RANDOLPH, Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. Fifty-two-year-old Theresa Lipa, an eighteen-year employee of Omnova Solutions, Inc. ("Omnova"), suffered a work-related injury in July 2000. Lipa returned to work at Omnova in her preinjury position, at her preinjury wage rate, after first filing a Petition to Controvert with the Mississippi Workers' Compensation Commission ("MWCC") asserting "[t]otal loss of wage[-]earning capacity." A rebuttable presumption existed that Lipa had suffered no loss of wage-earning capacity, as she continued to work in her preinjury position, at her preinjury wage rate. It was not until four or five months later that layoffs at Omnova prompted a coworker with seniority to "bump" Lipa to a lower-paying position. Lipa's demotion to the lower-paying position was caused by the coworker exercising a privilege accorded by operation of the collective bargaining agreement between Omnova and a local union of the United Steelworkers of America, totally unrelated to her work injury. Lipa offered no evidence that she unsuccessfully had attempted to find employment elsewhere.
¶ 2. Following a hearing, an administrative judge concluded that Lipa had sustained a "loss of wage-earning capacity due to her work injury[,]" and ordered, inter
¶ 3. On July 20, 2000, Lipa was struck by a forklift while in the course and scope of her employment with Omnova. As a result, Lipa suffered injuries including, inter alia, urinary incontinence and back pain. At the time of her injury, Lipa was employed as a let-off operator.
¶ 4. From July 21, 2000, until July 30, 2000, Lipa received temporary total disability benefits of $303.35 per week. Lipa then returned to her let-off-operator position with Omnova. However, several months later, Lipa again discontinued her employment at Omnova due to pain and remained off work for approximately two years. For this period, Lipa received temporary total disability benefits of $303.35 per week.
¶ 5. Before returning to work, on March 26, 2002, Lipa filed a Petition to Controvert with the MWCC, claiming a "[t]otal loss of wage[-]earning capacity." In June 2002, Dr. Robert Smith released Lipa to return to work in early July 2002 with "light duty from a spine standpoint ... for six months[
¶ 6. When Lipa returned to work in the summer of 2002, she once again was employed as a let-off operator at her preinjury wage rate. According to both Lipa and Doug Pugh, a thirty-six-year employee of Omnova and the local union president, Lipa had difficulty performing the job functions of the let-off-operator position. Lipa testified that "I was able to do the job because I had a girl that I had worked years with; and me and her worked together. And she helped me lift the manual when I'd have to lift it and put it in the rows." According to Lipa, she would not have been able to perform such work without
¶ 7. Approximately four or five months later, according to Pugh, there were "several layoffs, and I think it was a layoff. [Lipa] got bumped. [Lipa] got bumped off the job. A higher seniority employee displaced her." (Emphasis added.) Pugh admitted that Lipa was "bumped" due to factors unrelated to her work injury. Pugh added that, under the collective bargaining agreement, Lipa could have done nothing to avoid getting "bumped."
¶ 8. On November 15, 2006, a hearing was held before Administrative Judge Tammy Green Harthcock. At the hearing, Sam Cox, an expert in "vocational consulting," testified that Lipa "does not have a lost wage capacity[,]" because "when she returned to her position with Omnova ..., she returned in the position that she left at the same rate of pay and was actively employed in that position." Cox's "Initial Vocational Evaluation" of Lipa concluded that "[b]ased upon [Lipa's] age, education, past work history, guidelines to return to employment and the fact that she is currently employed, it is my impression that she maintains the ability to remain employed in and around her current living area and has no loss of wage[-]earning capacity." (Emphasis added.) Cox also testified that if Lipa were unable to work at Omnova, "of course" she would experience some loss of wage-earning capacity. Cox explained further:
¶ 9. On January 3, 2007, the "Order of the Administrative Judge" was filed. Regarding Lipa's physical injury, the administrative judge decided that:
As to Lipa's wage-earning capacity, the administrative judge found that Lipa:
(Emphasis added.) The administrative judge then found that:
(Emphasis added.) Despite finding that Lipa had been placed in the lesser-paying position "due to a layoff[,]" the administrative judge ordered, inter alia, that Omnova pay Lipa "[p]ermanent disability benefits of $30.02 beginning July 9, 2002, and continuing for a period of 450 weeks as compensation for the disability [Lipa] sustained from her work injuries."
