Bill Wilder v. Muhlenberg County Coal Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 30, 2022
Docket2021 CA 001499
StatusUnknown

This text of Bill Wilder v. Muhlenberg County Coal Co. (Bill Wilder v. Muhlenberg County Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bill Wilder v. Muhlenberg County Coal Co., (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: JULY 1, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-1499-WC

BILL WILDER APPELLANT

PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION v. OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD ACTION NOS. WC-20-00810 AND WC-20-00811

MUHLENBERG COUNTY COAL CO.; HONORABLE MONICA RICE- SMITH, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; MURRAY ENERGY CORPORATION; AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART AND REMANDING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CETRULO, LAMBERT, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: Bill Wilder petitions for review of a decision of the

Workers’ Compensation Board (the “Board”) which reversed an administrative law

judge’s (“ALJ”) award of benefits to Wilder for his hearing loss. We affirm in

part, reverse in part, and remand. Wilder worked in the coal mining industry for many years. Relevant

here, Wilder worked for Ken America Resource, sometimes called Ken American

in the record, (“Ken America”) from April 2013 to February 2019. From February

2019 until December 2019, Wilder worked for Muhlenberg Coal Company

(“Muhlenberg Coal”). Murray Energy Corporation (“Murray Energy”) owns Ken

America and Muhlenberg Coal.

Wilder, via counsel, filed two applications for workers’ compensation

benefits in June 2020 – one for hearing loss and one for cumulative trauma,

naming “Murray Energy Corp./Pride Mine” as the defendant in each claim. In

August 2020, Murray Energy filed a terse “notice of correct employer” which “for

clarification purposes, notifies the parties that [Wilder] last worked for Muhlenberg

County Coal Company, as insured by Zurich. This employment lasted from

February 2019 through December 28, 2019, at which point he [Wilder] was laid

off.” Record (“R.”) at 84. That notice did not seek to have Murray Energy

dismissed as a defendant. An ALJ issued an order providing in relevant part that

Wilder’s “claim is amended to include Muhlenberg County Coal.” R. at 96. Thus,

Wilder’s claim proceeded against both Muhlenberg Coal and Murray Energy, who

generally made little distinction between themselves.

An ALJ held a combined final hearing/benefit review conference

(“BRC”) in March 2021. The transcript of that proceeding shows that when the

-2- ALJ asked if pre-existing impairment was a contested issue, defendants’ counsel

responded: “Yes, pre-existing impairment and also benefits applicability of

[Kentucky Revised Statute] KRS 342.7305, the hearing loss.” R. at 338. In

relevant part, KRS 342.7305(4) states that “the employer with whom the employee

was last injuriously exposed to hazardous noise for a minimum duration of one (1)

year of employment shall be exclusively liable for benefits.” It is undisputed that

Wilder worked for Muhlenberg Coal for less than a year.

Soon thereafter, that ALJ’s term of office expired, so Wilder’s claims

were assigned to a second ALJ, who held her own final hearing in April 2021. At

the beginning of that hearing, the ALJ noted that the evidence included a transcript

of the BRC/final hearing held by the first ALJ. In their post-hearing brief,

defendants repeated their assertion that Wilder’s employment with Muhlenberg

Coal “does not meet the minimum one-year requirement for hearing loss liability

pursuant to KRS 342.7305. As a result, Plaintiff’s hearing loss claim against

Muhlenberg County Coal Company should be dismissed.” R. at 471. Again,

however, Murray Energy did not seek dismissal as a defendant.

In June 2021, the ALJ issued a decision awarding Wilder benefits on

his hearing loss claim. The ALJ noted the parties’ stipulation that an employment

relationship existed between Wilder and “the defendant/employer . . . .” R. at 484.

Thus, the opinion did not analyze whether Murray Energy was Wilder’s employer.

-3- The ALJ ordered “Murray Energy/Muhlenberg County Coal” to pay disability

benefits and related medical expenses to Wilder. Though the opinion and award

listed “[b]enefits per KRS 342.7305” as a contested issue, it contained no

substantive discussion thereof. R. at 485.

Muhlenberg Coal filed a petition for reconsideration; Murray Energy

did not. Muhlenberg Coal argued that Wilder “did not work for the

Defendant/Employer for more than one year, which precludes the award of any

benefits for alleged hearing loss against Muhlenberg.” (Emphasis added.) The

petition for reconsideration did not facially allege that Murray Energy was not

Wilder’s employer. Toward that end, in his response to the petition, Wilder

maintained that he worked for Murray Energy and had done so long enough to

meet the requirements of KRS 342.7305(4).

The ALJ held that Wilder had “established he worked in excess of one

year for Murray Energy.” R. at 500. So, the ALJ amended the opinion and award

to reflect that Murray Energy alone was responsible for paying Wilder’s disability

benefits. In other words, the ALJ relieved Muhlenberg Coal from being

responsible for Wilder’s disability benefits. However, likely by oversight, the ALJ

did not concomitantly amend the portion of the opinion and award making

Muhlenberg Coal and Murray Energy jointly liable for Wilder’s compensable

medical expenses.

-4- Muhlenberg Coal appealed to the Board; neither Wilder nor Murray

Energy did. Murray Energy’s lack of active participation in Muhlenberg Coal’s

appeal is highlighted by the fact that Muhlenberg’s brief to the Board stated that its

author “represents Muhlenberg not Murray . . . in this action.”1 R. at 549.

Muhlenberg Coal’s main argument was that it had to be dismissed as Wilder

“should not be allowed to recover from Muhlenberg [Coal] as the language in KRS

342.7305(4) clearly precludes the same.” R. at 542. But, as Muhlenberg Coal

noted in its brief, the ALJ on reconsideration had amended the opinion and award

to “only include Murray Energy[,]” as being responsible for paying Wilder’s

disability benefits. Id.

In November 2021 the Board issued an opinion purporting to reverse

the ALJ’s decision to require Muhlenberg Coal to pay disability benefits to Wilder.

The gist of the Board’s conclusion was that Wilder had not worked for Muhlenberg

Coal for one year, as required by the plain language of KRS 342.7305(4). Of

course, the ALJ had already amended the opinion and award to reflect that

Muhlenberg Coal was not responsible for Wilder’s disability benefits. Next, the

1 The same counsel repeats that assertion in this Court in the response to Wilder’s petition for review. The assertions are dubious. As the ALJ noted, it appeared all along as if Murray Energy and Muhlenberg Coal shared counsel. Indeed, both the brief to the Board and the response in this Court to Wilder’s petition for review contain the electronic signature of Attorney Taylor L.

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Bluebook (online)
Bill Wilder v. Muhlenberg County Coal Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bill-wilder-v-muhlenberg-county-coal-co-kyctapp-2022.