We entertain this case on remand from the Supreme Court, which directed this court to decide the matter as if on leave granted.
*526This case has a long and complex history. Employee Orville Hartsell injured his right knee in an October 8, 1965, accident which occurred during the course of his employment as a truck driver with defendant Richmond Lumber. Defendant paid Hartsell voluntary compensation from October 9, 1965, until February 25, 1967. Hartsell returned to Richmond Lumber on February 27, 1967, where he was given favored work as a night watchman. He disliked the work and voluntarily quit. On October 9, 1967, Hartsell began working at Community Meat Plant and continued until that company closed on April 18, 1968.
Hartsell petitioned on December 22, 1967, for a hearing on his claim for workers’ disability compensation benefits arising out of the 1965 truck accident. At a hearing before referee James W. Nolan, defendant offered Hartsell his former night watchman job. In an April 28, 1969, decision, referee Nolan ordered compensation for total disability from the date of the accident to the date Hartsell began working as a night watchman, for partial disability up to the date of hearing, and for no compensation thereafter due to Richmond Lumber’s offer of favored work employment, which Hartsell apparently refused. The Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board affirmed referee Nolan’s decision in an opinion and order issued on June 3, 1970. Both this Court and the Supreme Court denied leave to appeal that decision.
Hartsell filed another petition for hearing on July 16, 1970, but voluntarily discontinued the action without prejudice. Thereafter, he began working part-time at Chamberlain’s Shoe Mart, Inc., in September or October of 1974 and continued working there until at least September 19, 1979. On February 1, 1978, defendant Richmond Lumber closed the plant involved in this case.
*527Hartsell filed another petition for hearing on May 4, 1978, naming Richmond Lumber and the Second Injury Fund, alleging total and permanent disability arising from the 1965 accident and aggravation of this injury and additional injury caused by work in excess of restrictions. Following a September 19, 1979, hearing, hearing referee Edward H. DeVoe issued a decision holding: (1) that the wcab’s 1970 decision was res judicata; (2) that the only issue was whether Hartsell had lost industrial use of his legs owing to the 1965 injury; and (3) that Hartsell had not proven permanent and total disability or the loss of industrial use of his legs.
The wcab dismissed Hartsell’s appeal of hearing referee DeVoe’s decision for failure to file a transcript on November 26, 1980. On December 19, 1980, Hartsell simultaneously moved to reinstate the wcab appeal and filed an application for leave to appeal with this Court. This Court dismissed the appeal as premature, but the wcab granted the motion to reinstate the appeal. In an opinion dated November 21, 1983, the wcab (1) affirmed denial of differential benefits from the Second Injury Fund for total and permanent disability; (2) found that defendant Richmond Lumber had adequate notice of Hartsell’s claim for continuing general disability, based upon withdrawal of favored work; (3) found that the 1970 wcab opinion was not res judicata with respect to issues raised at the 1979 hearing; and (4) held that Hartsell was entitled to compensation from February 1, 1978, the date of the plant’s closing (and withdrawal of the offer of favored work), to the date of Hartsell’s death, which was sometime in 1983. Hartsell’s personal representative was substituted as a party plaintiff following his death.
This Court denied defendant Richmond Lum*528ber’s application for leave to appeal. On November 9, 1984, the Supreme Court remanded to this Court for consideration of the appeal as if on leave granted. 419 Mich 950 (1984).
i
First, we consider Richmond Lumber’s contention that it did not receive adequate notice of Hartsell’s intention to raise the favored work issue at the 1979 hearing because his petition raised only the issue of total and permanent disability due to loss of industrial use of both legs. We agree with the wcab’s finding that Richmond Lumber had actual notice that it was required to defend against the favored work issue.
Hartsell’s injury occurred in October, 1965, but the two-year time period for filing the claim for compensation was extended by (1) Richmond Lumber’s voluntary provision of compensation until February 25, 1967, and (2) the provision of favored work until Hartsell quit on June 24, 1967. See MCL 418.381(1); MSA 17.237(381X1). Hartsell’s timely December 22, 1967, petition was denied as it related to continuing compensation only because of decedent’s refusal to accept favored work. The wcab affirmed the denial in 1970 and admonished Richmond Lumber not to withdraw its bona fide offer of favored work.
Hartsell’s second petition (against Richmond Lumber and Second Injury Fund) was filed after Richmond Lumber ceased operating in February, 1978. The petition identified the cause of the injury as the 1965 accident and "working in excess of restrictions . . . [which] caused and aggravated back and bilateral leg pathology.” The petition also stated: "Back and bilateral leg pathology— industrial loss of use of both legs—total and permanent disability.”
