Circle De Lumber Co. v. Humphrey

130 P.3d 941, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2006 WL 511129
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 2006
DocketS-11086
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 130 P.3d 941 (Circle De Lumber Co. v. Humphrey) 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
Circle De Lumber Co. v. Humphrey, 130 P.3d 941, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2006 WL 511129 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Circle De Lumber Company was ordered to pay workers’ compensation benefits to Otto Humphrey for a work-related injury that Humphrey suffered in 1993. Circle De appeals the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board’s methods of calculating permanent total disability benefits rates and temporary total disability benefits rates, the retrospective interest awards to Humphrey for late-paid .benefits, and the award of attorney’s fees to Humphrey in excess of the statutory minimum. We affirm the board’s decision in all respects.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On February 22, 1993 the Circle De Lumber Company (Circle De) hired Otto Humphrey, a resident of Soldotna, as a logging equipment operator. In May 1993 Humphrey suffered a head injury during his em *944 ployment with Circle De. 1 Humphrey was riding on the top of a skidder when it struck a tree, causing the top of the tree to break off and hit Humphrey on the head. According to his workers’ compensation claim, Humphrey suffered from severe headaches, head trauma, loss of hearing in his right ear, short-term memory loss, loss of equilibrium in his right ear, impaired equilibrium in his left ear, and ringing in his right ear as a result of the accident.

Circle De paid Humphrey temporary total disability (TTD) benefits from May 29, 1993 until November 16, 1995. From November 11, 1995 until December 6, 1996 Circle De paid Humphrey permanent total disability (PTD) benefits. Then Circle De resumed paying TTD benefits, as well as permanent partial impairment (PPI) benefits, until December 9, 1999. On December 7, 1999 a panel of physicians examined Humphrey at Circle De’s request and determined that he was permanently and totally disabled. Following this determination, Circle De paid Humphrey PTD benefits effective December 9, 1999. In June 2000 the parties entered into a stipulation declaring that Humphrey was permanently and totally disabled. The stipulation was approved by the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (hereinafter “the board”) in Humphrey v. Circle De Lumber Co. (Humphrey I). 2 The board also determined that Humphrey had been permanently and totally disabled beginning on December 7, 1999.

In Humphrey II, 3 issued in November 2000, the board considered Humphrey’s request to adjust his PTD weekly compensation rate from $110 per week to $351 per week, based on the wage rate in 1998 of an experienced tree faller ($21.50 per hour), a fifty-hour work week, and a six-month logging season. 4 Following Gilmore v. Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board, 5 the board agreed to calculate Humphrey’s lost earnings based on the nature of his employment and work history under the version of AS 23.30.220(a)(2) that was in effect in 1993, 6 rather than based on the historical average calculation under AS 23.30.220(a)(1). 7 The board accepted Humphrey’s calculation, resulting in gross weekly earnings of $560 and a weekly PTD compensation rate of $351, awarded retrospectively to December 7, 1999, the date of the PTD classification. 8 The board also required Circle De to pay interest on any late-paid PTD benefits, and awarded Humphrey the statutory minimum in attorney’s fees and costs. 9

Following the board’s decision in Humphrey II, Humphrey asked the board to retroactively increase his TTD compensation rate. On January 19, 2001, in Humphrey III, the board retroactively adjusted Humphrey’s TTD compensation rate from $110 per week to $236.55 per week. 10 71s in Humphrey II, the board departed from the standard practice of calculating Humphrey’s gross weekly wage by using former AlS 23.30.220(a)(1), this time using his hourly wage at the time of injury to compute his compensation rate. 11 The board also award *945 ed Humphrey interest on any late TTD benefits payments, statutory minimum attorney’s fees, and costs. 12

On July 23, 2001, in Humphrey IV, 13 the board granted Humphrey’s request for retroactive PPI benefits, paid at his TTD compensation rate; granted Humphrey interest on his retroactive PPI benefits; found Circle De in default for failure to pay interest on Humphrey’s TTD benefits; awarded Humphrey interest and a penalty on Circle De’s defaulted interest payments; and granted Humphrey attorney’s fees of thirty-five percent, in excess of the statutory minimum. 14

Circle De appealed the board’s decisions in Humphrey II-TV to the superior court. Its appeals were consolidated and heard by Superior Court Judge Michael L. Wolverton. Circle De argued that the board erred in setting Humphrey’s PTD and TTD compensation rates; that interest should have accrued only after the board’s “due date” for payment set in its order, not on the date when Humphrey originally became entitled to TTD or PPI benefits; and that the board erred in awarding enhanced attorney’s fees in Humphrey TV. Judge Wolverton found the board’s compensation rates for Humphrey’s PTD and TTD benefits to be supported by substantial evidence. However, because the board’s order was unclear on whether the awarded compensation rates were excessive under the statute, he remanded the case for additional findings. 15 Judge Wolverton affirmed the board’s awards of interest, reasoning that “the purpose of an interest award is to recognize the time value of money and to reimburse the aggrieved party for value lost.” Judge Wolverton also remanded the award of enhanced attorneys’ fees; in order to determine whether the enhanced award was manifestly unreasonable, Judge Wolver-ton needed findings by the board that explained the basis for its decision.

Upon remand, in Humphrey V 16 the board found that Humphrey worked for Circle De for nine weeks and four days. 17 The board calculated that, using this period of employment, the PTD compensation rate set by the board ($351 per week) did not exceed Humphrey’s gross weekly earnings at the time of injury (which the board calculated to be $421.18 per week). 18

In a separate decision, Humphrey VI, the board ruled on attorney’s fees and costs. 19

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Bluebook (online)
130 P.3d 941, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2006 WL 511129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/circle-de-lumber-co-v-humphrey-alaska-2006.