Bailey v. Litwin Corp.

713 P.2d 249
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1986
DocketS-378
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 713 P.2d 249 (Bailey v. Litwin Corp.) 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
Bailey v. Litwin Corp., 713 P.2d 249 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

This case involves a claim for workers’ compensation benefits by William Bailey, Jr. After incurring a work-related injury, Bailey received temporary total disability benefits from November 1980 until July 1981. In April 1982, he received a $6000 lump-sum payment for permanent partial disability. Bailey now maintains that he was entitled to continue receiving temporary total disability compensation between July 1981 and May 1982. He also claims the Workers’ Compensation Board (Board) erred in calculating his permanent partial disability award and in refusing to award him attorney’s fees and costs.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Appellant Bailey is fifty-one years old and has been a pipefitter for the last twenty-eight years. He injured his back on August 14, 1980, while leaning over a pipe to pick up a tool box and a transmitter. At the time, he was working for Appellee Lit-win Corporation (Litwin), on a construction project at the Tesoro plant in Kenai, Alaska.

After his injury, Bailey was examined by several doctors and chiropractors, who formed differing assessments of his condition. In August 1980, Dr. Bruce W. Teag-ue, a chiropractor, examined Bailey and released him for work. Bailey immediately resumed work for Litwin as a pipefitter. Dr. William West, another chiropractor, examined Bailey the following September and October and released him for regular work on September 29,1980. Bailey was laid off November 4, 1980 when Litwin reduced its workforce. On the same day, a third chiropractor, Dr. Gene Kremer, examined Bailey and took him off work through January 1981. Dr. Michael Newman, an orthopedic specialist, treated Bailey and released him for work, without restrictions, effective April 21, 1981. 1 In April, Dr. Kremer *251 again took Bailey off work, but released him for work, without restrictions, as of July 6, 1981. 2

Bailey resumed work as a hydro-tester with National-NANA on the North Slope from July 13 to August 16, 1981, when he was terminated due to a reduction in force. On October 1, 1981, he began work on the North Slope in “instrumentation” 3 for Professional Contractors, Inc. (PCI) and continued until November 4, 1981.

Christopher W.M. Horton, M.D., conducted an independent medical examination of Bailey on November 25, 1981, and recommended that Bailey continue his work without any restrictions. He evaluated Bailey as medically stationary and rated him as having a ten percent whole body permanent physical impairment.

Ross Brudenell, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, examined Bailey on February 23, 1982, and determined that he was not medically stationary and did not release him for work. Later, Dr. Brudenell stated that Bailey’s condition was medically stationary as of March 3, 1982, but that he “will probably risk increasing symptoms if he tries to do heavy, manual labor ... [and that] his working activity which related to instrument controls, was much more appropriate than any attempts to try to get back his original occupation.”

On March 8, 1982, Bailey returned to the North Slope to work for the F.J. Early Company, primarily in hydro-testing and instrumentation. He was terminated April 26, due to a reduction in forces, but hoped to be recalled.

Dr. Newman examined Bailey again on May 18, 1982, and considered his condition medically stationary and unchanged since April, 1981.

In sum, during the ten-month period from July 7, 1981 through May 7, 1982, Bailey worked a total of 1170 hours and earned $36,807.85 (approximately $876 per week). In 1977 his average weekly wage was also $876. In 1978 and 1979 Bailey worked approximately 1138 and 1227 hours, with average weekly wages of $517.88 and $523.68, respectively. His average weekly wage in 1980 before he was injured was $832.94.

Bailey received temporary total disability benefits from November 10, 1980, through July 6, 1981. While the payment date is unclear from the record, it is undisputed that the insurance carrier, Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers), awarded Bailey a lump sum payment of $6,000, based on a ten percent loss of earning capacity and Dr. Horton’s impairment rating.

In February 1982, Bailey filed a petition for adjustment of claim with the Workers’ Compensation Board. In its second decision and order, 4 the Board determined that Litwin and Travelers properly terminated Bailey’s temporary total disability benefits in July 1981. The Board decided Bailey was entitled to $6000 in permanent partial disability benefits. It arrived at this figure by multiplying his ten percent loss of earning capacity by $60,000, the maximum benefits allowable under AS 23.30.190(b). Because Litwin and Travelers had already paid $6000 to Bailey voluntarily, the Board *252 denied Bailey’s claim for costs and attorney’s fees. The superior court affirmed the Board’s decision and order.

II. TEMPORARY TOTAL DISABILITY 5

The Board found that by July 16, 1981, both Dr. Newman and Dr. Kremer had released Bailey for work without restriction, and that he had in fact returned to work on July 13. In the Board’s opinion, these facts overcame any presumption that Bailey continued to be temporarily totally disabled; thus, the Board concluded that Litwin and Travelers properly terminated his temporary benefits. The Board found also that any periods of unemployment Bailey experienced between July 1981 and May 1982 were “due to the economy and construction cycles and not to the employee’s injury.”

Bailey argues that he is entitled to temporary total disability benefits from July 1981 through May 1982 because he was not medically stable as of July 1981, his medical condition prevented him from working full-time, and he was being retrained in instrumentation. 6

The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), AS 23.30.005-.270, creates a presumption of compensability. AS 23.30.-120(1). If, however, substantial evidence 7 is introduced to the contrary, the presumption is rebutted and “drops out.” The claimant then bears the burden of proving all elements of the claim. Veco, Inc. v. Wolfer, 693 P.2d 865, 870 (Alaska 1985); Miller v. ITT Arctic Services, 577 P.2d 1044, 1046 (Alaska 1978). The Board’s written decision and order explicitly states that evidence introduced by Litwin and Travelers was sufficient to overcome the presumption. Although the Board did not expressly so state, we assume this same evidence lead it to conclude that Bailey had failed to prove the necessary elements of his claim.

In reviewing the Board’s decision, our task is to determine if its findings of fact and conclusions of law are supported by “substantial evidence in light of the whole record.” Delaney v. Alaska Airlines,

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713 P.2d 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-litwin-corp-alaska-1986.