*529Richmond Lumber claims this petition did not provide adequate notice that Hartsell was making a claim for general disability compensation benefits against Richmond Lumber based on withdrawal of the offer of favored work. The wcab rejected this argument. In reviewing a Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board decision, this Court must affirm if the proper legal standard has been applied, there is competent evidence to support the board’s finding, and there is an absence of fraud. Collins v Waterford Twp School Dist, 118 Mich App 798, 801; 325 NW2d 585 (1982), lv den 417 Mich 998 (1983), citing Const 1963, art 6, § 28; MCL 418.861; MSA 17.237(861).
We find no legal impediment to affirming the wcab’s finding that Richmond Lumber had adequate and actual notice of the favored work issue. First, the petition itself cited the 1965 work-related accident as one cause of the injury. Although it did not specifically state "general disability,” it stated "total and permanent disability” in describing the nature of the disability and referred to "back and bilateral leg pathology.” The description of the nature of the disability in the petition, taken together with the cause of the injury, informed defendant Richmond Lumber that the 1965 injury and general disability compensation was at issue. With respect to general disability, the only continuing issue after the 1970 wcab opinion was whether favored work was available.
The petition, although somewhat ambiguous, generally described the claim as required by MCL 418.847; MSA 17.237(847). Moreover, the uncontroverted affidavit of plaintiff’s counsel demonstrates that Richmond Lumber had actual notice of the issue. The fact that Richmond Lumber was named at all in the petition demonstrates that favored *530work was at issue.1 Finally, Hartsell’s counsel specified at the beginning of the hearing that the remaining issue concerned Richmond Lumber’s liability after the plant’s closing. After the parties argued about whether this ought to be an issue, hearing referee DeVoe concluded that Richmond Lumber was not out of the picture. Based on the foregoing, we affirm the wcab’s finding that Richmond Lumber had actual notice that it was required to defend against the favored work issue.
ii
Richmond Lumber next argues that the wcab improperly reinstated Hartsell’s appeal because Hartsell did not order the transcript and no appeal may be reinstated without substantial compliance with procedural rules. Richmond Lumber cites Dries v Chrysler Corp, 402 Mich 78; 259 NW2d 561 (1977), for the proposition that the wcab may reinstate an appeal dismissed for procedural reasons only if the appealing party has substantially complied with wcab rules. This argument distorts the Dries holding. In Dries, the Court did not indicate that substantial compliance was the only ground which will permit the wcab to reinstate a procedurally defective appeal.
In East Jordan Iron Works v Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board, 124 Mich App 324, 328; 335 NW2d 23 (1983), this Court summarized the rules governing when reinstatement of an appeal is proper:
In Pocs v Buick Motor Co, 207 Mich 591, 593; 175 NW 125 (1919), the Court pointed out that no provision in the statute or the rules allows a *531rehearing of a final order. In later cases, however, the Court stated the rule more broadly. In Letourneau v Davidson, 218 Mich 334, 339; 188 NW 462 (1922), the Court held that the board had no power to grant a rehearing to review the facts establishing liability as found by the board. On several occasions, the Court’s statement of the rule was that the board had no power to grant a rehearing of its determinations. Panozzo v Ford Motor Co, 255 Mich 149, 150; 237 NW 369 (1931); Guss v Ford Motor Co, 275 Mich 30, 34; 265 NW 515 (1936); Fitzpatrick v Olds Div of General Motors Corp, 282 Mich 646, 648; 276 NW 709 (1937). Other cases explain that the rehearing which is prohibited is one which reopens a case for redetermination of the basic facts. Tulk v Murray Corp of America, 276 Mich 630, 633; 268 NW 761 (1936); McLean v Eaton Mfg Co, 286 Mich 285, 294; 282 NW 150 (1938); Dean v Great Lakes Casting Co, 78 Mich App 664, 667; 261 NW2d 34 (1977). [Emphasis added.]
While Richmond Lumber maintains that reinstatement is barred by authority of Guss v Ford Motor Co, 275 Mich 30; 265 NW 515 (1936), in Dean, supra, this Court explicitly limited Guss to cases where a determination had been made by the board on the merits. Guss does not apply where the board’s determination is only to dismiss an appeal for procedural default. Dean, supra, 78 Mich App 667-668. Dean indicates that the board has power to reinstate appeals which are dismissed for procedural reasons.
Here, Hartsell’s appeal was dismissed because of a procedural defect. The merits of the case were never reached. The wcab acted within its power when it reinstated the appeal.
hi
Finally, we reject Richmond Lumber’s compel*532ling argument that Hartsell was not entitled to compensation for continuing disability when Richmond Lumber closed its plant and thereby withdrew its offer of favored work.
