Alaska Interstate v. Houston
This text of 586 P.2d 618 (Alaska Interstate v. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
This appeal is from the superior court’s reversal of a decision of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board which awarded an attorney fee of $1,000 to Joseph Houston pursuant to AS 23.30.145(b). 1 The superior *619 court disagreed and awarded an attorney fee based on the minimum percentage schedule set out in AS 23.30.145(a), computed on the amount in controversy. 2 We affirm the superior court.
Houston suffered a work related back injury on September 13,1975. He was paid temporary total disability benefits until he was released for work by his physician on December 8, 1975. He returned to work on February 12, 1976, and was employed until he was terminated on February 28, because of his inability to work satisfactorily as a result of the injury. His physician found his condition to be permanent on April 5, 1976, and estimated his total physical impairment to be 20%. A hearing was held before the Workmen’s Compensation Board on September 10, 1976. Houston had received temporary total disability benefits from the date of the injury until he was released for work, December 8,» 1975, and from the date of his termination from work, February 28, 1976, through the date of the hearing.
Houston claimed that he was entitled to a permanent total disability rating and that he should receive temporary total disability payments during the period December 8, 1975, through February 12, 1976. The carrier resisted both of these claims, contending on the first that Houston was not totally disabled. The Board found in favor of Houston on each claim. However, it refused to award him percentage attorney fees based on AS 23.30.145(a); instead it granted $1,000 in attorney fees under AS 23.30.-145(b), to be paid by the carrier. In justifying this award the Board stated:
The defendant did resist payment of compensation, and the applicant retained an attorney in the successful prosecution of his case. We find that the applicant’s attorney was only required to do a minimal amount of work, and the claim was not complex, but the benefits resulting to the applicant were considerable.
On appeal to the superior court Houston sought and obtained an award of attorney fees pursuant to the formula prescribed by § 145(a).
The carrier’s argument is that the minimum attorney fees of subsection (a) may not be awarded unless a formal notice of controversy is filed pursuant to AS 23.-30.155(d). 3 It contends that this point was resolved by us in Haile v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., 505 P.2d 838 (Alaska 1973). In Haile the carrier had failed to act on a claim for a long period of time. Prior to the hearing, however, the carrier advised the Board that it agreed to the payment of compensation. Four justices participated in Haile. Justice Boochever wrote an opinion *620 in which Justice Connor joined, which, among other things, rejected the view that a carrier’s “delay in making payment constitutes a controversion of the claim so as to mandate an award of minimum attorney’s fees.” Id. at 840. Chief Justice Rabinowitz and Justice Erwin wrote separately. The Chief Justice took the position that § 145(a) attorney fees could be awarded without a controversion. Id. at 842. Justice Erwin’s view was that the long delay in payment which had occurred was a controversion. Id. None of the opinions filed in Haile held that a formal notice of controversion is required to make a claim controverted for the purposes of § 145(a).
Section 145(a) requires only that the Board “advises that a claim has been controverted,” not that a formal notice of controversy be filed under § 155(d). That latter provision serves the independent concern, not relevant here, of § 155, and does not purport to define when a claim is in fact controverted. To require that a formal notice of controversion be filed as a prerequisite to an award of the statutory minimum attorney fees would serve no purpose that we are able to perceive. It would be a pure and simple elevation of form over substance because the nature of the hearing, the pre-hearing discovery proceedings, and the work required of the claimant’s attorney are all unaffected by the existence or not of a formal notice of controversion when there is controversion in fact. 4
The carrier further contends that § 145(a) attorney fees may be awarded only in cases where the right to compensation, as distinct from the amount, is at issue. That position, however, is contrary to the express language of § 145(a) which contemplates controversion “in part.” It also conflicts with J. B. Warrack Co. v. Roan, 418 P.2d 986 (Alaska 1966). In Roan, as here, the question was whether the claimant’s disability was partial or total. The Board had found a total disability and awarded § 145(a) attorney fees. We stated, with specific reference to § 145(a):
Roan’s claim for permanent total disability was controverted 5 by appellants. This means, under the above statute [§ 145(a)], that the Board had the right to direct that fees for legal services be paid in addition to the compensation awarded.
Id. at 990.
In Bradley v. Mercer, 563 P.2d 880 (Alaska 1977), this court ordered the award of attorney fees under § 145(b) in a case in which a carrier contested the amount of compensation owed to the injured employee. In Bradley, supra, however, the manner of computing the attorney fee was not in dispute; the appeal was taken from the Board’s decision to require the employee rather than the carrier to pay the fee. As the carrier admits in the present case, con-troversion of a claim may at the same time also include “an attempt to resist payment of compensation,” and therefore arguably be subject to the provisions of § 145(a) and § 145(b). In the instant case the court is asked only to decide whether Houston’s claim was controverted for purposes of invoking the fee schedule set forth in § 145(a).
Finally, the carrier argues that the minimum fees provided by § 145(a) are much too high in this case and, therefore, we should adopt its construction of the statute to “avoid results which are glaringly absurd.” 6 It points out that since the Board awarded Houston $357.59 a week “during the continuance of his total loss of earning capacity,” and since 80% of that was contested, Houston’s counsel could receive $28.53 a week for the remainder of *621 Houston’s life. 7
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
586 P.2d 618, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-interstate-v-houston-alaska-1978.