1. Workers' Compensation-_professional football player--dollar-for-dollar credit
The Industrial Commission did not err in a workers' compensation case involving
plaintiff injured professional football player by concluding that defendant employer was not
entitled to a dollar-for-dollar credit for the amounts paid to plaintiff after his injury, because: (1)
N.C.G.S. § 97-42 provides that any credit awarded to an employer for any amount paid to an
employee after his injury is limited to shortening of the period in which compensation is paid,
and not by reducing the amount of the weekly payment; (2) the North Carolina Workers'
Compensation Act precludes a dollar-for-dollar credit and prohibits contractual modification of
the workers' compensation statutory provisions; and (3) the NFL players' contract has been
interpreted to provide for a time credit and not a dollar-for-dollar credit.
2. Workers' Compensation-_professional football player-_no credit for payments due
and payable--roster bonus--signing bonus--minicamp--workout--appearance fees
The Industrial Commission did not abuse its discretion in a workers' compensation case
involving plaintiff injured professional football player by concluding that defendant employer
was not entitled to a greater credit for five of the payments received by plaintiff post-injury
including one of the fifteen payments of $47,059 paid during the 2000 season, the $1,000,000
roster bonus of 3 April 2001, the $1,985.72 paid for workouts and mini-camps in 2001, a $2,500
appearance fee for 7 March 2001, and the $4,500,000 signing bonus, because: (1) N.C.G.S. § 97-
42 provides that payments made by the employer which were due and payable when made are
not deductible, and the pertinent five payments had been earned by plaintiff and were due and
payable when made; and (2) the 18 September 2000 $47,059 payment was for services rendered
during the prior week, including the 17 September 2000 game in which plaintiff was injured.
3. Workers' Compensation-_professional football player-_credit for payments--
additional findings of fact necessary
The Industrial Commission erred in a workers' compensation case involving plaintiff
injured professional football player by concluding that defendant employer was not entitled to a
greater credit for payments including the $225,000 injury protection provision payments paid
during the 2001 regular season, the $750,000 one year skill and injury guarantee payments paid
in 2002, and the injured reserve pay of fourteen $47,059 installments in 2000, and the case is
remanded for further findings on these payments because: (1) the determination that the injury
protection plan payments were from an employee-funded plan was not supported by competent
evidence; (2) although the parties stipulated that plaintiff would receive $750,000 in seventeen
equal payments during the 2002 football season, the Commission did not render any findings of
fact or conclusions of law as to whether it would award defendants a credit for these payments;
and (3) on remand, the Commission may hear additional evidence and may make further findings
of fact as to whether the effect of N.C.G.S. § 97-42 has been modified in this case regarding the
injured reserve pay.
4. Workers' Compensation-_professional football player--post-injury wage earning
capacity
The Industrial Commission did not err in a workers' compensation case involving
plaintiff injured professional football player by concluding that plaintiff's post-injury wage
earning capacity outside the NFL is $40,000 per year during the relevant 300-week period
covered by N.C.G.S. § 97-30, because: (1) plaintiff's uncontradicted testimony that he was
making $40,000 a year was competent evidence upon which the Commission could determine
plaintiff's wage-earning capacity; and (2) if plaintiff's income changed and plaintiff began
making more than $40,000 a year during the 300-week period, such that he was no longer
entitled to the maximum compensation rate, defendants could move to terminate or diminish the
amount of compensation pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 97-47.
R. James Lore for plaintiff-appellee.
Hedrick, Eatmon, Gardner & Kincheloe, L.L.P., by Hatcher
Kincheloe and Shannon P. Herndon, for defendant-appellants.
HUNTER, Judge.
