( 100%) of the wages or salary [she] received from [the] pre-injury employer on
the date of the injury." Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B) (2015). We disagree with
Employee's conclusion.
The 2013 Reform Act replaced what the Panel described in Robinson as the "two-
tiered benefit system created in [Tennessee Code Annotated section] 50-6-241" with
section 50-6-207(3)(B), which includes provisions ·designed to protect the interests of
several categories of employees, including those who are unable to return to work
because of the effect of their work injuries as well as those who are able to return to
work, but at a lesser wage or salary than they were receiving at the time of their injury.
Section 50-6-207(3)(B) addresses the second of these categories by providing that "[i]f
appropriate, the injured employee's. award as determined under subdivision (3)(A) shall
be increased by multiplying the award by a factor of one and thirty-five one hundredths
(1.35)." Id. (emphasis added). In addition to the provision authorizing an increased
award as a result of reduced wages or loss of employment, section 50-6-207(3)(B)
contains subdivisions that provide for a permanent partial disability award to be further
increased where the employee is earning reduced wages or has suffered a loss of
employment ifthe employee meets additional factors related to the employee's education,
age, and unemployment rate in the county in which the pre-injury employer is located.
See Tenn. Code Ann. § 50-6-207(3)(B)(i)-(iii).
Employer contends that when the original period of compensation expired on
October 13, 2015, Employee's base rate of pay was $18.16, which was $0.30 greater than
her base pay rate of $17 .86 on the date of her injury. Employer notes that, as in
"Edwards, Young, and Robinson, the decrease in [Employee's] hourly rate was
completely unrelated to her injury," and that "[a]ll employees in the Melt Department
received the same reduction in pay, regardless whether they had workers' compensation
claims." Employer emphasizes that Employee's "hourly rate had decreased beginning in
October for the two years prior to her injury," and that Employee "and all other similarly
situated employees will go back to the summer hours' pay later this year when it is
applicable."
Employer contends that if Employee's argument is accepted, she will "be in a
better position than she would have been if she ... had been injured during spring, fall or
winter," and that if she had been injured in the spring, fall, or winter, there would be no
argument whether she would be entitled to any additional compensation because her base
rate of pay at the end of the original compensation period would have been higher than
when she was injured. Employer notes that Employee's hourly rate of pay returns to her
base rate each October regardless of whether she has suffered any injuries. Employer
. argues that Employee "should not receive increased compensation just because she was
injured during the summer months when her pay was temporarily increased," and that
Employer "should not be unfairly penalized, and [Employee] should not receive an
unearned windfall."
9
In contemplating the unusual set of circumstances with which we are presented in
this case, we have considered pre-2013 Reform Act statutory provisions and case law
concerning the meaning of "wage." We have also considered the 2013 Reform Act's
deletion of sections 50-6-241(a) and (b), the revised method of calculating permanent
partial disability benefits in the 2013 Reform Act, and the Reform Act's conditioning an
employee's entitlement to increased benefits at the end of the original compensation
period upon the employee's "receiving wages or a salary that is less than one hundred
percent (100%) of" the wages or salary the employee received from the pre-injury
employer." In view of the historical context in which "wages" came to be defined, we
find it significant that the General Assembly did not define "wages" as used in section
50-6-207(3) or otherwise indicate a different meaning of "wages" than has been
established in prior opinions. Moreover, the rules and regulations adopted by the Bureau
of Workers' Compensation both before and after the effective date of the 2013 Reform
Act do not define the term. Accordingly, we find no basis in the language of section 50-
6-207 to conclude that the General Assembly intended that an employee receiving a
"summer hours' bonus" or a "shift differential" at the time the employee suffers a work
injury to be entitled to increased benefits under the facts and circumstances presented in
this case. Rather, the General Assembly's failure to provide a definition of "wages"
under these circumstances suggests that the interpretation applied under pre-reform law
would continue to be applicable to post-reform cases.
Additionally, it would be inconsistent for similarly-situated employees to be
entitled to increased permanent disability benefits depending on when the injury
occurred, when an employee's original period of compensation ended, or what shift an
employee was working when the injury occurred versus when the original period of
compensation ended. Were it otherwise, an employee injured while working overtime
hours could be entitled to increased benefits if, at the time such employee's original
period of compensation ends, the employee is no longer working overtime. Even when
the workers' compensation statutes were remedially construed, the courts determined that
such an interpretation was inconsistent with legislative intent. See King v. Gerdau
Ameristeel US, Inc., No. W2011-01414-Wc-R3-WC, 2012 Tenn. LEXIS 488, at *7
(Tenn. Workers' Comp. Panel July 30, 2012) ("Although [the employee] has work
restrictions that reduce the amount of overtime pay he receives, overtime pay contributes
to his average weekly wage, not his hourly rate of pay. We conclude that [the employee]
has returned to work on a full-time basis at the same hourly rate of pay and has made a
meaningful return to work."). In this case, Employee's "reduction" in wages was the
result of the end of a summer hours' bonus that is effective every year. It applies to all
employees working in certain departments, and is directly related to economic conditions
and a collective bargaining agreement designed to alleviate the effects of those
conditions. Moreover, and most importantly, the elimination of the bonus does not affect
Employee's base rate of pay, that is, her hourly wage, which was higher at the time the
original compensation period ended than at the time of her injury. Applying a fair and
impartial interpretation of the 2013 Reform Act "in accordance with basic principles of
10
statutory construction," as mandated by section 50-6-116 (2015), we conclude that
Employee is not entitled to increased benefits.
Conclusion
For the above reasons, we conclude that the trial court correctly determined that
Employee was not entitled to increased permanent partial disability benefits.
Additionally, we find that the trial court's decision does not violate any of the standards
set forth in Tennessee Code Annotated section 50-6-217(a)(3). Accordingly, the trial
court's order is affirmed and certified as final.
~ Workers' Compensation Appeals Board
11
TENNESSEE BUREAU OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD
Tara Marshall ) Docket No. 2015-01-0147
)
v. )
) State File No. 63950-2014
Mueller Company, et al. )
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the Appeals Board’s decision in the
referenced case was sent to the following recipients by the following methods of service
on this the 11th day of July, 2016.
Name Certified First Class Via Fax Via Email Address
Mail Mail Fax Number Email
Jeffrey W. Rufolo X jrufolo@summersfirm.com
Joseph R. White X jrw@smrw.com
Audrey A. Headrick, X Via Electronic Mail
Judge
Kenneth M. Switzer, X Via Electronic Mail
Chief Judge
Penny Shrum, Clerk, X Penny.Patterson-Shrum@tn.gov
Court of Workers’
Compensation Claims
Matthew Salyer
Clerk, Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board
220 French Landing Dr., Ste. 1-B
Nashville, TN 37243
Telephone: 615-253-1606
Electronic Mail: Matthew.Salyer@tn.gov