Peace v. J. P. Stevens Co.

EAGLES, Judge.

Plaintiff complains that the Commission erred in limiting his award of compensation for total disability to the maximum total compensation payable pursuant to the Workers’ Compensation Act in effect in 1973 rather than the statutes in effect in 1981 when he became totally disabled. We agree and reverse the Industrial Commission’s opinion.

The facts here are not in dispute. Plaintiff was born in 1911 and completed the eighth grade in school. During 1939 plaintiff first became employed in the textile industry and he continued to work in the mills until 1975. During this time he worked primarily as a loom fixer or mechanic. While working in the mills he was exposed to cotton dust and other synthetic materials. The Commission found that plaintiff had no respiratory problems as a child, but that he noticed a shortness of breath and productive cough sometime in 1966 when he was working for defendant Stevens at its Shelby plant. As he continued working in the mills his symptoms worsened causing him to miss significant amounts of work from 1973 through 1975. After April 1975 plaintiff’s symptoms were so severe that he could no longer work in the mills. He obtained part-time work as a security guard and until October 1981 worked at various other jobs part time. Because his breathing problems had continued to worsen, he stopped working completely in 1981.

The Commission specifically found that plaintiff has “severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease which was classified as Class IV according to AMA criteria or greater than 50% whole body impairment,” and that “[h]is cumulative exposure to cotton dust in his several employments placed him at an increased risk of *132developing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease compared to members of the general public without that exposure.”

The Commission’s opinion finds that plaintiff was disabled initially on 1 January 1973 and concludes that “[t]he rights and liabilities of the parties are controlled by the law in effect on that date.” As of 1 January 1973 G.S. 97-41 limited total compensation paid under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act) to $20,000. However, the General Assembly repealed G.S. 97-41 effective 1 July 1975. Here the Commission limited plaintiff’s total compensation award to $20,000.

Plaintiff argues that this court’s decision in Smith v. American and Efird Mills, 51 N.C. App. 480, 277 S.E.2d 83 (1981), modified and affirmed, 305 N.C. 507, 290 S.E.2d 634 (1982), requires that the Commission’s award be reversed. We agree.

In Smith the Court of Appeals described the issue as whether “an employee may recover under the Workers’ Compensation Act [the Act] for disability due to an occupational disease which at its inception was only partially debilitating, but which developed over time into a totally disabling condition.” Id. at 485, 277 S.E.2d at 86-87. Like the instant case the plaintiff in Smith had initially been declared partially disabled due to an occupational disease. The Commission awarded plaintiff compensation for his partial disability. All of the evidence before the Commission further indicated that as a result of plaintiff’s disease he subsequently became totally disabled. However, the Commission in Smith failed to make an explicit finding that plaintiff was totally disabled and no compensation was awarded to plaintiff as a result of his total disability. While recognizing that the case had to be remanded for this critical finding, our court’s opinion discussed the ultimate issue of plaintiff’s entitlement to compensation for his total disability so as to avoid further costs and delay. The court determined that if upon remand plaintiff was found totally disabled, then he would be entitled to full compensation for both his partial disability and his total disability so. long as the periods of partial and total disability did not overlap. Id. at 490, 277 S.E.2d at 89.

The Smith court next addressed whether the plaintiff should be compensated for his total disability under the 1970 or 1978 version of the Act. The employee had first become disabled in 1970, but was not permanently and totally disabled until 1978. There we stated the following:

*133We are well aware that the law of this jurisdiction is that the applicable version of the statute is the one in effect when the disability occurs. Wood v. Stevens & Co., 297 N.C. 636, 256 S.E.2d 692 (1979). As applied to the present facts, however, this simple rule can become difficult to apply unless one bears in mind the rationale for the rule as stated in the case: The date of disability is the date upon which the employee’s claim accrues and the date upon which the employer becomes liable. Id. at 644, 650, 256 S.E.2d at 697, 701. We read Wood to require that a given statute within the Act be applied as it read at the time plaintiff first gained rights and defendant first became liable under that statute. We do not understand the Wood holding to require that the entire Workers’ Compensation Act be applied as it existed at the time plaintiff’s right to proceed under any provision of the Act first accrued. We believe plaintiff could become disabled, for the purpose of determining the applicable version of a statute, at different times under different statutes.
In 1970, plaintiff became partially disabled under G.S. 97-30 and thus became entitled to recover for partial disability under the 1970 version of that statute. Plaintiff had no right to claim compensation, nor was the employer exposed to liability, under G.S. 97-29 until 1978 when plaintiff appears to have become totally disabled; therefore, plaintiff became disabled, for purposes of G.S. 97-29, on the date in 1978 when his disability became total, and the version of G.S. 97-29 then in effect should be applied in determining the compensation to be awarded thereunder.

Id. at 491, 277 S.E.2d at 90.

On appeal our Supreme Court “approve[d] and adopt[ed] as [their] own the well-reasoned and well-documented decision of the unanimous panel of the Court of Appeals.” Smith v. American & Efird Mills, 305 N.C. 507, 510, 290 S.E.2d 634, 636 (1982). We find no distinction between the instant case and Smith and, accordingly, we hold that when determining plaintiff’s compensation for his total disability the 1981 version of the Act applies.

Defendants contend that two cases subsequent to Smith require a contrary result: Dowdy v. Fieldcrest Mills, 308 N.C. 701, 304 S.E.2d 215 (1983), and Gregory v. Sadie Cotton Mills, 90 N.C. App. 433, 368 S.E.2d 650, disc. rev. denied, 322 N.C. 835, 371 S.E.2d *134277 (1988). Both are distinguishable. In Dowdy plaintiff employee quit his job in 1976 because of breathing problems. He had missed work due to those breathing problems beginning in 1973. Employee did not file a claim for workers’ compensation benefits until 1978. The employer argued that the employee’s claim was not timely filed pursuant to G.S. 97-58. The Industrial Commission entered an award in favor of the employee due to his total disability beginning 1 March 1976. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Commission’s ruling. The Supreme Court found “that the plaintiff was disabled within the meaning of G.S. 97-58(c) no later than 1974 and that the claim filed by him on 24 February 1978 does not establish timely filing required to confer jurisdiction on the Industrial Commission to hear the claim.” Id. at 705, 304 S.E.2d at 218. In the instant case defendants do not contend that plaintiff’s claim for workers’ compensation benefits was not timely and, accordingly, Dowdy does not apply here.

Our decision in Gregory is distinguishable on its facts. There the employee was found to be totally disabled on 1 October 1968 and was awarded compensation based on the version of the statute, G.S. 97-29, in effect in 1968. The employee argued that she was only partially disabled on 1 October 1968 and was not totally disabled until 13 January 1980. She sought total disability compensation pursuant to the 1980 version of G.S. 97-29. In Gregory we held that the record supported the Commission’s finding that the total disability began 1 October 1968 and, accordingly, we upheld the Commission’s award. Here defendants do not assign as error the Commission’s findings about the nature and extent of plaintiff’s disabilities.

Plaintiff also excepted to the Commission’s determination of his average weekly wage on 1 October 1981. Because plaintiff failed to address that issue in his brief, he has abandoned that issue. N.C. App. R. 28(a).

In summary, we reverse the portion of Commission’s opinion and award which ordered that plaintiff’s total disability compensation be based on the 1973 version of the Act and remand the case to the Commission for computation of plaintiff’s compensation benefits in accordance with this opinion.

Reversed and remanded.

Judges Parker and Orr concur.