Alaska Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Alaska Workmen's Compensation Board

417 P.2d 595, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 154
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1966
Docket692
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 417 P.2d 595 (Alaska Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Alaska Workmen's Compensation Board) 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.

Bluebook
Alaska Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Alaska Workmen's Compensation Board, 417 P.2d 595, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 154 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION

Before NESBETT, C. J., and DIMOND and RABINOWITZ, JJ.

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

In this appeal appellant seeks reversal of a compensation order.of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board. The Board’s award was sustained by the superior court and appellant thereafter appealed to this court from the superior court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment and af-firmance of the Board’s compensation order.

Appellant urges us to reverse on three separate' grounds, namely: that the superior court erred in not remanding the case to the Board because the. record upon which the Board based its decision was “garbled and unintelligible”; that the Board’s compensation order omitted any finding to the *596 •effect that Marshall Wheeler’s (husband of .appellee Genevieve Wheeler) death arose out of and in the course of his employment by appellant; and that the superior court erred in not remanding the case to the Board for the purpose of permitting the Board to consider the testimony of two physicians which the Board had previously rejected.

■ This case was commenced in August of 1962, when appellee-claimant Genevieve Wheeler filed an application for compensation with the Board. A hearing was held before the Board on October 13, 1962. 1 At this first hearing appellee produced testimony from six witnesses, including the testimony of Doctor Walter R. Fischer, a pathologist. 2 Then, on September 25, 1963, the Board entered a compensation order in which it awarded death benefits to appellee. 3

Subsequent to the Board’s order of September 25, 1963, appellant filed an application for review by the full Workmen’s Compensation Board. 4 After the conclusion of some rather dubious procedures, the Board granted appellant’s application for full Board review. 5 What impresses us as unusual in the Board’s handling of this application is that after appellant had filed its application for review a Board member wrote to counsel for appellant requesting that an affidavit be submitted in support of one of the grounds alleged as a basis for review. The Board omitted to send a copy of this letter to counsel for appellee-claimant. Counsel for appellant replied and on the basis of this letter, appellant’s application was granted. It was not until the Board informed counsel for claimant of its decision to grant the application that appellee and her counsel were furnished with a copy of counsel for appellant’s letter to the Board.

Thereafter, in response to a letter from claimant’s counsel, the Board advised respective counsel that:

* * * the makeup of the Board in January will be.completely different from that which heard this matter originally, so all evidence should be resubmitted.

*597 When the matter came before the Board for hearing on January 17, 1964,' 6 Mr. Kirk-bride stated at the opening of the proceedings that:

* * * I want to point out that on December 27, 1963,1 wrote to Mr. Emmal in response to his inquiry and told him that we * * * the Board would hear this entire matter and that all evidence should be resubmitted. I want to add to that, that the Board is going to review the transcript of the original hearing and the medical evidence.

Counsel for appellee-claimant then stated that he was “going to submit it on the original record.” After considerable discussion, it was agreed that counsel for appellant would have until February 17, 1964, within which to submit Doctor Donald Tatum’s testimony by way of answers to interrogatories and then the matter was to be reviewed by the Board.

Subsequently counsel for appellant submitted to the Board not only Doctor Tatum’s testimony but also attempted to submit interrogatories addressed to and the answers of Doctors Winthrop Fish and Arthur J. Schaible. Counsel for claimant objected to the receipt in evidence of the two additional sets of interrogatories, and the Board ruled that the proffered testimony of Doctors Fish and Schaible would not be made part of the record. Then, on November 10, 1964, the Board issued a second order in this matter again awarding death benefits to appellee Genevieve L. Wheeler.

Our review of the proceedings which culminated in the Board’s refusal to consider Doctor Fish’s and Doctor Schaible’s testimony has convinced us that the Board did not err in rejecting this evidence. As we previously indicated, by virtue of a somewhat unusual procedure, it was appellant who obtained a review by the full Board of its initial compensation order. At the review hearing counsel for appellant 7 acquiesced in the very procedure which ap--pellant now seeks to void. The record of the proceedings before the full Board reveals that counsel for appellant agreed that he would submit testimony of Doctor Tatum within thirty days

We, therefore, hold that appellant’s contention that the Board “did not follow reasonable standards of procedural fair play” in rejecting the testimony of the two physicians is not borne out by the record in this case. In a review proceeding initially obtained by appellant, and one in which appellant’s counsel agreed to the procedure followed by the Board, it was not error for the Board to refuse to consider appellant’s additional evidence.'

Appellant also contends that the Board’s order granting compensation was “invalid because of the lack of a necessary finding of fact that Mr. Wheeler’s fatal coronary attack had been caused by exertion in his employment.” As 44.62.510(a) of our Administrative Procedure Act requires that the Board’s decision “shall be written and shall contain findings of fact * * *.” 8

In our recent opinion Morrison-Knudsen Co. v. Vereen, 9 we were presented with an issue concerning, the duty of the Board to make findings in regard to the issue of whether application for compensation was timely filed. On the record in that case we determined that the matter need not be remanded to the Board for the entry of find *598 ings, although we cautioned that “in future cases coming before the Board, the Board should * * * make findings which disclose the basis for its determination * * *_” 10 We reach a similar result here and reaffirm our previous admonition to the Board.

In its second decision of November 10, 1964, the Board, in part, made the following findings of fact:

Marshall E. Wheeler, 39, suffered a fatal coronary thromboses on July 20, 1962, while employed by the defendant.
The deceased had changed a tire on the cement mixer truck he operated for the defendant at approximately 8 a. m. and died some two hours later while unloading cement at the Lathrop High School.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hewing v. Alaska Workmen's Compensation Board
512 P.2d 896 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1973)
Anderson v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.
498 P.2d 288 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1972)
Laborers & Hod Carriers Union, Local No. 341 v. Groothuis
494 P.2d 808 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1972)
Beauchamp v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.
477 P.2d 993 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)
Wilson v. Erickson
477 P.2d 998 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)
Brown v. Northwest Airlines, Inc.
444 P.2d 529 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1968)
STATE, DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS v. Johns
422 P.2d 855 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
417 P.2d 595, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-redi-mix-inc-v-alaska-workmens-compensation-board-alaska-1966.