¶ 10. After Omnova filed a Petition for Review with the MWCC, a Commission Order affirmed the Order of the administrative judge. Omnova then filed a Notice of Appeal to Circuit Court. The circuit court affirmed the Commission Order, finding that it was "supported by substantial evidence and the applicable law." From that ruling, Omnova filed a Notice of Appeal.
¶ 11. On March 10, 2009, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court.
¶ 12. Preliminarily, the Court of Appeals acknowledged that Lipa "returned to her job as let-off operator[,] ... remained at her pre-injury wage[,]" and "remained in this position for approximately five months before being `bumped' by another employee with greater seniority." Id. at 1002. Moreover, the Court of Appeals noted that "[w]hen a claimant's post-injury earnings are equal to or exceed pre-injury earnings, there is a presumption of no loss of wage-earning capacity." Id. at 1004 (citation omitted). Nonetheless, the Court of Appeals concluded that:
Id. (emphasis added).
¶ 13. On November 17, 2009, the Court of Appeals denied Omnova's Motion for Rehearing. On February 18, 2010, this Court granted Omnova's Petition for Writ of Certiorari. See Lipa, 27 So.3d at 404.
¶ 14. This Court will consider:
¶ 15. This Court has stated that:
Lott v. Hudspeth Ctr., 26 So.3d 1044, 1048 (Miss.2010). In applying this standard, this Court is cognizant that the Mississippi Workers' Compensation Law "is construed liberally, and doubtful cases are to be resolved in favor of compensation so that the beneficent purposes of the act may be achieved." Robinson v. Packard Elec. Div., 523 So.2d 329, 332 (Miss.1988) (citations omitted).
¶ 16. The Workers' Compensation Law provides that "[c]ompensation shall be payable for disability ... of an employee from injury ... arising out of and in the course of employment. ..." Miss.Code Ann. § 71-3-7 (Rev.2000). The Law defines "disability" as "incapacity because of injury to earn the wages which the employee was receiving at the time of the injury in the same or other employment...." Miss.Code Ann. § 71-3-3 (Rev. 2000) (emphasis added). This Court has stated that "[t]he question of degree and duration of disability[
¶ 17. This Court has stated that it is:
Agee v. Bay Springs Forest Prods., Inc., 419 So.2d 188, 189 (Miss.1982) (citations omitted) (emphasis added). That presumption:
Russell v. S.E. Utils. Serv. Co., 230 Miss. 272, 282, 92 So.2d 544, 547 (1957) (quoting 2 Larson, Workmen's Compensation Law § 57.21 (1952)).
¶ 18. It is undisputed that Lipa returned to Omnova as a let-off operator at her preinjury wage rate. Accordingly, the "rebuttable presumption" was that she had "suffered no loss in [her] wage-earning capacity." Agee, 419 So.2d at 188. However, Lipa claims that she was able to perform these duties only with the aid of a coworker. Four or five months later, Pugh testified that Lipa was "bumped" from that position due to layoffs, "displaced" by a "higher senior employee. ..." Even according to Pugh, this "bump" was entirely unrelated to Lipa's injury and, under the collective bargaining agreement, she could have done nothing to avoid it. Cox subsequently opined that Lipa had suffered no loss of wage-earning capacity as a result of her injury. According to Cox, the only potential loss of wage-earning capacity which Lipa might suffer if she left Omnova would be related to her lack of seniority at the new place of employment, not her work-related injury.
