Cal. Dept. Corrections & Rehabilitation v. Workers' Comp. App. Bd.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 14, 2023
DocketE079076
StatusPublished

This text of Cal. Dept. Corrections & Rehabilitation v. Workers' Comp. App. Bd. (Cal. Dept. Corrections & Rehabilitation v. Workers' Comp. App. Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cal. Dept. Corrections & Rehabilitation v. Workers' Comp. App. Bd., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 8/14/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION, E079076

Petitioner, (WCAB No. ADJ1360597)

v. OPINION

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALS BOARD and MICHAEL AYALA,

Respondents.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of review. Annulled and

remanded.

Carla R. Anene, Mark Beatty, Mary R. Huckabaa, A. Gina Hogtanian, and Tariq

Ashrati, for Petitioner.

Allison J. Fairchild for Respondent, Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board.

Adams, Ferrone, Ferrone and Michael T. Bannon for Respondent, Michael Ayala.

In workers’ compensation law, if a worker is injured because of the employer’s

serious and willful misconduct, the “compensation” the worker is entitled to increases by

one half. The statute defining “compensation” limits the term to benefits or payments

1 provided by Division 4 of the Labor Code. In this writ proceeding, we find that

“compensation” does not include industrial disability leave, which is provided by the

Government Code, and therefore cannot be increased by one half in cases of serious and 1 willful employer misconduct.

BACKGROUND

While at his job as a correctional officer at the Lancaster State Prison in August

2002, respondent Michael Ayala was severely injured in a preplanned attack by inmates.

He filed a workers’ compensation claim and alleged that the injury was caused by the

serious and willful misconduct of his employer, petitioner California Department of

Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). Such an allegation is significant because section

4553 provides that “[t]he amount of compensation otherwise recoverable shall be

increased one-half . . . where the employee is injured by reason of serious and willful

misconduct” by the employer. Ayala and CDCR agreed that the injury caused Ayala 85

percent permanent disability, but they could not agree whether CDCR engaged in serious

and willful misconduct.

Nearly two decades later—the record does not show the reasons for delay—a

workers’ compensation judge found that CDCR did not engage in serious and willful

misconduct. However, on reconsideration, respondent Workers’ Compensation Appeals

Board (the Board) rescinded the workers’ compensation judge’s decision and reversed,

finding that CDCR had engaged in serious and willful misconduct. (See Argonaut Ins.

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Labor Code.

2 Co. v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1967) 247 Cal.App.2d 669, 673 [“Reconsideration

is, in effect, an appeal to the Board”].) Over a dissent, a Board majority found that

CDCR “failed to act on a credible threat of inmate violence that was specifically reported

to be planned for the day of the attack and took the facility off lockdown despite this

threat even though it possessed additional information . . . that this had long been

planned.”

The Board’s determination established Ayala’s entitlement to an additional 50

percent of “compensation otherwise recoverable” per section 4553. Ayala and CDCR

disagreed, however, about what constituted the “amount of compensation otherwise

recoverable” under that section. We will sometimes refer to this amount as the “base

compensation.”

Ayala contended that, for the period before his permanent disability, his base

compensation was his full salary. He was paid his full salary because he was on

industrial disability leave and enhanced industrial disability leave, which, as we describe

below, are alternatives to temporary disability. CDCR, on the other hand, contended that

industrial disability leave benefits, enhanced or not, are not “compensation” as the term is

statutorily defined. Thus, in CDCR’s view, the base compensation was only what Ayala

would have been entitled to on temporary disability. Assuming that Ayala would have

been entitled to temporary total disability, the base compensation would have been two-

thirds of his salary, subject to statutory limits. (See §§ 4453, 4653.)

3 The workers’ compensation judge agreed with CDCR and found that the base

compensation was what Ayala would have been paid in temporary disability. But on

reconsideration, the Board again rescinded and reversed the workers’ compensation

judge’s decision, this time finding that the base compensation was what Ayala was paid

on industrial disability leave and enhanced industrial disability leave.

We granted CDCR’s petition for a writ of review pursuant to section 5950. We

now hold that industrial disability leave and enhanced industrial disability leave are not

“compensation” as that term is used in section 4553 and annul the Board’s contrary

decision.

DISCUSSION

We start with section 4553 itself. In full, it states that “[t]he amount of

compensation otherwise recoverable shall be increased one-half, together with costs and

expenses not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250), where the employee is injured

by reason of the serious and willful misconduct of any of the following: [¶] (a) The

employer, or his managing representative. [¶] (b) If the employer is a partnership, on the

part of one of the partners or a managing representative or general superintendent thereof.

[¶] (c) If the employer is a corporation, on the part of an executive, managing officer, or

general superintendent thereof.” As this litigation established that CDCR committed

serious and willful misconduct, our focus is on what the phrase “compensation otherwise

recoverable” includes.

4 Section 4553 is part of Division 4 of the Labor Code, which begins at section 3200

and ends at section 6002. Section 3207, entitled “Compensation,” states that

“‘[c]ompensation’ means compensation under this division and includes every benefit or

payment conferred by this division upon an injured employee, or in the event of his or her

death, upon his or her dependents, without regard to negligence.”

The definition is as capacious as it is circular. It defines “compensation” as

“compensation” and makes clear that the term includes every type of payment to the

employee. 2 But the definition contains an express limitation. “Compensation” under

section 3207 must be provided pursuant to Division 4 of the Labor Code. In its one

sentence, the definition says this twice: compensation is “compensation under this

division,” and it “includes every benefit or payment conferred by this division.” Thus,

temporary disability payments are unambiguously “compensation.” They are provided

by Division 4 of the Labor Code. (§§ 4653-4654.)

2 The definition dates to California’s first compulsory worker’s compensation law, the 1913 Boynton Act. (Stats. 1913, ch. 176, § 2(3) [“The term ‘compensation’ means compensation under this act and includes every benefit or payment conferred by sections twelve to thirty-six, inclusive, of this act upon an injured employee, or in the event of his death, upon his dependents, without regard to negligence”]; see Mathews v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board (1972) 6 Cal.3d 719, 729-730 [describing early history of California’s compensation law].) The definition’s origin appears to be to have ensured that workers’ compensation was limited to the compensation defined under the workers’ compensation laws, rather than by some other source. (See Stats. 1913, ch. 176, § 12, subd.

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