Richmond Lumber claims that it made a good-faith offer of favored work to Hartsell and kept it open for a reasonable length of time, but that it is unreasonable to force it to keep the offer open for ten years. Hartsell counters that Michigan case law establishes that an employee with a continuing disability who rejects an offer of favored work is nonetheless entitled to compensation when the plant closes, as the offer is deemed to have been withdrawn.
Favored work is work offered by an employer to a disabled employee which accommodates the employee’s limitations. Ayoub v Ford Motor Co, 101 Mich App 740; 300 NW2d 508 (1980), lv den 411 Mich 871 (1981). The rationale behind the favored work doctrine was stated in Stallworth v Chrysler Corp, 144 Mich App 706, 710; 375 NW2d 797 (1985), lv den 424 Mich 857 (1985):
"The favored-work doctrine is a purely judicial creation. Favored, or light, work can be loosely defined as less strenuous post-injury work. Wages from favored work may be used as a setoff against an employer’s compensation liability, MCL 418.361(1); MSA 17.237(361)(1), but favored-work wages do not establish an earning capacity, and when such wages cease, they neither suspend nor bar compensation. Powell v Casco Nelmor Corp, 406 Mich 332; 279 NW2d 769 (1979).
"The primary purpose of the doctrine is that of mitigation. It allows an employer to reduce or completely eliminate compensation payments by providing work within the injured employee’s physical capacity. At the same time, it encourages the employee to return to productive employment rather than to remain idle, thus also serving a *533rehabilitative function. Pulley v Detroit Engineering & Machine Co, 378 Mich 418; 145 NW2d 40 (1966).” [144 Mich App 710, quoting from Bower v Whitehall Leather Co, 412 Mich 172, 182; 312 NW2d 640 (1981).]
In Bower, the Supreme Court held that an employee who refuses favored work does not forfeit compensation benefits where the refusal is reasonable. However, in Steward v Westran Corp, 130 Mich App 68; 343 NW2d 7 (1983), this Court held that an unreasonable refusal of favored work does not permanently deprive an employee of compensation benefits. Rather, an unreasonable refusal merely suspends the employee’s benefits for the duration of the unreasonable refusal. The Court also stated:
"In PPG Industries, Inc v Aites, 7 Pa Commw Ct 588; 300 A2d 902 (1973), claimant quit favored work to become a minister. When he later found he could not earn a living wage at that profession, he attempted to find additional lighter work. The Court held that by leaving favored employment, he did not forever waive his right to compensation. Once he attempted to secure additional employment other than as a minister, he again became eligible to receive benefíts when his old favored work position was no longer available. [Bower, supra, pp 188-189, n 8, quoted at 130 Mich App 71-72.]
Here, Hartsell was denied benefits in 1970 for an unreasonable refusal of favored work. His entitlement to continuing disability benefits is not at issue. Although he secured alternative part-time employment, unlike the plaintiff in Steward, Hartsell never made a subsequent request of Richmond Lumber for suitable favored work. His claim for continuing disability compensation was not based *534on his own acquiescence to the proffered work but on Richmond Lumber’s unequivocal withdrawal of the offer on February 1, 1978, caused by cessation of its operations. The wcab agreed with Hartsell that Richmond Lumber should not benefit from continued suspension of benefits since it had effectively withdrawn the offer.
Notwithstanding defendant’s rather persuasive argument that the employer should only be required to keep offers of favored work open for a reasonable length of time, we think that precedent dictates a contrary holding. The doctrine of favored work is anchored in mitigation principles which allow the employer to reduce its established liability to the employee where the employee unreasonably refuses favored work. However, the employee’s unreasonable actions can no longer be the justification for reducing the employer’s liability once the plant closes, as here, or once an offer of favored work is withdrawn. According to Steward, supra, benefits are forfeited only for the duration of the employee’s unreasonable refusal. Here, after Richmond Lumber closed in 1978, the favored work was unavailable to refuse. Under Richmond Lumber’s argument, the employee’s right to subsequently accept favored work, established in Steward, would be cut off. Finally, our holding accords with the well-established policy that the Workers’ Disability Compensation Act is remedial in nature and should be construed in a liberal and humanitarian manner in favor of the employee. See e.g., Fuchs v General Motors Corp, 118 Mich App 547, 554; 325 NW2d 489 (1982), lv den 417 Mich 1077 (1983).
Affirmed.
If the issue were limited to total and permanent disability for the industrial loss of the use of both legs caused by work in excess of restrictions subsequent to 1965, only the Second Injury Fund could have been found liable. See MCL 418.521; MSA 17.237(521).