Bauder v. Alaska Airlines, Inc.

52 P.3d 166, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 109, 2002 WL 1777726
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 2002
DocketS-9886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 P.3d 166 (Bauder v. Alaska Airlines, 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
Bauder v. Alaska Airlines, Inc., 52 P.3d 166, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 109, 2002 WL 1777726 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

The judgment of the superior court affirming the underlying decisions of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board is AFFIRMED for the reasons expressed in the attached opinion of the superior court 1

BRYNER, Justice, not participating.

APPENDIX

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF ALASKA

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT AT SITKA

Case No. 18I-99-159 CI

DECISION ON APPEAL

Brock Bauder appeals the determinations by the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board concerning his permanent partial impairment rating, his entitlement to additional temporary total disability benefits and his compensation rate. For the reasons stated below, however, the court concludes that the Board correctly applied the law and that its determinations on these issues were supported by substantial evidence.

Mr. Bauder also argues that the workers' compensation administrator handling his case frivolously or unfairly controverted his claim. But at the time of the controversion, Mr. Bauder was not entitled to a lump sum award and therefore the controversion was not unfair or frivolous.

Finally, Mr. Bauder argues that he is entitled to penalties, interest, attorney's fees, and costs. But, again, the court determines that the Board correctly addressed these claims in its decision.

*169 I. FACTS

On July 24, 1998, Brock Bauder injured his back while working for Alaska Airlines in Sitka, Alaska. 1 This workers' compensation case arises out of that injury and his employment record with Alaska Airlines before and after July 24, 1998.

In the spring of 1988, Mr. Bauder graduated from high school 2 He fished commercially that summer and then worked for Spenard Builders Supply 3 But Mr. Bauder had always been intrigued with aviation and flying and he thought the best way to pursue that goal was to work for Alaska Airlines. 4

In December 1988, as Mr. Bauder tells it, he talked the manager of the Sitka Alaska Airline Station into hiring him as a casual employee to unload a plane loaded with freight. 5 After that, the manager called Mr. Bauder in to work for the airline when employees were sick or on vacation over the holiday season. 6 This casual employment lasted just a few weeks, until early January 1989. 7 Mr. Bauder went fishing again but was re-hired by Alaska Airlines on June 5, 1989 as a temporary, part-time ramp agent. 8 Before Mr. Bauder began to work for the company, he filled out an application and informed the company that he had undergone surgery on his back in 1985 after a high school basketball injury. 9

Mr. Bauder worked as a temporary employee for Alaska Airlines that summer and in August he applied for a permanent position. 10 On September 5, 1989, he was hired as a permanent, part-time employee on the ramp. 11 He remembers working on and off between September of 1989 and June of 1990 and the records establish that he did work over the holiday season of 1989-1990 and in the spring of that year. 12

In June of 1990, Alaska Airlines reclassified Mr. Bauder to a full-time position for the summer. 13 In the fall, because of a reduction in flights, he was given the option of returning to part-time employment or being laid off. 14 Mr. Bauder decided to go to college at the University of North Dakota to study aviation administration and to learn to fly. 15 He was laid off on September 3, 1990. 16

After completing his first year of school, Mr. Bauder wrote to the manager of the Sitka Alaska Airlines station and asked for summer work. 17 He was hired as a temporary, part-time ramp agent on June 5, 1991 and worked that summer. 18 He also commercially fished for one or two weeks. 19 After the summer season ended, Mr. Bauder was laid off and he returned to college in the fall. 20

In May of 1992, Mr. Bauder again resumed working for Alaska Airlines as a part-time ramp agent until being furloughed after the summer season ended. 21 Mr. Bauder re *170 turned to the University of North Dakota for the fall semester. 22

When Mr. Bauder came home to Sitka for the Christmas holidays in 1992, he worked for Alaska Airlines for approximately 10 days. 23 And, as was now becoming a pattern, he returned to work for the airline in the summer of 1998. 24

Mr. Bauder injured his lower back while loading boxes of fish into the belly of an airplane on July 24, 1998. 25 He sought treatment from Dr. Donald Funk, who recommended physical therapy and released him to return to work provided the work was not strenuous. 26 Mr. Bauder did light duty work until he was again laid off after the summer season on September 7, 1993. 27

Rather than returning to North Dakota for school that fall, Mr. Bauder went to Denver, Colorado to attend a school-sponsored internship with United Airlines. 28 In Colorado, Mr. Bauder sought treatment for his back from Dr. Jeffrey Kleiner. 29 Dr. Kleiner diagnosed the problem as "a left-sided sacroiliac joint arthropathy or sprain." 30 After several visits, Dr. Kleiner told Mr. Bauder that he might have to have surgery. 31

Mr. Bauder's internship ended in December of 1998, and Dr. Kleiner released him to do light work on December 15, 1993. 32

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52 P.3d 166, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 109, 2002 WL 1777726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauder-v-alaska-airlines-inc-alaska-2002.