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ARK.] HARDWARE MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANY 161 V. MAXEY. HARDWARE MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANY V. MAXEY. 443278 205 S. W. 2d 29 Opinion delivered October 27, 1947. WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION LAW-PERMANENT PARTIAL DISABILITY.- Section 10 of Act 319 of 1935 provides that "in no case shall compensation be less than $7 per week." Held, that where 65% of .a claimant's average weekly wage amounts to less than the minimum expressed in § 10, the statute controls and payment may be made for 450 weeks. The percentage of disability has reference to the weekly wage when reduced by 35%, and not to the period of time over which payments are made. Appeal from Crawford Circuit Court; J. 0. Kin-cannon, Judge ;• affirmed. Barber, Henry c6 Thurman, for appellant. Howell & Howell, for appellee. GRIFFIN SMITH, Chief Justice. The question is whether Circuit Court erred when it approved the method of computation adopted by Workmen's Compensation Commission in awarding benefits to appellee. Act 319, approved March 15, 1939. The claimant's weekly earnings were $17.35. Sixty-five per cent. is $11.28. It is conceded there was an injury-caused impairment of 25% denominated by the Act as permanent partial disability. Following the accident of May 17, 1945; Maxey collected full compensation until June 1, 1946a period of 54 weeks. The healing period having terminated, evidence established the partial impairment. Payment of the minimum of $7 provided by § 10 of Act 319 was ordered for 396 weeks. This period was arrived at by subtracting from the maximum of 450 weeks the time taken for healing. Appellants contend° for a construction of the Act which would require payment of benefits at $11.28 for 25% of the maximum period,—that is, 1121/2 weeks. If this were done appellee would receive $1,269 instead of $2,772, as awarded. It is argued that any other construction would result in an absurdity. What appears to have been overlooked
162 HARDWARE MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANY [212 V. MAXEY. in reaching this conclusion is that the lawmaking body .may enact a statute that a reasonable objector would view as unreasonable, and yet it would be constitutionally permissive. There are practical considerations . the General Assembly must deal with that do not address themselves to Courts ; and when we conclude that a particular purpose was intended, the judiciary is not at liberty to defeat that end merely because in exceptional circumstances an inequitable result attends. In the case before us 25% of $11.28 is $2.82, and 450 times $2.82 is $1,269 as appellants say. But a payment of $2.82 is $4.18 short of $7. What, then, are we to do with § 10 where it is written that conwensation shall not exceed $20 per week nor be less than $7? To emphasize tbe minimum there is added, provided, however, that in no case shall the compensation be less than $7 per week". Our attention is called to Caddo Quicksilver Corporation v. Barber, 204 Ark. 985, 166 S. W. 2d 1, where the Commission dealt with a 90% permanent partial disability sustained by the claimant. Under § 13 (c) particular injuries are compensable for determined periods. Payment for loss of a leg is 65% of average weekly wages, to continue for 175 weeks. We affirmed -Circuit Court's finding that the Commission was correct in directing payment at $13.36 for 1.57 1/ 2 weeksninety per cent of 175 weeks. This construction, say appellants, is a judicial determination that in all cases involving permanent partial disability the maximum number of weeks mentioned in the Act as the period of compensation should be reduced by the percentage of disability. We agree that seeming inconsistencies occur where the minimum of $7 is allowed .for permanent partial disability if 65% of the claimant's weekly wage is less than $7. For example, 65% of a weekly wage of $10.77 equals $7. If in that case the degree of impairment is one-fourth, weekly payments on a percentage basis would be $1.75. If the disability be 10% the claimant, would receive weekly benefits of seventy cents ; and for a com-pensable period of 450 weeks the gross yield is -$787.50
ARK. 163 in the first instance and $315 in the second. If the minimum of $7 is awarded the allowance is $3,150 in either case. Result would be that a claimant incapacitated to the extent of -five, ten, fifteen, or any percent less than twenty-five would receive the exact compensation paid to one sustaining a 25% injury. This is seemingly at variance with accepted notions of fitness or order, but the anomaly is of legislative creation and is permissive. Since we are not permitted to place a cwistruction upon the Act that would defeat an essential purpose expressed by the Legislature, the judgment must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
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