Chase v. Vernam

110 P.3d 128, 199 Or. App. 129, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 455
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 13, 2005
Docket01-01-11862; A120876
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 110 P.3d 128 (Chase v. Vernam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Vernam, 110 P.3d 128, 199 Or. App. 129, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 455 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*131 DEITS, J. pro tempore

Plaintiff filed a complaint for unlawful discrimination against his employer, 1 asserting that his employment had been terminated in retaliation for pursuing a workers’ compensation claim. ORS 659A.109; ORS 659A.043; ORS 659A.885(1). 2 Because the amount requested in plaintiffs complaint was less than $25,000, the action was subject to mandatory arbitration. ORS 36.405(l)(a); ORS 36.400(3). The arbitrator ruled in favor of defendant, as did a jury following plaintiffs subsequent appeal to circuit court. As the prevailing parties at trial, defendants sought attorney fees, relying on ORS 36.425(4) and ORS 659A.885(1). The trial court awarded defendants $15,492.91 in attorney fees. Plaintiff appeals the trial court’s judgment, assigning error to the allowance of attorney fees. We conclude that defendants were entitled to only a portion of the attorney fees awarded and, accordingly, we modify the amount of attorney fees awarded.

Because defendants were the prevailing parties at trial, we would usually state the facts in the light most favorable to defendants. Or Const, Art VII (Amended), § 3; Jensen v. Medley, 336 Or 222, 226, 82 P3d 149 (2003). In this case, however, as we explain below, 199 Or App at 139-40, we must evaluate whether plaintiffs claim was unreasonable or groundless as a matter of law. Accordingly, we focus on those facts that would have been supported by the evidence that plaintiff offered in support of his claim.

Defendants own a steel fabrication business in Enterprise. They first hired plaintiff as a laborer in 1999 to work on the demolition and rebuilding of a mill in Elgin. The *132 job required plaintiff to work long hours, often ten or more hours a day, six days per week. Plaintiff began experiencing extreme arm pain at work on August 17, 1999. He reported his pain to defendant David Vernam, who asked him to stay on the job anyway. On August 18, he told Vernam that his arm hurt more than it had the day before, and Vernam sent him home. Plaintiff worked the next day, although his arm continued to hurt. On August 20, a roto-hammer that plaintiff was using completely twisted around his arm, causing him to drop it. Later that day, while driving a stake to hold concrete forms, his hand went numb and he experienced shooting pain in his arm. One of plaintiffs coworkers who was in the area at the time of the alleged roto-hammer accident did not recall such an event, although another coworker did. According to plaintiff, he reported those incidents to the foreman, Tom Roath, and asked him to fill out his time card when he left work that day because he was unable to write. Neither Roath nor Pete Beaudoin, plaintiffs crew supervisor, recalled plaintiff reporting the August 20 injury. Plaintiff admitted that he ultimately completed his time card for the twentieth himself and marked a box indicating that no injury had occurred that day.

Plaintiff worked the following day, even though his arm continued to hurt. He thought that if he rested the next day, a Sunday, his arm would improve and he could return to work on Monday. He did not return to work on Monday, however, because he continued to be in pain. Plaintiff then made an appointment with his doctor, Dr. Neeley. Plaintiff told defendants that he would not be coming to work, told them why he was not coming in, and asked for the company’s workers’ compensation number. Deborah Vernam asked plaintiff to see the company doctor, Dr. Boyd, for a second opinion. Plaintiff saw both Neeley and Boyd. Plaintiff testified that, when he saw Boyd, Boyd told him that he should not go back to work until Boyd had told him that he could do so. Plaintiff stayed home the next day. Dave Vernam called him that day and, according to plaintiff, asked him “what he was trying to do to him” and why plaintiff had not told him about the work injury.

Sometime before August 25, Neeley released plaintiff to light-duty work. Neeley instructed him not to do work *133 involving the use of his right arm and not to lift more than five pounds. Defendants wrote to Boyd, proposing to have plaintiff do painting with a hand-held brush “that would not consist of lifting anything over [five pounds] and would only require the use of his uninjured hand.” Boyd signed off on the proposal, but noted that plaintiff should be reevaluated in two weeks. SAIF, on behalf of VEMCO, also sent Neeley a letter explaining the duties that it believed that plaintiff could perform within his restrictions, namely work that did not involve lifting more than five pounds or using his injured hand. Neeley agreed that those duties were appropriate.

On August 25, plaintiff filed a workers’ compensation claim. On the same day, he also received defendants’ offer of re-employment, which specified that he would be performing only light-duty work. 3 Dave Vernam told plaintiff at that time that he was not to do anything outside his restrictions or he would be fired. Plaintiff worked that day but hurt his arm lifting some beams. Before leaving work, plaintiff told Dave Vernam that he would not be in the next day because he had to fill out workers’ compensation forms. Also on August 25, Deborah Vernam told SAIF that she was concerned that plaintiffs workers’ compensation claim was not legitimate.

On August 27, plaintiff returned to work. According to plaintiff, he was given work assignments that required him to get down on his hands and knees, which he could not do. He was also given work that required him to use a “man-lift,” which he had trouble doing because his injured arm was in a sling. Dave Vernam testified that plaintiff was given a choice of light-duty assignments such as picking up trash. Plaintiff testified that, when he left work that day, he told Dave Vernam that they needed to come to an agreement about what work he would be able to do.

On August 28, plaintiff again did not go to work because he was in too much pain to work. Although he was taking pain medication, he said that he had slept poorly because of the pain. The parties disagree about whether plaintiff advised defendants that he was not coming in that *134 day. Dave Vernam testified that they were not told that he was not coming in or given any reason for his absence. Plaintiffs fiancée testified that she called VEMCO to report that plaintiff was not coming in but that she was unable to reach anyone and did not remember if she left a message.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 P.3d 128, 199 Or. App. 129, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-vernam-orctapp-2005.