Barrington v. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.

198 P.3d 1122, 2008 WL 4682644
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
DocketS-12609
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 198 P.3d 1122 (Barrington v. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.) 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
Barrington v. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc., 198 P.3d 1122, 2008 WL 4682644 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Dr. Edward Barrington performed medical services for a workers' compensation claim *1124 ant who later settled her claim with her employer, without notice to her unpaid healthcare providers, including Dr. Barring ton. After the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board approved the settlement without notice to Dr. Barrington, he filed his own claim against the employer for payment. Both the board and the Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commission held that the employee's settlement barred Dr. Bar-rington's claim. Because Dr. Barrington should have been given notice of the pending settlement, we reverse the decisions of the board and appeals commission and remand for further proceedings.

HI. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Noelle Williams filed a workers' compensation claim against her employer, Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. (ACS), after she experienced job-related pain. ACS initially paid her medical bills but later controverted the need for further chiropractic treatment after its medical experts stated that any treatment Williams needed was not the result of a work-related injury. Her treating physician referred Williams to Dr. Edward Barrington for a permanent partial impairment (PPI) evaluation; Dr. Barrington performed the evaluation and electrodiagnostic testing in November 2004. ACS controverted all benefits in February 2005. When Dr. Barrington inquired, Williams's workers' compensation attorney told Dr. Barrington that his "claim was going to be included" with Williams's claim. According to Dr. Bar-rington, he delayed filing his own claim for payment based on this assurance. Williams's attorney indeed filed a copy of Dr. Barring ton's bill with the board in March 2005.

In April 2005 Williams and ACS entered into a written settlement agreement, subject to board approval. Per the terms of the proposed settlement, Williams would accept $7,500 as payment for her workers' compensation claims, including any unpaid medical expenses; she would waive future medical benefits; and she would indemnify ACS for any payments it later made on her claim. The agreement did not disclose the total amount of Williams's outstanding medical bills and stated that the parties anticipated that the settlement amount was "more than sufficient to cover the costs of any future medical treatment that may be necessary." No one gave the unpaid healthcare providers, including Dr. Barrington, any notice of the proposed settlement or tried to join them as parties. The board approved the settlement agreement in May 2005 without a hearing.

Not long after the board approved the settlement, Williams filed for bankruptcy; she listed Dr. Barrington and other healthcare providers as creditors. The bankruptey court discharged Williams's debt to Dr. Bar-rington and entered a final decree in September 2005.

Dr. Barrington filed a workers' compensation claim against ACS in early July 2005, seeking payment for his PPI evaluation. 1 ACS opposed, relying on its settlement with Williams. After a hearing, the board denied Dr. Barrington's claim, ruling that his recourse was against Williams in the civil courts. Dr. Barrington asked the board to reconsider, arguing that he should have been joined as a party before the settlement was approved. The board confirmed its earlier decision.

Dr. Barrington appealed to the appeals commission, which affirmed. The appeals commission agreed with the board that Dr. Barrington had a civil cause of action against Williams and decided that Dr. Barrington's due process rights were protected by "the survival of his common law action for collection of a debt if his claim is extinguished in a settlement to which he is not a party." It determined that Dr. Barrington did not need to be joined as "a real party in interest" because his "economic interest was represented in the employee's claim." The appeals commission further held that ACS's liability was extinguished by the settlement and that Dr. Barrington had no independent right to relief. Reasoning that no statute required notice to him, it rejected his contention that he should have at least received notice of the proposed settlement.

Dr. Barrington appeals.

*1125 HI. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

When we review an administrative agency decision that has been appealed first to the superior court, we directly review the agency decision'. 2 Here, the first level of review of the board decision was performed by an administrative agency, the Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commissions. 3

Dr. Barrington asks us to review the board's decision directly, or at least give no deference to the appeals commission's decision. ACS and the appeals commission both argue that we should review the appeals commission's decision.

The parties also disagree about the type of question this appeal presents. According to ACS, the appeals commission's interpretation of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act should be subject to reasonable basis review because the appeals commission has expertise in workers' compensation law. The standard of review we apply is based on the type of question presented. 4 We have frequently applied the independent judgment standard of review in construing the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act. 5

This appeal presents issues of law that do not involve agency expertise. The board's decision was based on contract principles. The appeals commission ultimately based its decision on statutory interpretation and due process. We apply our independent judgment to the questions presented here, adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy. 6

Because appeals commission decisions have precedential value for the board and the appeals commission, because the appeals commission's decision represents the final administrative action in a workers' compensation case, 7 and because the questions pre sented raise questions of law not involving agency expertise, here we review the appeals commission's decision.

We decline to adopt here a general rule for appeals from the appeals commission about the standards we will use to review other types of rulings that may be presented in workers' compensation appeals, such as factual determinations, decisions committed to adjudicator discretion, or rulings on questions of law that involve agency expertise. 8 We also express no opinion about whether we will review the appeals commission's decision or the board's decision in other cireum-stances. 9

B. The Appeals Commission Is Not a Party to Appeals from Its Decisions to this Court.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P.3d 1122, 2008 WL 4682644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrington-v-alaska-communications-systems-group-inc-alaska-2009.