Barker v. Labor Commission

2023 UT App 31, 528 P.3d 1260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 6, 2023
Docket20220242-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2023 UT App 31 (Barker v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Labor Commission, 2023 UT App 31, 528 P.3d 1260 (Utah Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 UT App 31

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DIRK W. BARKER, Petitioner, v. LABOR COMMISSION, BURRELL MINING PRODUCTS, AND ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, Respondents.

Opinion No. 20220242-CA Filed April 6, 2023

Original Proceeding in this Court

Virginius Dabney and Stony V. Olsen, Attorneys for Petitioner Bret A. Gardner and Kristy L. Bertelsen, Attorneys for Respondents Burrell Mining Products and Zurich American Insurance Company of Illinois

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN M. HARRIS and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER, Judge:

¶1 After being exposed to welding fumes, fly ash, cement, and foam concentrate at work for approximately twenty-five years, longtime cigarette smoker Dirk W. Barker was diagnosed with a chronic breathing disorder that prevented him from working. Barker sought and the Labor Commission approved his application for permanent total disability benefits, but the Labor Commission reduced those benefits by 75% based on its finding that his disorder was 75% attributable to non-industrial causes— i.e., his smoking. The Appeals Board (the Board) upheld that determination. We are asked to review the Board’s interpretation of the relevant statute to determine whether it permits apportionment where a worker has only one disability but where Barker v. Labor Commission

that disability results from a disease that has both industrial and non-industrial causes. We hold that, on the facts of this case, it does not, and therefore we set aside the Board’s decision and remand for the Labor Commission to adjust its award accordingly.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Barker worked for Burrell Mining Products (Burrell) from 1991 to 2016. During that time, he was exposed to welding fumes, fly ash, cement, and foam concentrate. He also had a history of smoking and non-industrial secondhand smoke exposure. In 2017, Barker was diagnosed with “severe, progressive, end-stage COPD & emphysema” that was caused or aggravated by his work for Burrell.

¶3 As a result of his diagnosis, Barker sought permanent total disability workers’ compensation benefits. In the course of discovery, Burrell requested that Barker be examined by a medical expert retained by its insurer. Barker refused to participate unless he could video and audio record the insurer’s exam. Burrell filed a motion to compel, requesting that the administrative law judge (ALJ) require Barker to undergo the insurer’s exam even without recording it. Barker responded that under rule 35 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, he had the right to record the insurer’s exam. This dispute continued for some time, involving numerous motions and petitions, including a petition for interlocutory review in this court, which we determined to be premature. The ALJ finally ordered Barker to participate in an insurer’s exam without recording it. Ultimately, both sides did make audio recordings of the exam, but Barker was not allowed to make a video recording.

¶4 After resolving the insurer’s exam issue, the ALJ held a hearing on Barker’s benefits claim and referred the medical questions to a medical panel. The medical panel concluded that Barker’s COPD with emphysema rendered him unable to work

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and that this disease was the sole cause of his disability. In addition, the panel concluded that Barker’s COPD was 25% attributable to his occupational exposure and 75% attributable to his smoking. Relying on the medical panel’s conclusions, the ALJ found that Barker was permanently and totally disabled by his disease but apportioned his benefits at the rate of 25%.

¶5 Barker requested that the Board review the ALJ’s decision, arguing that his award should not be apportioned. In a 2-1 decision, the Board upheld the ALJ’s decision to apportion benefits. Barker now requests review of that decision.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶6 Barker raises two primary issues for our review: (1) whether he should have been permitted to make a video recording of the insurer’s exam and (2) whether the Board correctly apportioned his award.1 “Absent a grant of discretion, an agency’s interpretation or application of statutory terms should be reviewed under the correction-of-error standard.” Barron v. Labor Comm’n, 2012 UT App 80, ¶ 8, 274 P.3d 1016 (quotation simplified). When reviewing “an agency’s interpretation of its own rules,” we “defer[] to an agency’s interpretation as long as it is both reasonable and rational.” Dorsey v. Department of Workforce Services, 2012 UT App 364, ¶ 8, 294 P.3d 580 (quotation simplified).

ANALYSIS

I. Video Recording the Insurer’s Exam

¶7 The Utah Administrative Procedures Act allows administrative agencies to create rules that “prescribe means of

1. Barker raises additional issues that we need not address in light of our ruling on the issues at hand.

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discovery adequate to permit the parties to obtain all relevant information necessary to support their claims or defenses.” Utah Code § 63G-4-205(1). But if an agency does not enact its own rules governing the discovery process, Utah law allows the parties to an administrative proceeding to “conduct discovery according to the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.” Id.; accord Utah Admin. Code R602-2-1(P) (providing that “[i]n formal adjudicative proceedings, the [Labor Commission’s Division of Adjudication] shall generally follow the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure regarding discovery . . . except as the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure are modified by” evidentiary rules in the Workers’ Compensation Act or the Utah Administrative Code).

¶8 Rule 35 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs defense-side medical examinations, allows them “only on motion for good cause shown.” Utah R. Civ. P. 35(a). In addition, the rule contains a specific provision regarding a plaintiff’s right to record the exam; that provision generally allows such recording, by either “audio or video,” “unless the party requesting the examination shows that the recording would unduly interfere with the examination.” Id.

¶9 The Labor Commission has enacted an administrative rule that, at least in part, governs medical examinations requested by employers or their insurers. That rule differs from rule 35 in that it allows employers, at their option, to “require the petitioner to submit to a medical examination by a physician of the [employer’s] choice” and allows petitioners to be relieved from the requirement only if they can show that the employer’s demand was unreasonable. See Utah Admin. Code R602-2-1(F)(3). But the administrative rule is silent on the subject of whether a petitioner may make an audio or video recording of the medical exam.

¶10 Burrell argues that the administrative rule entirely supersedes rule 35 by allowing an employer to require a claimant to submit to an insurer’s exam and asserts that the administrative rule’s silence regarding a claimant’s right to record the exam

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indicates that such recording is not allowed. Barker, on the other hand, asserts that the administrative rule modifies rule 35 only insofar as it gives the respondent the right to demand an exam without showing good cause, as would be required under rule 35. In particular, Barker maintains that because the administrative rule does not include its own provision pertaining to the recording of insurer exams, the recording portion of rule 35 steps into the breach and supplies the relevant rule.

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Bluebook (online)
2023 UT App 31, 528 P.3d 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-labor-commission-utahctapp-2023.