Bockness v. Brown Jug, Inc.

980 P.2d 462, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1999 WL 342775
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketS-8550
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 980 P.2d 462 (Bockness v. Brown Jug, 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
Bockness v. Brown Jug, Inc., 980 P.2d 462, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1999 WL 342775 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Ray Bockness appeals the partial denial of workers’ compensation benefits for a work-related back injury.. The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board found that Bockness’s employer, Brown Jug, Inc., did not need to pay for chiropractic treatments beyond those authorized by 5 AAC 45.082 or for more than *464 six weeks of injection therapy. The superior court affirmed. Because the Board correctly applied the law to Bockness’s claim and because substantial evidence exists to support the Board’s decision, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ray Boekness, an employee of Brown Jug, Inc., was injured in a work-related accident on March 23, 1993. 1 As Boekness was unloading beverages from a truck, the ramp on which he was standing collapsed, leaving Boekness hanging from the truck with one hand and holding onto a loaded hand truck with the other. Boekness suffered a back injury in the accident. He returned to part-time work on April 7, 1993, but his doctor restricted him to light duty work (lifting only up to twenty-five pounds). Boekness slowly returned to full-time work but continued to take time off due to back pain.

Boekness first visited Dr. Loren Morgan, a chiropractor, the day following the accident. Dr. Morgan diagnosed Boekness with a “strain/sprain complex involving both the muscle and the ligament” and started a regimen of chiropractic adjustments. Dr. Morgan’s original treatment plan called for two weeks of daily treatment, three weekly appointments for the following four to eight weeks, and then two weekly treatments for the following two to four weeks. Dr. Morgan repeatedly submitted this treatment plan to Brown Jug in accordance with AS 23.30.095(c). 2

On April 9, 1993, Brown Jug controverted Dr. Morgan’s treatments to the extent that they exceeded the frequency standards set out in 8 AAC 45.082(f). 3 In December 1993 Brown Jug arranged for Drs. Charles D. Potter and Richard L. Peterson to perform an independent medical evaluation (IME) for Boekness. Dr. Shawn Hadley performed a second IME in March 1994. All three physicians recommended that Dr. Morgan’s chiropractic adjustments be discontinued.

Boekness continued to experience pain, at times severe. He also suffered from periods of incontinence. Thus, despite the recommendations of the IME panel and of Dr. Hadley, Boekness continued his chiropractic care with Dr. Morgan. Along with his own treatment, Dr. Morgan also made several referrals for Boekness, including a referral to Dr. Glenn Ferris, a physician specializing in physical medicine and pain management. Dr. Ferris first saw Boekness on May 11, 1994 and began a treatment protocol of physical therapy, pain medication, and a series of trigger point and epidural injections. These treatments are considered by the medical community to be controversial. Dr. Morgan also referred Boekness to Health Beat of Alaska for active physical therapy, but the treatments were discontinued at Dr. Morgan’s request when Boekness’s pain increased. Dr. Morgan told Health Beat that he felt the injection therapy would provide greater benefit to Boekness than would continued physical therapy; accordingly, Bockness continued with chiropractic care from *465 Dr. Morgan combined with Dr. Ferris’s injection protocol.

Dr. Hadley examined Bockness again at Brown Jug’s request in May 1994. She concluded that further chiropractic care and injection therapy were not medically indicated. Based on the opinions of Drs. Potter, Peterson, and Hadley, Brown Jug filed another controversion notice, this time challenging all further chiropractic treatment, prescription medications, and epidural and trigger point injections. Dr. Moras R. Horning performed an IME following this notice, and concluded that no further chiropractic care was necessary and that injection therapy should be limited to six weeks in duration.

The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board held a hearing on July 10, 1996. The Board found that Bockness became medically stable by December 4, 1993, but suffered a setback and reverted to medical instability between May 25, 1994 and August 2, 1994. Accordingly, the Board awarded Bockness temporary total disability. benefits for the time periods in which he was medically unstable. The Board also determined that Brown Jug was responsible for Dr. Morgan’s chiropractic adjustments only to the extent they did not exceed the statutory frequency standards. The Board additionally limited Brown Jug’s responsibility to six weeks of Dr. Ferris’s treatments. The Board assigned Bockness a partial permanent impairment (PPI) rating and awarded him attorney’s fees and costs.

Bockness appealed this decision and appeared before the Board once more on March 27, 1997. The second Board decision corrected a typographical érror, adjusted Bockness’s PPI rating, and addressed issues of offset, overpayment, and attorney’s fees but did not make any adjustments to the original determinations of medical benefits.

Bockness appeals the partial denial of his medical benefit claims in the Board’s first decision.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We do not defer to the superior court when it acts as an intermediate court of appeal; instead, we review independently the decisions of administrative agencies. 4 We review agency findings under a substantial evidence standard, asking whether those findings are supported by “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” 5 We review questions of law under the independent judgment standard, adopting the rule of law most persuasive in light of reason, precedent, and policy. 6

IV. DISCUSSION

A. The Workers’ Compensation Act Requires Reimbursement Only for Reasonable and Necessary Medical Expenses.

Bockness’s primary argument is that Brown Jug must pay for all of Bockness’s treatments because they helped him move from a medically unstable condition to a medically stable one. Relying on AS 23.30.395’s definition of medical stability as “the date after which further objectively measurable improvement from the effects of the compen-sable injury is not reasonably expected to result from additional medical care or treatment,” 7 Bockness. claims that “[s]ome kind of medical treatment is necessary, as a matter of law, to achieve medical stability.” Bockness reasons that the treatments administered by Dr. Ferris and Dr. Morgan during the period of medical instability — May 25, 1994 to August 2, 1994 — actually helped him move to a medically stable condition and therefore are compensable. He argues that it was irrational for the Board to determine that he would not recover from his injury without medical care and then to refuse to pay for “the only medical care he actually received ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
980 P.2d 462, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 67, 1999 WL 342775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bockness-v-brown-jug-inc-alaska-1999.