Color Country Management v. Labor Commission

2001 UT App 370, 38 P.3d 969, 436 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 97, 2001 WL 1548778
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 6, 2001
Docket20001019-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2001 UT App 370 (Color Country Management v. Labor Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Color Country Management v. Labor Commission, 2001 UT App 370, 38 P.3d 969, 436 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 97, 2001 WL 1548778 (Utah Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVIS, Judge:

T1 Color Country Management and Mid Century Insurance Company (collectively Color Country) petition for review of the action of the Labor Commission pursuant to Utah Code Ann. §§ 34A-2-801(8) (1997), 63-46b-16 (1997), 1 and Rule 14 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure. 2

BACKGROUND

12 Because Color Country does not challenge the Appeals Board's findings of fact, we recite the relevant facts from the Board's order on Color Country's motion for review. See Osman Home Imp. v. Indus. Comm'n, 958 P.2d 240, 241 n. 1 (Utah Ct.App.1998).

T3 Nellie Thomas was employed by Color Country at its Sizzler restaurant where she worked preparing salads and maintaining the salad bar. On October 15, 1994, Thomas, *971 while taking dirty dishes from the salad bar to the dish-washing station, slipped in a puddle of greasy water, fell, and fractured her ulna, dislocated the radial head, and tore the rotator cuff in her left arm. She also sustained injury to her spine. Thomas had six surgical procedures over the next few years, including the attachment of a metal plate in her arm; removal of a loose serew; a bone graft and reapplication of a dynamic compression plate; surgery on her rotator cuff; surgical removal of the second plate; a cast on her arm due to a new fracture through one of the serew holes; and another surgical procedure to repair yet another fracture with another bone graft, this one through the callus.

T4 On May 15, 1997, Thomas filed an application for a hearing regarding her workers' compensation claim. An administrative law judge (ALJ) held an evidentiary hearing on January 6, 1998. On January 8, 1998, the ALJ awarded Thomas temporary total disability benefits of $140 per week and specifically reserved ruling on permanent partial and permanent total disability.

15 On June 23, 1998, the same ALJ issued a supplemental order, citing a January 20, 1998 report 3 by Dr. Seott Smith in which Dr. Smith gave Thomas a twenty percent whole person impairment rating based on the problems she had with her left arm, shoulder, and her neck. The ALJ awarded Thomas permanent partial disability benefits based on the twenty percent whole person impairment, with a credit for amounts already paid by Color Country, and reserved ruling on permanent total disability.

T6 On August 11, 1998, the same ALJ issued a third order finding that because Thomas had reached medical stability, the issue of permanent total disability was now "ripe for determination," and concluded Thomas was "tentatively permanently totally disabled." He ordered Color Country to pay subsistence benefits of $140 per week, suspended permanent partial payments, and informed the parties that Color Country could submit a reemployment plan and request a hearing on the plan.

T 7 In September 1998, Color Country submitted a reemployment plan and requested a hearing. In the meantime, the first ALJ retired and a second ALJ held a hearing March 8, 2000, regarding the reemployment plan submitted by Color Country. On May 18, 2000, he issued an abstract based on the August 11, 1998 award. On June 14, 2000, the second ALJ issued an order in which he reaffirmed the earlier orders, rejected the reemployment plan, and entered a final award of permanent total disability.

T8 Color Country subsequently filed two motions for review: one filed June 16, 2000, to have the Appeals Board review the propriety of the abstract, and one filed July 14, 2000, to have the Appeals Board review the compensation award.

T9 In its October 31, 2000 order addressing the compensation award, the Board found that by January 20, 1998, Thomas had reached medical stability with permanent impairments to her left shoulder consisting of limitations to her range of motion, "joint crepitation, and distal clavicle resection." The Board determined that Thomas had a twenty-nine percent impairment of the left shoulder, which it equated as a seventeen percent whole person impairment. The Board described the neck impairment as "critical signs of impairment without radieu-lopathy or loss of motion, but with some evidence of arthritis for [a] 5% whole person impairment." The Board determined that these impairments, when combined, produced a twenty percent whole person impairment.

T10 The Board agreed with the earlier findings by the ALJ that Thomas could not perform other work reasonably available when taking into consideration her "age, education, past work experience, medical capacity and residual functional capacity." The Board noted that Thomas had over thirty years experience as a certified nursing assistant, but that she could not resume those duties due to her impairment. The Board found that she could not return to her job at *972 Sizzler due to her impairment, and that her circumstances limited her ability to do other work reasonably available in the area where she lived.

{11 The Board then examined the reem-ploymnet plan that Color Country submitted. The Board noted that the plan did not provide for "education, training, accommodation of physical problems or payment of continuing disability compensation to provide for ... subsistence during the period of rehabilitation and reemployment."

112 Based on its findings, the Board concluded that Thomas had carried her burden of proving permanent total disability and that she was entitled to an award of $131 per week, reduced from the $140 per week awarded by the ALJ. 4

113 After the Board's October 31, 2000 decision affirming the ALJ's rejection of the reemployment plan and the award of permanent total disability, Color Country filed a petition for judicial review in this court pursuant to section 34A-2-801(8), section 63-46b-16, and Rule 14 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.

1 14 On January 22, 2001, the Commission denied the motion for review of the abstract by stating that the Appeals Board would not take any action on the motion for review of the abstract because "it appears your motion for review is moot" due to a stay granted by the district court.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

1 15 On appeal, Color Country argues that (1) the Commission misinterpreted Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-67 (1994); 5 (2) its due process rights were violated by the Commission, and if the Commission interpreted and applied section 35-1-67 correctly, then seetion 85-1-67 is unconstitutional on its face and as applied; and (8) the abstract was improperly issued because there was no final order at the time it was issued.

116 "Judicial review of final agency actions is governed by the Utah Administrative Procedures Act." Viktron/Lika Utah v. Labor Comm'n, 2001 UT App 8, ¶ 5, 18 P.3d 519.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 UT App 370, 38 P.3d 969, 436 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 97, 2001 WL 1548778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/color-country-management-v-labor-commission-utahctapp-2001.