American Home Assurance Company v. William Frazier

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 2006
Docket09-05-00322-CV
StatusPublished

This text of American Home Assurance Company v. William Frazier (American Home Assurance Company v. William Frazier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Home Assurance Company v. William Frazier, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

In The



Court of Appeals



Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

____________________



NO. 09-05-322 CV



AMERICAN HOME ASSURANCE COMPANY, Appellant



V.



WILLIAM FRAZIER, Appellee



On Appeal from the 411th District Court

Polk County, Texas

Trial Cause No. 15,389



MEMORANDUM OPINION

American Home Assurance Company appeals the judgment in favor of William Frazier in his suit for judicial review of a Texas Workers' Compensation Commission decision. (1) The trial court denied a plea to the jurisdiction, which the carrier based on the worker's failure to exhaust administrative remedies, and granted Frazier's motion for partial summary judgment, thereby ruling as a matter of law that American waived its right to dispute compensability because it failed to timely initiate its dispute. Because Frazier did not demonstrate that he had claimed at the administrative level that American failed to comply with the seven-day deadline to either pay or to file a notice of refusal, we hold the trial court erred in reversing the appeals panel's decision on that basis. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the case.

William Frazier sustained a work-related injury in a fall from a ladder on August 6, 1992. The parties documented three injuries arising out of this accident: (1) a back injury not disputed by American; (2) a neurogenic bladder disputed by American in September 1992; and (3) a general neurological deficit disputed by American in 1994. The Form TWCC-1 Employer's First Report of Injury or Illness, filed on August 20, 1992, states Frazier injured his "rt. rib, hip, side." A cystogram performed on August 20, 1992, revealed a possible neurogenic bladder that the reporting doctor did not think was related to Frazier's back injury. In a Form TWCC-21 Payment of Compensation or Notice of Refused/Disputed Claim, American stated that "Claimant's current disability appears to be due to a neurogenic bladder, which is not related to his work injury." This Form TWCC-21 was signed September 3, 1992, and at the administrative level was found to have been received by the TWCC on September 11, 1992. A Form TWCC-21 dated February 22, 1994, disputed a 50% impairment rating Dr. Strickland assigned based on urinary bladder function. In a Form TWCC-21 dated July 11,1994, American referred to a report by Dr. Jay Martin Barrash and stated that the 50% impairment rating was not related to the on-the-job injury.

Three documents record the controversy as it existed on the administrative level. First, the benefit review conference report identifies two of the disputed issues, as follows:

ISSUE RAISED BUT NOT RESOLVED AFTER BENEFIT REVIEW CONFERENCE: Did the Carrier timely contest compensability of the Claimant's neurological condition made the subject of Dr. Barrish's [sic] report of 6-10-94, or has the Carrier waived the right to dispute this as part of the Claimant's compensable injury?



CLAIMANT'S POSITION: The Carrier withdrew its dispute over this part of my problems in may [sic] of 1993 and should not now be able to dispute the neurological problems. I strongly disagree with Dr. Barrish's [sic] opinion. He was the Commission's selected designated doctor to provide a whole body impairment rating and nothing else. The Carrier should not now be able to start this same old dispute all over again[.]



CARRIER'S POSITION: The Carrier's dispute is based on what Dr. Barrish [sic] has said in his report and ask that they be allowed to exclude the neurological injury or problems as part of the compensable injury of 8-6-92.



ISSUE RAISED BUT NOT RESOLVED AFTER BENEFIT REVIEW CONFERENCE: Is the Claimant's neurological deficit a result of the compensable injury of 8-6-92?

CLAIMANT'S POSITION: I sustained an injury to multiple parts of my body on 8-6-92 and this injury caused the neurological deficit that the Carrier is now disputing.

CARRIER'S POSITION: Based on Dr. Barrish's [sic] report of 6-10-94 the neurological deficit is not due to the compensable injury.



Thus, the benefit review conference concerned the effect of filing the TWCC-21 that contested Frazier's general neurological deficit for the first time in 1994. The report does not record an argument related to a failure to initiate benefits within seven days of the first report of injury in 1992.

The decision rendered after the February 10, 1995, contested-case hearing is also in the record. The decision describes Frazier's waiver argument as follows: "[Frazier] contended that his compensable injury of August 6, 1992 did result in the neurological deficit alleged, and in the alternative, contended that Carrier had waived its right to dispute the compensability of such condition." No mention is made of the seven-day pay-or-dispute deadline, and the examiner's discussion of the controversy reveals that Frazier's waiver argument related to the Form TWCC-21 filed in 1994. The hearing examiner found American received its first report that Frazier's injury was alleged to include a neurological deficit on May 20, 1994, but that American failed to dispute the alleged compensability of the alleged neurological deficit within 60 days of that date. The hearing examiner held that "[a]lthough Claimant's neurological deficit is not a result of his compensable injury of August 6, 1992, Carrier waived its right to dispute the compensability of such condition, except as to Claimant's neurogenic bladder."

The decision filed by the appeals panel on April 25, 1995, also appears in the record. The appeals panel noted that on September 11, 1992, Frazier was treated by neurologist Dr. Mathew, who said that Frazier presented with symptoms and findings of cervical myelopathy. The opinion also recited that Dr. Pedro C. Caram examined Frazier on September 16, 1992, and found spinal cord disease that he thought was unrelated to the injury. The appeals panel found that Frazier was treated for neurological problems by Doctors Spiel, Fletcher, and Strickland in 1992, 1993, and 1994, and that these doctors noted neurological deficits in addition to the neurogenic bladder. The appeals panel described Frazier's waiver argument, and its resolution of that argument, as follows:

The claimant challenges the hearing officer's finding that the carrier timely disputed his neurogenic bladder condition and her conclusion that the carrier did not waive its right to dispute the compensability of that condition. The evidence shows that the carrier was given written notice of the injury on August 20, 1992, and that by September 11, 1992, (within 60 days) it had filed a TWCC-21 with the Commission stating that the neurogenic bladder is not related to the work injury. . . .

The appeals panel noted that on May 20, 1994, Dr.

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American Home Assurance Company v. William Frazier, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-home-assurance-company-v-william-frazier-texapp-2006.