Richardson Sports Ltd. Partners, d/b/a The Carolina Panthers,
et al. (defendants) present the following issues for our
consideration: whether the North Carolina Industrial Commission
(Commission) erred in (I) only allowing defendants a fourteen-
week credit, with an approximately $8,000.00 value, for
approximately six million dollars in post-injury payments to
plaintiff and not allowing a dollar-for-dollar credit for the total
amount paid to plaintiff post-injury,
(See footnote 1)
(II) awarding plaintiff an
automatic right to receive 300 weeks of partial disabilitybenefits, and (III) finding that the $225,000.00 paid to plaintiff
pursuant to a contractual injury protection plan represents
payments made from revenue designated as employee revenue and not
funded by the defendants. We affirm the opinion and award in part
and remand this case to the Commission for the reasons stated
herein.
This is a rare case in which a highly paid individual suffered
a compensable injury and occupational disease and received several
millions of dollars after his injury pursuant to his employment
contract. Charles H. Smith, III (plaintiff), entered into a
contract with defendants on 1 March 2000 to play professional
football for the Carolina Panthers (Panthers) of the National
Football League (NFL). The contract was scheduled to end on 28
or 29 February 2005, unless the contract was terminated, extended,
or renewed as specified by the contract. The contract provided
that defendants would pay plaintiff (1) $800,000.00 for the 2000
season, (2) $1,500,000.00 for the 2001 season, (3) $2,700,000.00
for the 2002 season, (4) $3,500,000.00 for the 2003 season, and (5)
$4,000,000.00 for the 2004 season. In addition to the salary,
plaintiff would receive financial bonuses such as a $4,500,000.00
signing bonus, a $1,000,000.00 roster bonus for each season he was
placed on the team's roster starting in 2001, and payments for
making public appearances and attending the team minicamps and
workouts. A one-year skill and injury guarantee addendum to the
contract provided plaintiff would receive $750,000.00 in 2002 if
the team determined plaintiff's skill for performance was
unsatisfactory when compared with other players competing forpositions on the roster or if plaintiff was unable to pass the
team's 2002 preseason physical due to a football-related injury
occurring prior to the 2002 season. The Collective Bargaining
Agreement (CBA) between the NFL clubs and the NFL Players
Association was also a part of plaintiff's contract, and it
contained several benefits, including an injury protection
provision. Under certain conditions, this provision provides a
one-time benefit to injured players during the season after a
player's injury. Plaintiff received $225,000.00 under this
provision.
Prior to entering into a five-year contract with defendants,
plaintiff played football for four years in college and played with
the Atlanta Falcons (Falcons) of the NFL from 1992 until 2000.
With the Falcons, plaintiff received awards, including being voted
greatest defensive lineman in Falcon history, being selected to the
All-Pro Bowl NFL team, and being chosen as co-captain in Super Bowl
XXXIII. While playing for the Falcons, plaintiff sustained a knee
injury and had knee reconstruction surgery in 1994. He only missed
one game with the Falcons related to that injury.
After joining the Panthers in 2000, plaintiff passed the pre-
employment physical examination performed by defendants' physician,
which made him eligible to play football. After passing the
physical examination, defendants allowed plaintiff to undergo
another surgical procedure to get his knee cleaned out.
Plaintiff continued rehabilitation treatment and attended practices
sporadically. After playing the first two games of the season,
plaintiff sustained another knee injury during the third game on 17September 2000, and plaintiff was placed on injured reserve. While
on injured reserve, plaintiff continued to receive his salary.
During the 2000 season, plaintiff was paid $800,000.00 in
installments of $47,059.00 for seventeen weeks. Three of these
installment payments were for the three games in which plaintiff
played, including the third game in which he was injured. The
remaining fourteen installment payments, totaling $658,826.00, was
injured reserve pay.
Plaintiff had knee surgery towards the end of the 2000 regular
football season. Defendants decided to place plaintiff on its 2001
roster. As a result, plaintiff received a $1,000,000.00 roster
bonus in April 2001. From 2 April 2001 to 21 May 2001 plaintiff
participated in minicamps, workouts, and training camps, for which
plaintiff was paid $1,985.72. Plaintiff also made appearances
during this time period, for which defendants paid him $2,500.00.
