Bradley v. Commonwealth

301 S.W.3d 27, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 326, 2009 WL 4891948
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 2009
Docket2009-SC-000135-WC, 2009-SC-000136-WC
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 301 S.W.3d 27 (Bradley v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. Commonwealth, 301 S.W.3d 27, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 326, 2009 WL 4891948 (Ky. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) awarded a lump sum death benefit to Carmelo Angel Isidoro Mayo’s estate 1 and income benefits 2 to his minor child, Alexandria del Carmen Dorantes Mejia, a citizen and resident of Mexico. The ALJ ordered the Uninsured Employers’ Fund (UEF) to pay all benefits in the event that Mayo’s employer failed to do so, including the 30% enhancement provided by KRS 342.165(1) and interest accrued on past-due benefits. The Workers’ Compensation Board affirmed.

Mayo’s estate appeals and the UEF cross-appeals from the Court of Appeals’ decision affirming in part and reversing in part. The court held that KRS 342.130 does not apply to a lump-sum death benefit and that although interest accrues on the benefit, sovereign immunity prohibits the UEF from paying interest.

We affirm to the extent that KRS 342.130 does not apply to Mayo’s estate and that interest accrues on past-due death benefits. We reverse with respect to the UEF’s liability for interest on past-due income benefits, which include death benefits. We view KRS 342.760(4) and KRS 342.790(3) as holding the UEF responsible for interest on past-due income benefits and as permitting the UEF to recover liquidated damages from the uninsured employer with interest.

Mayo, an undocumented laborer from Mexico, died on December 3, 2002, when the unreinforced trench in which he was working collapsed. Evidence indicated that he had lived in the United States and worked for Garry Wise for at least five years at that time. The Kentucky Office of Occupational Safety and Health investigated the circumstances of Mayo’s death *29 and determined that Wise failed to comply with six different federal safety regulations. The administrator of Mayo’s estate and the guardian/conservator of his minor child, Mejia, sought workers’ compensation benefits under KRS 342.750. The UEF was joined as a party because Wise failed to purchase workers’ compensation insurance or to qualify as a self-insurer.

The parties took proof, after which they stipulated that a safety violation occurred and that benefits must be enhanced by 30%. They disputed whether the UEF bore liability for the enhancement. The ALJ awarded Mayo’s estate a lump-sum death benefit under KRS 342.750(6) and a 30% enhancement under KRS 342.165(1), with interest from the date of Mayo’s death through the date of payment under KRS 342.040(1). The ALJ also awarded Mejia, through her guardian/conservator, an income benefit under KRS 342.750(1), which was enhanced by 30% under KRS 342.165(1) but then reduced by 50% under KRS 342.130 based on her status as a nonresident alien dependent.

Mejia’s benefits are no longer at issue because the UEF’s notice of appeal to the Board named only the administrator of Mayo’s estate and the ALJ as parties. Thus, the only issues properly before the Board concerned the UEF’s responsibility to Mayo’s estate for interest on the lump-sum death benefit and, in the alternative, whether the benefit should have been reduced by 50% under KRS 342.130. The UEF argued that KRS 342.130 required the lump-sum death benefit to be reduced by 50% because Mejia was the sole beneficiary of Mayo’s estate; that interest did not accrue under KRS 342.040(1) because a death benefit was not an income benefit; and that sovereign immunity prohibited the UEF from paying interest in any event.

Death Benefits

Chapter 342 authorizes income benefits to permit disabled workers to continue to provide the necessities of life for themselves and them dependents. If an injured worker dies before receiving all of the income benefits awarded, KRS 342.730(3) permits portions of the benefits to be continued to surviving dependents. KRS 342.750 authorizes more generous benefits when a work-related injury results in death.

KRS 342.750(1) provides the widow or widower, children, and certain other surviving dependents with income benefits that are based on percentages of the deceased’s average weekly wage. Moreover, if the worker’s death occurs within four years of the work-related injury, KRS 342.750(6) provides the worker’s estate with a lump-sum benefit from which the cost of burial and other expenses shall be paid.

KRS 342.130

The ALJ reduced Mejia’s income benefit by 50% under KRS 342.130 because she was Mayo’s non-resident alien minor child but did not reduce the lump-sum death benefit payable to Mayo’s estate. The UEF relies on Maryland Casualty Co. v. Chamos 3 to argue that the ALJ erred by failing to reduce the lump sum. We disagree.

KRS 342.130 requires compensation paid “to alien dependent widows, widowers and children, not residents of the United States” to be 50% of the amount that would be payable to residents. It also prohibits compensation to non-resident alien parents, brothers and sisters. Nowhere does the statute refer to compensa *30 tion payable to an estate. Chumos

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Bluebook (online)
301 S.W.3d 27, 2009 Ky. LEXIS 326, 2009 WL 4891948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-commonwealth-ky-2009.