Cogger v. Anchor House

936 P.2d 157, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 185924
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1997
DocketNo. S-6959
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 157 (Cogger v. Anchor House) 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
Cogger v. Anchor House, 936 P.2d 157, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 185924 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice Pro Tern.

I. INTRODUCTION

Anthony Cogger (Cogger) appeals from the rejection of his worker’s compensation claim. The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (Board) found Cogger’s claim barred by his failure to report his injury on time. The superior court affirmed. Because we conclude that Cogger’s employer had actual notice of his injury and was not prejudiced by his failure to provide formal notice, we reverse the superior court’s decision and remand to the Board to determine the com-pensability of Cogger’s injury.1

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Anchor House, a residential treatment facility in Anchorage, hired Anthony Cogger as a resident manager in June 1990. In June 1991, Cogger accepted additional maintenance responsibilities. His work at Anchor House involved heavy lifting; for “milk runs” and “Costco runs” he moved heavy crates, and on at least one occasion he had to lift a patient out of a bathtub. Cogger’s employment at Anchor House ended in October 1992, when he left for a less physically strenuous position elsewhere.

Cogger had injured his back in September 1989 during previous employment as a secu[159]*159rity guard. Cogger maintained that Ms prior back injury healed after eight or nine months, that is, in April or May 1990, shortly before he began work at Anchor House. One of Cogger’s supervisors at Anchor House testified, however, that Cogger complained about back pain during his entire tenure there, particularly on the milk runs and Costco runs.

Cogger states that in April 1992 he injured his back while carrying a thirty to forty-pound toolbox up a stairway to repair a door at Anchor House. After pausing briefly on the stairway, he resumed Ms duties. The result of the April injury, he says, was a sharp back pain that bothered him severely for the rest of that day and required him to take over-the-counter painkillers regularly afterwards.

The parties agree that Cogger was the only eyewitness to the toolbox incident, and that Cogger did not consider it sufficiently serious at the time to report it formally, either through worker’s compensation or in the Anchor House daily log. Nor did Cogger seek medical attention at that time or stop work: he says that he thought that Ms condition would improve on its own, and that he should “be the tough guy” and work through the injury. Cogger states that he told coworkers and some supervisors about the injury, and that Ms co-workers also told supervisors, so Ms injury was common workplace knowledge, although he did not formally report it. Anchor House and its insurer Wau-sau Insurance Company (collectively Anchor House), state that Cogger’s coworkers knew only that he suffered from general back pains, not that a specific incident caused them. Anchor House has no contemporary record of the toolbox incident, demes any contemporary knowledge of the injury, and implies that Cogger retrospectively exaggerates the severity of his “self-report[ed] ... alleged injury.”

On July 13,1992, while he was on a fishing trip without Ms medication, the pain in Cog-ger’s back became much worse. Anchor House suggests that this newly increased back pain may have been a result of the 1989 injury, or a result of Cogger’s catching a fifteen to twenty-pound king salmon on the fishing trip. On July 15, Cogger went to a hospital emergency room for Ms back pain. When asked about the cause of Ms pain, Cogger did not specifically mention the toolbox incident to Ms physicians, Dr. Edney and Dr. Cates. He “[djenied any specific instance of the onset of the pain,” but he did report “a Mstory of low back pain for the last three months.” At some point in August, Cogger’s wife, Karen Cogger, told Murray Colgin, Cogger’s supervisor, that Ms injury was work-related.2 After continuing medical treatment and a course of limited therapy, including a week off from work (at the doctor’s recommendation), prescription painkillers and a muscle relaxant, Cogger’s back pain worsened and spread to his buttocks and legs, and he began to have bowel and bladder problems. On August 19, doctors ordered a magnetic resonance image (MRI) test and learned from it that Cogger had a herniated disk. Surgery on August 21, one week of hospitalization, and a month off from work followed.

On September 9, 1992, Cogger filed a workers’ compensation claim for Ms April injury, claiming that the toolbox incident had caused his herniated disk. Anchor House disputed Cogger’s claim. After a hearing, the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board) determined that Cogger’s claim was barred because AS 28.30.100 requires notice of workers’ compensation claims within thirty days of when the injury becomes discoverable, and Cogger had waited for more than thirty days, from July 13 until September 9, to submit formal notice. The superior court affirmed the Board’s ruling.

Cogger appeals to this court. He asserts that (1) he formally reported the injury within the thirty-day limitation period because that period began to run on August 20,1992, (2) even if Ms employer lacked timely formal notice, it had timely actual notice because Cogger’s supervisors knew of Ms injury and any failure to give timely formal notice was not prejudicial, and (3) otherwise, the law’s catch-all excuse for failure to give notice should apply.

[160]*160III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

Cogger’s appeal raises questions of both fact and law. This court reviews administrative findings of fact under the standard of whether they “are supported by substantial evidence in light of the whole record.” Delaney v. Alaska Airlines, 693 P.2d 859, 863 (Alaska 1985), overruled on other grounds, Wade v. Anchorage Sch. Dist., 741 P.2d 634, 638-39 (Alaska 1987). This court reviews administrative findings of law that raise questions of statutory construction and do not implicate agency expertise using its independent judgment. Phillips v. Houston Contracting, Inc., 732 P.2d 544, 546 (Alaska 1987).

B. Whether Cogger Gave His Employer Timely Formal Notice

An employee must provide formal written notice to his or her employer within thirty days of an injury in order to be eligible for workers’ compensation. AS 23.30.100.3 For reasons of fairness and based on the general excuse in AS 23.30.100(d)(2), this court has read a “reasonableness” standard, analogous to the “discovery rule” for statutes of limitations, into the statute. Alaska State Hous. Auth. v. Sullivan, 518 P.2d 759, 761 (Alaska 1974). Under this standard, the thirty-day period begins when “by reasonable care and diligence it is discoverable and apparent that a compensable injury has been sustained.” Id. at 761 (quoting 3 Arthur Larson, Workmen’s Compensation § 78.41, at 60 (1971)).

Cogger suggests that the thirty-day period begins to run when the full seriousness of the injury becomes evident, in his case on the date of the August MRI diagnosis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 157, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 185924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogger-v-anchor-house-alaska-1997.