On 23 July 2001, plaintiff's contract was terminated by defendants
due to unsatisfactory skill or performance as compared with that of
other players competing for positions on the club's roster.
Defendants paid plaintiff $87,500.00 in severance pay, an amount
based on his years of service with the NFL. As the conditions of
the contractual injury protection provision were met, plaintiff
also received $225,000.00 in installments during the 2001 regular
season. In 2002, plaintiff received $750,000.00 pursuant to the
one year skill and injury guarantee addendum to his contract.
At the time of the Commission's review, plaintiff earned
$40,000.00 per year as a radio announcer for 790 Zone Radio in
Atlanta, Georgia. If it had not been for the injury, he would havehad the capacity to earn at least $20,000,000.00 under the
contract, which included the signing bonus of $4,500,000.00, his
salary each year, and his projected roster bonus each year. In the
Pre-trial Agreement, defendants agreed to pay $588.00 per week, the
maximum workers' compensation rate in effect for 2000, until the
hearing.
Defendants denied plaintiff's injury was compensable by filing
a Form 61 with the Commission on 11 October 2001. Thereafter, on
5 March 2002, defendants filed a Form 60 admitting compensability.
The parties then proceeded before the deputy commissioner regarding
the amount of workers' compensation, if any, to which plaintiff was
entitled. Defendants argued they were entitled to credits for
post-injury payments made to plaintiff. In a 1 July 2002 opinion
and award, Deputy Commissioner Phillip A. Holmes determined
plaintiff was entitled to 300 weeks of compensation at a rate of
$588.00 per week. Defendants were awarded a fourteen week credit.
Thus, plaintiff was awarded compensation at the rate of $588.00 per
week for 286 weeks and medical expenses. On appeal, the Commission
affirmed the opinion and award with some modifications. The
Commission concluded [p]laintiff sustained a compensable injury by
accident and developed compensable occupational disease(s) as a
result of an admittedly compensable event arising out of and in the
course of his employment with defendants on September 17, 2000.
In the award, plaintiff was awarded partial disability compensation
of $588.00 for 300 weeks with a fourteen-week credit to defendants.
This would result in a total award of $168,168.00. Plaintiff was
also awarded payment for past and future medical coverage forinjuries, diseases, and conditions resulting from the injury.
Defendants appeal.
(See footnote 2)
Defendants assert that they are entitled to a greater credit
than that awarded by the Commission. Specifically, defendants
contend they should have been awarded either a period credit or
dollar-for-dollar credit for the following payments:
1 *
fifteen payments of $47,059.00 totaling
$705,885.00 paid during the 2000 season
post-injury,
2 *
$1,000,000.00 roster bonus paid on 3
April 2001,
3 *
$1,985.72 paid in 2001 for workouts and
mini-camps,
4 *
a $2,500.00 appearance fee paid on 7
March 2001,
5 *
$225,000.00 in injury protection payments
for the 2001 season,
6 *
$750,000.00 paid during the 2002 season
pursuant to the One-Year Skill and Injury
Guarantee which is Addendum C to the 2001
contract, and the
7 *
$4,500,000.00 signing bonus.
We first address defendants' contention that they were entitled to
a dollar-for-dollar credit for the above amounts paid to plaintiff
post-injury.
[1] Defendants contend they are entitled to a dollar-for-
dollar credit because this Court has previously affirmed a dollar-
for-dollar credit in Larramore, a workers' compensation case
involving a professional football player. See Larramore v.
Richardson Sports Ltd. Partners, 141 N.C. App. 250, 540 S.E.2d 768.
In Larramore, however, this Court did not address the issue of
whether an employer was entitled to a dollar-for-dollar credit for
the amounts paid to an employee after his injury. Moreover, this
Court does not even discuss a dollar-for-dollar credit in
Larramore. The only reference to a credit in Larramore is in this
Court's summary of the Commission's opinion and award. This Court
stated: The Commission calculated plaintiff's average weekly wage
as $1,653.85, yielding a weekly compensation rate of $478.00, minus
appropriate credits to defendants. Id. at 253, 540 S.E.2d at 770.
