LaRose v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services
LaRose v. District of Columbia Department of Employment Services
Opinion of the Court
The appeal in this case challenges the rate and amount of compensation ordered by the Department of Employment Services (“DOES” or “agency”) to be paid to petitioner as a consequence of injuries sustained in the course of his employment. Petitioner raises two issues. Initially, he urges that the agency improperly calculated his rate of disability compensation. Secondly, and alternatively, he contends that even if his compensation rate was properly calculated, the figure must at least yield an amount which satisfies a statutorily prescribed minimum. See D.C.Code §§ 36-305(c) and 36-308(9) (1997 Repl.). We vacate the agency’s decision and remand the case.
In reviewing the agency’s resolution of the first question, we observe that the decisions rendered by the Director of DOES (“Director”) and the Hearings and Appeals Examiner (“Hearings Examiner”) are inconsistent on this point. In calculating petitioner’s total wages, the Hearings Examiner concluded petitioner “was concurrently employed by three (3) employers,” and totaled or “stacked” all the wages earned.
In reviewing the question of minimum compensation, we are aware that the agency is regularly obliged to interpret the relationship between the provisions of D.C.Code §§ 36-305(e) and 36-308(9) in order to determine the minimum amount of a claimant’s compensation. In the present case the agency expressly relied upon its precedent in Joyner v. Reyna’s Fashions, H & AS No.
Given our practice of deferring to an agency’s reasonable statutory interpretation, see Sibley Mem’l Hosp. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs., 711 A.2d 105, 108 (D.C. 1998), as well as the inconsistencies of the record both as to facts and findings, it is necessary that we vacate the agency’s decision and remand this ease for further consideration.
So ordered.
. Petitioner obtained work through a union hiring hall and was paid on an hourly basis. In the thirteen weeks prior to the injury, he worked for intervenor employer for five nonconsecutive weeks and for one hour in a sixth week, in which he was injured, earning a total of $1778.57. In addition, during two of those weeks in which he worked for respondent, he also worked for two other employers for wages totalling $919.53. Petitioner had no other employment during the thirteen-week period. The Hearings Examiner divided the total wages of $2698.10 by thirteen to arrive at an average weekly wage of $207.55. Petitioner takes the position that the Hearings Examiner should have considered only the wages earned from intervenor employer and divided that total by five weeks.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Deryck LaROSE v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT SERVICES, and Freeman Decorating Company, Intervenor
- Status
- Published