Amended June 11, 2015 Roberts Dairy and Crawford & Company v. Grady Billick

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 2015
Docket13–1009
StatusPublished

This text of Amended June 11, 2015 Roberts Dairy and Crawford & Company v. Grady Billick (Amended June 11, 2015 Roberts Dairy and Crawford & Company v. Grady Billick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amended June 11, 2015 Roberts Dairy and Crawford & Company v. Grady Billick, (iowa 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 13–1009

Filed April 3, 2015

Amended June 11, 2015

ROBERTS DAIRY and CRAWFORD & COMPANY,

Appellees,

vs.

GRADY BILLICK,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County,

Christopher L. McDonald, Judge.

A workers’ compensation claimant appeals the district court’s

ruling on judicial review of a decision of the Iowa Workers’ Compensation

Commissioner. REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.

Thomas J. Currie of Currie & Liabo Law Firm, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellant.

Stephen W. Spencer and Joseph M. Barron of Peddicord, Wharton,

Spencer, Hook, Barron & Wegman, L.L.P., West Des Moines, for

appellees. 2

HECHT, Justice.

An employee sought workers’ compensation benefits for a series of

work-related injuries. His current employer contends its liability for

industrial disability benefits must be apportioned because the employee

previously suffered disability as a consequence of two separate injuries

sustained while working for other employers. The workers’ compensation

commissioner concluded apportionment of industrial disability is not

mandated by law under the circumstances of this case. On judicial

review, the district court concluded the commissioner’s decision was

based on a misinterpretation of amendments to our workers’

compensation statutes passed in 2004. The district court reversed the

commissioner’s decision and remanded the case to the agency for further

findings relevant to the apportionment issue. Finding no error in the

commissioner’s interpretation of the relevant statutes, we reverse the

district court’s ruling and remand with instructions.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The following facts are supported by substantial evidence in the

agency record for this case. In 1985, Grady Billick sustained a back

injury while working for Squealer Feed Company in Iowa. He later

settled his workers’ compensation claim against that company for

payment based on an eighty-five percent industrial disability.

In 1993, Billick was again injured while working for Milky Way

Transport. On that occasion, he lost control of a tanker truck he was

driving in inclement weather. The truck crashed and Billick sustained

injuries to his head, neck, left shoulder, ribs, back, and left arm. His

workers’ compensation claim for these injuries was settled under

Missouri law for an amount representing 18.5% permanent partial

disability of the body as a whole. 3

Billick began working for Roberts Dairy (Roberts) in 2001. The

employment required Billick to drive a semi-truck and deliver milk

products from Iowa City to various retail stores across the state. The

trucks were generally loaded by others, but Billick was required to

unload them himself upon arrival at points of delivery.

Billick suffered four work-related injuries while working for

Roberts. In March 2004, a dolly carrying milk crates struck Billick’s left

ankle and trapped it against a dock plate. Despite treatment, including

an arthroscopic surgery, Billick was left with permanent impairment and

experiences residual pain and swelling in his left lower extremity.

In June 2004, shelving in a Wal-Mart store collapsed while Billick

was making a delivery there for Roberts. The shelving struck Billick’s

head, neck, and left shoulder, and knocked him to the ground. He

received treatment for left shoulder and neck pain which led to shoulder

surgery. Billick was assigned a partial permanent physical impairment

rating for this injury.

In 2006, rusty bolts on a trailer strap came loose when Billick used

the strap while pulling a truck door shut. He lost his balance, fell out of

the truck, and injured his left arm and elbow. An MRI study performed

on the day of this injury revealed a thoracic compression fracture.

Billick lost no work as a consequence of this injury.

In 2007, a misaligned loading dock at a store in Altoona caused

several milk crates to fall off a dolly. The crates struck Billick in the

chest and shoulder. While driving back to Iowa City after sustaining this

injury in Altoona, another vehicle’s erratic movement caused Billick to

steer his truck off the road. The emotional trauma resulting from the

near-crash combined with and superimposed on the chest injury he 4

suffered earlier that day made Billick quite distraught and produced a

physical–mental injury.

Billick filed four workers’ compensation petitions against Roberts.

The claims were consolidated for hearing. The commissioner’s appeal

decision awarded Billick healing period benefits for various periods of

temporary total disability, permanent partial disability benefits for a loss

of twelve percent of his left lower extremity, and permanent partial

disability benefits for the loss of thirty-five percent of his earning capacity

for the unscheduled components of injury.

The commissioner rejected Roberts’s contention that its liability for

Billick’s industrial disability should be apportioned because Billick was

previously compensated for his losses of earning capacity arising from

the 1985 and 1993 injuries through settlements in Iowa with Squealer

Feed and with Milky Way in Missouri. Both parties sought judicial

review of the commissioner’s appeal decision.

Although the parties’ petitions for judicial review challenged—and

the district court’s decision addressed—numerous aspects of the agency

decision, the only issue before us on appeal is whether the

commissioner’s ruling on the apportionment issue based upon his

interpretation of the legislature’s 2004 amendments to Iowa Code

chapter 85 was correct. The district court concluded the commissioner

misapprehended the relevant statutes and therefore reversed and

remanded the case to the agency for further findings of fact relevant to

the apportionment issue.

Billick appeals from the district court’s decision on judicial review.

We retained the appeal to interpret the 2004 amendments and decide

whether the commissioner erred in concluding Roberts’s liability for 5

permanent partial disability benefits cannot be apportioned under the

circumstances of this case.

II. Scope of Review.

“Iowa Code chapter 17A governs judicial review of the decisions of

the workers’ compensation commissioner.” Mycogen Seeds v. Sands, 686

N.W.2d 457, 463 (Iowa 2004). Under chapter 17A, we are free to

substitute our own interpretation of statutes “whose interpretation[s]

ha[ve] not clearly been vested” in the agency. Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c)

(2007); see also Mycogen Seeds, 686 N.W.2d at 464. To determine

whether the legislature clearly vested an agency with authority to

interpret particular statutes, we consider “the phrases or statutory

provisions to be interpreted, their context, the purpose of the statute,

and other practical considerations . . . as well as the functions of and

duties imposed on the agency.” Renda v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n, 784

N.W.2d 8, 11–12 (Iowa 2010).

The legislature has not expressly granted the commissioner the

power to interpret Iowa Code sections 85.34(2)(u) and (7)(a)—the statutes

at issue in this case.

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Amended June 11, 2015 Roberts Dairy and Crawford & Company v. Grady Billick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amended-june-11-2015-roberts-dairy-and-crawford-company-v-grady-billick-iowa-2015.