Accordingly, we conclude this Court's opinion in Larramore does not
hold an employer is entitled to a dollar-for-dollar credit for any
amounts paid to an employee after his injury. Rather, this issue
is governed by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42 (2003).
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42 states:
Payments made by the employer to the
injured employee during the period of his
disability, or to his dependents, which by the
terms of this Article were not due and payable
when made, may, subject to the approval of the
Commission be deducted from the amount to be
paid as compensation. Provided, that in the
case of disability such deductions shall be
made by shortening the period during whichcompensation must be paid, and not by reducing
the amount of the weekly payment. Unless
otherwise provided by the plan, when payments
are made to an injured employee pursuant to an
employer-funded salary continuation,
disability or other income replacement plan,
the deduction shall be calculated from
payments made by the employer in each week
during which compensation was due and payable,
without any carry-forward or carry-back of
credit for amounts paid in excess of the
compensation rate in any given week.
Thus, any credit awarded to an employer for any amount paid to an
employee, after his injury, is limited to shortening of the period
in which compensation is paid, under the restrictions set forth in
N.C. Gen. Stat. 97-42, and not by reducing the amount of the weekly
payment.
(See footnote 3)
Nonetheless, defendants argue that they are entitled to a
dollar-for-dollar credit pursuant to their contract with plaintiff.
Paragraph 10 of the NFL Player Contract entered into by the parties
states:
WORKERS' COMPENSATION. Any compensation paid
to Player under this contract or under any
collective bargaining agreement in existence
during the term of this contract for a period
during which he is entitled to workers'
compensation benefits by reason of temporary
total, permanent total, temporary partial, or
permanent partial disability will be deemed an
advance payment of workers' compensation
benefits due Player, and Club will be entitled
to be reimbursed the amount of such payment
out of any award of workers' compensation.
Defendants argue that this contractual provision specifically sets
forth that the types of payments that were made to Employee-
Plaintiff in this action are deemed advances against any award ofworkers' compensation. In support of this contention defendants
cite Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc. v. Workmen's Compensation
Appeal Board, 604 A.2d 319 (Pa. 1992) and Station v. Workmen's
Compensation Appeal Board, 608 A.2d 625 (Pa. 1992). In Steelers
and Station, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania explained the
Workmen's Compensation Board should have determined the credit owed
to the professional football team for payments made to an injured
player on a dollar-for-dollar basis. See Steelers, 604 A.2d at
323; Station, 608 A.2d at 632. In each of these decisions, the
Pennsylvania court based its decision upon Paragraph 10 of the NFL
Player Contract. Steelers, 604 A.2d at 322-23; Station, 608 A.2d
at 632.
(See footnote 4)
While the same contractual provision is present in this case,
Station and Steelers do not provide relevant guidance. First, in
North Carolina, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42 does not allow a credit to
be given by reducing the amount of the weekly payment. Rather, the
number of weeks in which a claimant receives workers' compensation
should be shortened. Our review of the Pennsylvania statutes does
not reveal a similar provision.
(See footnote 5)
Second, North Carolina statutesprovide: No contract or agreement, written or implied, no rule,
regulation, or other device shall in any manner operate to relieve
an employer in whole or in part, of any obligation created by this
Article, except as herein otherwise expressly provided. N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 97-6 (2003). Thus, the North Carolina Workers'
Compensation Act precludes a dollar-for-dollar credit and prohibits
contractual modification of the workers' compensation statutory
provisions. See Hoffman v. Truck Lines, Inc., 306 N.C. 502, 507-
08, 293 S.E.2d 807, 811 (1982) (stating an employer would not be
permitted to escape his liability or obligations under the Act
through the use of a special contract or agreement if the elements
required for coverage of the injured individual would otherwise
exist).
