City Of Madrid, Iowa, And Emc Insurance Companies Vs. Angela Blasnitz

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 5, 2007
Docket69 / 06-0977
StatusPublished

This text of City Of Madrid, Iowa, And Emc Insurance Companies Vs. Angela Blasnitz (City Of Madrid, Iowa, And Emc Insurance Companies Vs. Angela Blasnitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Of Madrid, Iowa, And Emc Insurance Companies Vs. Angela Blasnitz, (iowa 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 69 / 06-0977

Filed October 5, 2007

CITY OF MADRID, IOWA, and EMC INSURANCE COMPANIES,

Appellants,

vs.

ANGELA BLASNITZ,

Appellee.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Arthur E.

Gamble, Judge.

Insurer seeks further review of court of appeals decision

remanding workers’ compensation case to commissioner for

determination of insurer’s liability for penalty benefits. DECISION OF

COURT OF APPEALS VACATED. DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART; CASE REMANDED.

Lori A. Brandau and Michael L. Mock of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor

& Fairgrave, P.C., Des Moines, for appellants.

Jim Lawyer of Lawyer, Lawyer, Dutton & Drake, LLP,

West Des Moines, for appellee. 2

TERNUS, Chief Justice.

This appeal involves a workers’ compensation insurer’s challenge

to an award of penalty benefits by the workers’ compensation

commissioner. The district court ruled the commissioner had applied an

incorrect standard in determining the employer’s liability for penalty

benefits under Iowa Code section 86.13 (2003) and concluded the case

should be remanded to the commissioner for reconsideration of penalty

benefits under the appropriate test. Upon the employer’s appeal, the

court of appeals affirmed the district court’s remand to the

commissioner.

We conclude the commissioner’s award of penalty benefits was not

supported by substantial evidence because the underlying workers’

compensation claim was fairly debatable as a matter of law under the

record before the commissioner. Therefore, we vacate the court of

appeals decision, affirm the judgment of the district court in part and

reverse in part, and remand the case for entry of a judgment consistent

with this opinion.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

On August 1, 2003, the appellee, Angela Blasnitz, filed a petition

for arbitration seeking workers’ compensation benefits for a shoulder

injury she was ultimately found to have sustained on January 17, 2003.

Her employer, City of Madrid, Iowa, and its workers’ compensation

insurer, EMC Insurance Companies, denied her claim, contending she

had not sustained a shoulder injury on the date alleged. (We will refer to

these parties jointly as the insurer.) An arbitration decision was

eventually entered by a deputy workers’ compensation commissioner,

awarding disability, medical, and penalty benefits. 3

On intra-agency appeal, the workers’ compensation commissioner

affirmed, adopting the deputy’s decision with some “additional analysis”

concerning the penalty benefits issue. Before reviewing the

commissioner’s analysis of this issue, it is helpful to summarize the

pertinent facts found by the commissioner, as well as the relevant

documentary evidence and testimony introduced at the hearing.

In January 2003 the claimant was employed as a police officer for

the City of Madrid. On January 17, 2003, she was dispatched to a call at

the home of Michael and Susan Palmer to investigate a domestic

disturbance. The claimant testified at her workers’ compensation

hearing that she slipped and fell in the Palmer home, striking her right

shoulder and elbow. At the time of the incident, the claimant was

wearing a remote microphone for her patrol vehicle recording system,

and she can be heard to fall on the tape. Her fall was not visible on the

tape, however.

The claimant stated in answers to interrogatories that she had

immediate pain in her shoulder and elbow. The patrol car tape shows

her conducting a vehicle stop after her fall, sometimes using her right

arm above her shoulder. She does say “ouch” once while searching the

vehicle. The claimant did not record that she sustained an injury when

she completed her patrol activity report for her January 17, 2003 shift.

The claimant had been injured three times while working for the city

before the January 17, 2003 incident, and on each occasion, she had

noted her injury in her patrol activity log on the day the injury occurred.

The claimant testified she had a discussion with the police chief

the day after her fall regarding an injury to her shoulder. The chief,

however, denied he had a conversation with the claimant on January 18

or January 19, as he did not work on either date. 4

The police chief gave the claimant a three-day suspension on

February 19, 2003, for failing to follow an office directive with respect to

an unrelated matter. On the final day of her suspension, February 24,

2003, the claimant sought her initial treatment for her shoulder, neck

and arm. She reported to her chiropractor on that date that she had her

first symptoms after a fall on her right shoulder approximately three

weeks earlier. The claimant wrote a note to her employer the next day,

February 25, 2003, stating that she fell “at the 10-16” and hurt her back

and shoulder. In response to this note, the insurer authorized medical

care with a Dr. Kirkland, who the claimant saw on March 19, 2003. The

claimant reported to Dr. Kirkland that she slipped and fell on either

January 17, 2003, or December 17, 2002, while responding to a call, but

according to his records, she really could not remember. Also on

March 19, 2003, the claimant reported to Therapeutic Associates that

the injury occurred ninety days prior. On March 26, 2003, she told a

physical therapist that she injured her shoulder on January 17, 2003,

when responding to a domestic-dispute call. She gave the same history

to a physician she consulted on May 7, 2003, who determined the

claimant had a rotator cuff tear in her right shoulder. The claimant

subsequently had two surgeries to repair the tear.

On three occasions in April 2003, the insurer made surveillance

videos of the claimant. In one video, she can be seen bridling, leading,

and grooming three horses for approximately ninety minutes, using both

arms, sometimes above shoulder level. At one point, she appears to

briefly shake her right arm and hold her right shoulder. On May 21,

2003, the insurer took a recorded statement from Mr. Palmer, one of the

subjects of the claimant’s January 17 domestic-disturbance call.

Mr. Palmer told the insurer that the claimant fell straight down on 5

January 17, 2003, and landed on her bottom. The insurer wrote to the

claimant on May 22, 2003, denying her claim.

On June 2, 2003, the claimant called Mr. Palmer and asked him to

sign a statement for her because “she was having trouble with the

workmen’s comp.” The next day, June 3, 2003, Mr. Palmer gave a

second statement to the insurer, stating that on January 17, 2003, “he

had turned slightly and he turned back around and claimant had her

feet in the air and her back was against the wall.” He explained that he

“just wasn’t thinking right” when he gave his first statement. Eventually,

Mr. Palmer’s deposition was taken on March 12, 2004. He testified that

he did not see the claimant fall on January 17, 2003, but he did offer to

help her up after her fall. He further testified she said she was fine, she

did not act like she had been injured, and she did not rub her right arm

or shoulder. Mr. Palmer also suggested in his deposition that the parties

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