Cajun Cable Co. v. Industrial Commission

754 P.2d 317, 156 Ariz. 590, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 649
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 29, 1987
Docket1 CA-IC 3609
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 754 P.2d 317 (Cajun Cable Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cajun Cable Co. v. Industrial Commission, 754 P.2d 317, 156 Ariz. 590, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 649 (Ark. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

FIDEL, Judge.

This special action review of an Industrial Commission award arises from the Administrative Law Judge’s dismissal of petitioners’ requests for hearings as inexcusably untimely under A.R.S. § 23-947(B). Both the employer, Cajun Cable Company, Inc., and the No Insurance Fund of the Industrial Commission of Arizona have petitioned from the decision upon review affirming the award.

Cajun Cable and the Fund had sought a hearing in order to challenge the Industrial Commission’s determination that Cajun Cable was uninsured and that the workers’ compensation insurance it had purchased from Fremont Indemnity Company was not yet effective as of the time of the industrial injury of Cajun Cable’s employee Gary W. Field. The Fund, established by A.R.S. § 23-1065 (amended 1986), is responsible for paying compensation benefits awarded to injured workers employed by uninsured employers. See A.R.S. § 23-907(B). These payments plus a penalty become a lien against the uninsured employer’s property. See A.R.S. § 23-907(C). By their requests for hearing in this case Cajun Cable and the Fund sought to establish Fremont’s coverage; the Fund thereby sought to avoid liability for compensation benefits, and Cajun Cable sought to avoid a lien.

We consider whether the administrative law judge abused his discretion in rejecting the position of the employer and the Fund that their untimely requests for hearing resulted from justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation by Fremont that, as of the time of Field’s industrial injury, the employer was not insured. 1

Facts

In mid-February 1983, the employer decided at its annual corporate meeting to convert the status of its cable installers from independent contractors to employees. The employer’s president, Mike Dubea, met with his insurance agent, Fred Patterson, to discuss obtaining workers’ compensation coverage beginning March 1, 1983. Patterson, the self-employed owner of the Fred Patterson Insurance Agency and an authorized agent of Fremont, had authority to bind Fremont for such coverage.

Dubea testified that he first met with Patterson in mid-February and then phoned *592 in late February 1983 to confirm that the coverage was effective March 1,1983. Dubea testified that Patterson told him “Fine. I will have it covered. It will begin March the 1st. Don’t worry about it.” The agent did not remember the date he talked to Dubea, but testified that, as a result of the call, he filled out an application for insurance, listed the date of inception as March 1st, and signed it, dated March 1, 1983.

On March 3, 1983, the employee, Gary Field, was injured on the job. He reported his injury to the employer’s insurance secretary, Linda Petruso, on March 7th or 8th, and she called Patterson to ask how to file a claim. Petruso testified that Patterson told her the paperwork had not gone through, the employer was not covered by workers’ compensation insurance until March 8, 1983, and Cajun Cable should therefore pay the employee’s medical bills itself. Patterson testified that the claim was called in after he had filled out the application and that after the call he changed the application date from March 1 to March 8, 1983, before he mailed it to the carrier. He explained the date change by saying, “I just remember somebody called the claim in and I said: ‘Wait a minute. Mike just called the coverage in yesterday. There wouldn’t be coverage back then. There was no coverage in force at that time.’ ” The carrier received the application on March 10, 1983, and began coverage on March 8, 1983.

On April 6, 1983, the employee filed a claim for benefits with the Industrial Commission. Terri Plew, the supervisor of the No Insurance Fund, testified that the Industrial Commission assessed whether there was insurance on the claim by consulting its computer to see if the employer had current coverage. The information on computer is entered through an “006 card”, by which the insurance companies report the name of the policy holder and the policy period whenever workers’ compensation coverage is issued or renewed. The Commission’s computer search revealed that coverage had not begun until March 8, 1983. A manual search of the Commission files led to the same conclusion. Finally, finding no coverage for the employer as of March 3, the date of injury, the Fund phoned the employer for more information. The Fund’s files show that the employer responded “that as far as they knew there was no insurance on that day either.”

On May 24, 1983, the Industrial Commission, relying on the representations of both the employer and the carrier that there was no insurance in effect on March 3rd, issued an award of compensability, finding, among other things, that the employer lacked insurance on the date of injury. None of the parties filed a request for hearing within the 90-day protest period, and the award became final on August 23, 1983. See A.R.S. § 23-947.

Although Mike Dubea was upset when Linda Petruso told him there was no coverage on the date of Field’s injury, he neither contacted the agent nor the carrier. He did, however, mention the problem to his labor lawyer, Mr. Fine, in June or July of 1983, while consulting about other matters. No legal action resulted from that conference. Dubea and Petruso both testified that, until they received a bill for $5,946.89 from the Industrial Commission in early September 1983, they took no legal action, although they had received the May 24th award and understood that it would become final if not protested within 90 days. Petruso said the receipt of the September bill was Cajun Cable’s first indication that the employee’s claim would involve more than a few hundred dollars. Receipt of the bill prompted Dubea to seek legal help in early September. Dubea again called attorney Fine, who referred him to attorney Stoffa, a partner specializing in workers’ compensation. The parties stipulated that, until Dubea talked with his attorney in September 1983, neither Dubea nor Petruso was aware that Cajun Cable had legal rights against the carrier on the basis of the agent’s oral promise to procure coverage effective March 1st. After Dubea met with his attorney, Petruso called the carrier “to finally see if I could find out why the date was different than what I had anticipated.” Petruso spoke with Gerald Clifford, the carrier’s senior underwriter, who told her the policy was effective from the *593 application date entered by the agent. • Petruso testified she learned for the first time during her call to Clifford on September 8, 1983, that Patterson had changed the application date from March 1st to March 8th.

The employer filed its untimely request for hearing on September 8, 1983,107 days after the May 24th award. Cajun Cable claimed that its late filing should be excused under A.R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
754 P.2d 317, 156 Ariz. 590, 1987 Ariz. App. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cajun-cable-co-v-industrial-commission-arizctapp-1987.