Moreover, in In the Matter of an Arbitration between National
Football League Players Association and National Football League
Management Council, Opinion and Decision of Sam Kagel, National
Arbitrator (28 December 1994), the arbitrator determined Paragraph
10 of the NFL Players Contract was
designed to avoid double dipping by a Player
in a case where the Player is receiving a
salary or injury protection compensation and
is also receiving Workers' Compensation by
providing that the Club can offset Workers'
Compensation payments against such salary or
injury protection payments.
The period during which such offsets
can be made by the Club is the period of
salary payments or the period related to the
injury protection period. . . .
See Arbitration at 19. Thereafter, the arbitrator decided the Club
was entitled to an offset on a time basis. Id. The NFL CBA
indicates that each NFL club is bound by arbitration decisions. Article IX, Section 8 of the NFL CBA states in pertinent part:
The decision of the arbitrator will constitute full, final and
complete disposition of the grievance, and will be binding upon the
player(s) and Club(s) involved and the parties to this Agreement
. . . . As the Panthers are a party to the CBA, they are bound by
the arbitrator's decision that Paragraph 10 of the Players'
contract provides for an offset on a time basis. Therefore, not
only does North Carolina law preclude a dollar-for-dollar credit,
the NFL Players' contract has been interpreted to provide for a
time credit and not a dollar-for-dollar credit.
[2] We next consider defendants' arguments that they were
entitled to a greater credit than that awarded by the Commission.
In its award, the Commission granted defendants a credit for
fourteen weeks of compensation payments at the weekly rate of
$588.00, to be deducted from the end of the 300-week period. As
previously stated, defendants contend they should have been awarded
a credit for the following payments:
8 *
fifteen payments of $47,059.00 totaling
$705,885.00 paid during the 2000 season
post-injury,
9 *
$1,000,000.00 roster bonus paid on 3
April 2001,
10 *
$1,985.72 paid in 2001 for workouts and
mini-camps,
11 *
a $2,500.00 appearance fee paid on 7
March 2001,
12 *
$225,000.00 in injury protection payments
for the 2001 season,
13 *
$750,000.00 paid during the 2002 season
pursuant to the One-Year Skill and Injury
Guarantee which is Addendum C to the 2001
contract, and the
14 *
$4,500,000.00 signing bonus.
Whether an employer is awarded a credit for payments made to an
employee post-injury is governed by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42, which
states:
Payments made by the employer to the
injured employee during the period of his
disability, or to his dependents, which by the
terms of this Article were not due and payable
when made, may, subject to the approval of the
Commission be deducted from the amount to be
paid as compensation. Provided, that in the
case of disability such deductions shall be
made by shortening the period during which
compensation must be paid, and not by reducing
the amount of the weekly payment. Unless
otherwise provided by the plan, when payments
are made to an injured employee pursuant to an
employer-funded salary continuation,
disability or other income replacement plan,
the deduction shall be calculated from
payments made by the employer in each week
during which compensation was due and payable,
without any carry-forward or carry-back of
credit for amounts paid in excess of the
compensation rate in any given week.
For an employer to receive a credit under this statute (1) the
payment must not have been due and payable, and (2) the Commission
must decide, in its discretion, whether to award a credit. If the
Commission decides to award a credit, the credit is awarded by
shortening the number of weeks for which the claimant receives
compensation. The employer is not entitled to a dollar-for-dollar
credit. If the payment was made pursuant to an employer funded
disability plan, different rules may apply.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42 expressly provides that payments made
by the employer which were 'due and payable' when made are not
deductible. Moretz v. Richards & Associates, 316 N.C. 539, 541,
342 S.E.2d 844, 846 (1986); see also Thomas v. B.F. Goodrich, 144
N.C. App. 312, 318-19, 550 S.E.2d 193, 197 (2001) (stating [i]fpayments made by an employer are due and payable, the employer may
not be awarded a credit for the payments under section 97-42).