¶ 19. The administrative judge's finding that Lipa "was placed in the factory trucker position due to a lay-off by [Omnova] and then was unable to return to her pre-injury position[,]" is not in accord with the conclusion that Lipa had "sustained a loss
¶ 20. The language of the administrative judge indicates the decision concerning loss of wage-earning capacity was reached — at least in part — based on Lipa's loss of her preinjury position, which decidedly was due to the union contract, not her injury. Lipa's assertion that "I can't get no ... good paying jobs because of ... some of the restrictions[,]" fails to satisfy the substantial-evidence standard required to rebut the "presumption that [she] has suffered no loss in [her] wage-earning capacity." Agee, 419 So.2d at 189. We therefore must remand for a hearing on whether Lipa can rebut the presumption that she did not suffer a loss of wage-earning capacity, without consideration of the fact that Lipa lost her preinjury job due to layoffs/union contract policies.
¶ 21. Accordingly, this Court reverses the MWCC, the circuit court, and the Court of Appeals and remands for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 22.
WALLER, C.J., CARLSON, P.J., DICKINSON, LAMAR, AND CHANDLER, JJ., CONCUR. PIERCE, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY GRAVES, P.J., AND KITCHENS, J.
PIERCE, Justice, dissenting:
¶ 23. Today's majority opinion correctly states the standard of review in workers' compensation appeals: This Court is limited to reviewing only whether the decision of the Mississippi Workers' Compensation Commission is supported by substantial evidence. Lott v. Hudspeth Ctr., 26 So.3d 1044, 1048 (Miss.2010) (citing Walker Mfg. Co. v. Cantrell, 577 So.2d 1243, 1245-47 (Miss.1991)) (Maj. Op. ¶ 15). However, the majority goes on to reverse the ruling of the MWCC, the Circuit Court of Lowndes County, and the Court of Appeals when substantial evidence clearly exists to support those decisions. Therefore, I must dissent.
¶ 24. The majority opinion states, "The Court of Appeals, like the administrative judge, failed to connect Lipa's acknowledged loss in wages to a work-related injury." (Maj. Op. ¶ 19). The majority quotes the administrative law judge where she states Lipa "was placed in the factory trucker position due to a lay-off by [Omnova] and then was unable to return to her pre-injury position," (Maj. Op. ¶ 19) and supposes this language indicates "the decision concerning loss of wage-earning capacity was reached — at least in part — based on Lipa's loss of her preinjury position, which decidedly was due to the union contract, not her injury." (Maj. Op. ¶ 20).
¶ 25. However, contrary to the assertions made in the majority opinion, the administrative law judge did, in fact, find
¶ 26. Additionally, it has been the long-standing rule of this Court that when an injured employee has post-injury earnings that are the result of union influence, or a collective bargaining agreement, such earnings are temporary and unpredictable and do not bar a claimant from proving a loss of wage-earning capacity. See Russell v. Se. Utils. Serv. Co., 230 Miss. 272, 283-284, 92 So.2d 544 (1957). This Court has found the MWCC to be warranted in finding a loss of earning capacity where the claimant's post-injury wages were disproportionate to his or her wage-earning capacity because "in a normal labor market [the claimant] would not be able to hold [his pre-injury] job ... without the strenuous help of the union exercising its assignment powers ... the influence and sympathy of the union, and the sufferance of his employers." Id.
¶ 27. Substantial evidence supports the finding that Lipa could not have returned to her preinjury job without the assistance of a coworker. The physical limitations she incurred as a result of her injury, coupled with her education and work history, support the finding that Lipa sustained a loss of wage-earning capacity. Further, because substantial evidence existed that in a normal labor market, without the influence of the union, Lipa would not be able to maintain her preinjury job, I would affirm the Court of Appeals, the Circuit Court of Lowndes County, the Mississippi Workers' Compensation Commission, and the Administrative Law Judge. This Court is bound by our standard of review, and the majority remands for a finding which already has been made. For these reasons, I dissent.
GRAVES, P.J., AND KITCHENS, J., JOIN THIS OPINION.