Our appellate courts have determined there are at least three
instances where a payment is due and payable. First, a payment
is due and payable when the Commission has entered an opinion
awarding benefits to a claimant. See Foster v. Western-Electric
Co., 320 N.C. 113, 115, 357 S.E.2d 670, 672 (1987). Second, a
payment is due and payable after the employer has admitted the
worker's injury is compensable and therefore entitled to workers'
compensation benefits.
(See footnote 6)
Moretz, 316 N.C. at 541-42, 342 S.E.2d at
846. As explained by our Supreme Court in Moretz,
[t]he Workers' Compensation Act provides that
a policy insuring an employer against
liability arising under that Act must contain
an agreement by the insurer to pay promptly
all benefits conferred by its provisions, and
that such agreement is to be construed as a
direct promise to the person entitled to
compensation. N.C.G.S. § 97-98 (1985). By
virtue of this promise, once the employer has
accepted an injury as compensable, benefits
are due and payable. See also N.C.G.S. §
97-18(b) (1985). Because defendants accepted
plaintiff's injury as compensable, then
initiated the payment of benefits, those
payments were due and payable and were not
deductible under the provisions of section 97-
42, so long as the payments did not exceed the
amount determined by statute or by the
Commission to compensate plaintiff for his
injuries.
Id. Thus, if the payments exceed the amount to which the plaintiff
is entitled, the employer will not have to pay any additional
compensation. See id. at 542, 342 S.E.2d at 847 (stating the
employer did not have to pay any additional compensation because
the plaintiff had already been fully compensated for his injury).
Third, a payment is due and payable when made if the employee has
earned the compensation or benefit. In Christopher v. Cherry
Hosp., 145 N.C. App. 427, 550 S.E.2d 256 (2001), the employer
denied the employee's workers' compensation claim and the injured
employee used fifty-two days of accrued sick leave and vacation
leave while she was out of work. Christopher, 145 N.C. App. at
427, 550 S.E.2d at 257. This Court explained that an employee's
accumulated vacation and sick leave could be used by the plaintiff
for purposes other than those served by the [Workers' Compensation]
Act, [and] were not tantamount to workers' compensation benefits.
Id. at 430, 550 S.E.2d at 258. We further explained that:
Such benefits have nothing to do with
the Workers' Compensation Act . . . .
[P]laintiff in the instant case cannot be held
to have received duplicative payments for his
injury or to have received more than he was
entitled by the Workers' Compensation Act to
receive.
Id. (citation omitted). Based upon our analysis, we held in
Christopher that payments for such vacation and sick leave are
'due and payable' when made because they have been earned by the
employee and are not solely under the control of the employer.
Id. at 432, 550 S.E.2d at 260.
When, however, an employer makes payments that
are not due and payable, the Commission may in
its discretion award the employer a credit for
the payments pursuant to section 97-42. . . . Thus, this Court's review of the Commission's
decision to grant or deny a credit for
payments made by an employer that were not due
and payable is strictly limited to a
determination of whether the record
affirmatively demonstrates a manifest abuse of
discretion by the Commission.
Thomas, 144 N.C. App. at 319, 550 S.E.2d at 197 (footnote omitted).
When a credit is awarded, the deduction shall be made by
shortening the period during which compensation must be paid, and
not by reducing the amount of the weekly payment. N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 97-42. Thus, any credit awarded to defendants may not result in
the reduction of the $588.00 weekly rate of compensation. Rather,
the number of weeks in which plaintiff receives compensation would
be shortened.
However, if the payment was made pursuant to an employer-
funded salary continuation, disability, or other income replacement
plan, different rules may apply. In Foster v. Western-Electric
Co., 320 N.C. 113, 357 S.E.2d 670, our Supreme Court indicated that
if an employer pays an employee wage-replacement benefits at a time
when workers' compensation benefits are not due and payable, the
employer is entitled to a credit. Allowing a credit for these
payments is in accord with the public policies behind our Workers'
Compensation Act, i.e., to relieve against hardship, to provide
payments based upon the actual loss of wages[,] and the avoidance
of duplicative payments. Id. at 116-17, 357 S.E.2d at 673.
In Evans v. AT&T Technologies, 332 N.C. 78, 418 S.E.2d 503
(1992), our Supreme Court indicated that the credit for payments
made pursuant to an employer-funded wage replacement plan should be
a dollar-for-dollar credit. In response to this holding, theGeneral Assembly amended N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42 in 1994 to add the
following provision:
Unless otherwise provided by the plan, when
payments are made to an injured employee
pursuant to an employer-funded salary
continuation, disability or other income
replacement plan, the deduction shall be
calculated from payments made by the employer
in each week during which compensation was due
and payable, without any carry-forward or
carry-back of credit for amounts paid in
excess of the compensation rate in any given
week.
The statute was amended to modify the decision of the Supreme
Court [of North Carolina] in Evans v. AT&T Technologies, 332 N.C.
78, 418 S.E.2d 503 (1992), which provided a dollar-for-dollar
credit against workers' compensation due for payments received
under an employer-funded disability program. Henry N. Patterson,
Jr. and Maxine Eichner, 1994 Workers' Compensation Reform Act, pp.
27-28.
Under the new language, unless otherwise
provided by the plan, payments made under an
employer-funded salary continuation,
disability or other income replacement plan
will be deducted from payments due from the
employer in each week during which
compensation is payable without any carry-
forward or carry-back for credit for amounts
paid in excess of the compensation rate in any
given week. The employer, therefore, is now
entitled only to a credit against compensation
payable for weeks during which the employer-
funded disability benefits were paid unless
otherwise provided in the employer's
disability plan.
Id. Therefore, under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-42, any credit an
employer receives for payments made pursuant to an employer-funded
salary continuation, disability, or other income replacement plan
is awarded by reducing the number of weeks of workers' compensationawarded to the claimant by the number of weeks in which an employer
made payments under the plan, if the payments were not due and
payable when made. If the payment made by the employer was more
than what the employee was to receive under the Workers'
Compensation Act, the excess cannot be used towards an additional
week of credit. However, the language [u]nless otherwise provided
by the plan indicates an employer may include language in the
wage-replacement plan which modifies the application of this
amendment to N.C. Gen. Stat. 97-42.
In this case, our review of the record indicates that five of
the payments received by plaintiff post-injury had been earned by
the plaintiff, and were due and payable when made. Thus,
defendants cannot seek a credit for these five payments: (1) one
of the fifteen payments of $47,059.00 paid during the 2000 season,
(2) the $1,000,000.00 roster bonus paid on 3 April 2001, (3)
$1,985.72 paid in 2001 for workouts and mini-camps, (4) a $2,500.00
appearance fee paid on 7 March 2001, and (5) the $4,500,000.00
signing bonus.
In finding of fact 15, the Commission found:
Post injury payments in the sum of $4,805.72
were made to plaintiff during the period of
April 2, 2001, to May 21, 2001, for
plaintiff's participation in the Workout,
MiniCamp and Training Camps, as well as an
Appearance Fee pursuant to his contract.
These payments constitute post-injury
earnings.
Plaintiff's payment history indicates he received six $320.00
payments between 2 April 2001 and 21 May 2001 for workouts, one
payment of $385.72 for minicamp, and $2,500.00 on 7 May 2001 for an
appearance. According to plaintiff's contract, he was obligated to
participate in minicamps, workouts, and to make appearances on
behalf of the team. As plaintiff's payment history indicates these
payments between 2 April and 21 May 2001 were for participating in
these activities, the Commission's conclusion that these were post-
injury earnings is supported by competent evidence. As such,defendants cannot seek a credit for these payments because they
were due and payable when made.
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