Curtis Wright, V Pierce County Risk Management

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 21, 2023
Docket56979-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Curtis Wright, V Pierce County Risk Management (Curtis Wright, V Pierce County Risk Management) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis Wright, V Pierce County Risk Management, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 21, 2023

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II CURTIS WRIGHT, No. 56979-5-II

Appellant,

v.

PIERCE COUNTY RISK MANAGEMENT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent.

VELJACIC, J. — Curtis Wright appeals the dismissal of his claim under the Industrial

Insurance Act (IIA) for an occupational disease—Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)—arising

from his work as a detective with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office. He argues that the superior

court erred when it failed to apply the first responder occupational disease presumption to his 2021

claim following the 2018 and 2019 amendments to RCW 51.08.142 and RCW 51.32.185 of the

IIA. He also argues that the superior court failed to interpret and accurately apply the doctrine of

res judicata when granting Pierce County’s summary judgment motion. Because the superior court

properly denied his claim, we affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Wright retired from the sheriff’s office after serving as a correctional officer, deputy, and

detective from 1984 to 2011. In 2002, Wright was assigned to the homicide team and officer-

involved shooting squad as a detective. A couple of years later, he began showing signs of coping

difficulties, and his supervisors recommended he seek counseling. In early 2010, Dr. Ann Alpern 56979-5-II

diagnosed Wright with PTSD generated from work-related traumatic incidents since 2003. Wright

retired the following year—2011.

II. 2011 INITIAL CLAIM1

In September 2011, Wright filed his first workers’ compensation claim with the

Department of Labor & Industries (Department). The Department assigned it claim number SE-

64111. In his claim, Wright noted he developed an occupational disease—PTSD—due to

traumatic experiences during the job with the sheriff’s office.

Five months later, in 2012, the Department rejected Wright’s claim. He appealed to the

Board of Industrial Insurance (Board). The County filed a motion for summary judgment.

In September 2012, an industrial appeals judge (IAJ) issued a proposed decision and order

(PDO) granting the County’s motion for summary judgment. Though the IAJ found Wright to

have PTSD caused or aggravated by his employment with the sheriff’s office, it affirmed the denial

1 Wright filed a total of at least four claims with the Department as far as we can determine from the record provided to this court. Below is a table of the claims collaterally related to this appeal- those at issue appear in bold:

Date Claim # Result Assigned September 2011 SE-64111 Rejected- PTSD not recognized as an occupational disease under statute/WACs at the time

June 2018 SK-34955 Denied- invalid and consolidated as a duplicate of SE- 64111

Later in 2018 Not in record Wright refiled claim instead of appealing the Board’s decision regarding his June 2018 claim

January SM-13528 Denied- res judicata applied and deemed duplicate of 2020/March 2021 SE-64111

2 56979-5-II

of his claim on the basis that PTSD was excluded as an occupational disease within the meaning

of former RCW 51.08.142 (1988) and former WAC 296-14-300 (1988), in effect at the time.

The following month, the Board entered an order adopting the PDO. Wright did not appeal

this order.

III. AMENDMENT TO INDUSTRIAL INSURANCE ACT

In 2018, the legislature amended the IIA, specifying what classified as a legally recognized

occupational disease and expressly excluding PTSD. Former RCW 51.08.142 (2018).

The amendments to the IAA included changes to chapter 32 “Compensation.” A new

subsection was added, establishing a “prima facie presumption that [PTSD] is an occupational

disease” for firefighters and law enforcement officers. Former RCW 51.32.185(1)(b) (2018).

However, the presumption only applies to “an applicable member following termination of service

for a period of three calendar months for each year of requisite service but may not extend more

than sixty months following the last date of employment.” Former RCW 51.32.0185(2) (emphasis

added).

IV. 2018 CLAIM

Wright filed a new appeal in June of 2018. The claim was assigned case number SK-

34955. In April 2019, the Department issued an order determining SK-34955 (June 2018) was

invalid and a duplicate of SE-64111 (September 2011). Consequently, claim SK-34955 (June

2018) was consolidated with SE-64111 (September 2011) and denied.

Wright appealed to the BIIA. The County filed a motion for summary judgment. An IAJ

affirmed the Department’s 2018 order denying Wright’s new claim SK-34955 (June 2018) as a

duplicate of SE-64111 (September 2011) via PDO. Notably, the PDO stated Wright’s claims were

prohibited from being relitigated under res judicata as the parties involved in the present appeal

3 56979-5-II

were the same, the claims involved the same matter and raised the same cause of action, which

was resolved in a final and binding order in 2012 (pertaining to the 2011 claim). Lastly, it stated

that the amendments to the IIA did not apply retroactively to Wright’s claim. Wright filed a

petition for review with the full Board.

In May 2020, the Board adopted the IAJ’s PDO and granted the County’s motion, affirming

that SK-34955 (June 2018) was a duplicate of SE-64111 (September 2011). Wright did not appeal

the Board’s decision, instead he refiled yet another claim.2 The final disposition of this claim is

unknown, as it is not apparent from the record before us.

V. 2020/2021 CLAIM

In Early 2020, Wright received a subpoena from the Pierce County Prosecuting Attorney’s

Office.3 Consequently, he filed a new claim with the Department, asserting another incident of

PTSD. The Department assigned it claim number SM-13528.

In March 2021, the Department denied Wright’s SM-13528 (January 2020) claim as a

duplicate of SE-64111 (September 2011) and consolidated the two. Wright appealed. The County

filed a motion for summary judgment asserting res judicata applied.

The AIJ held a telephonic motion hearing on October 13. The sole issue addressed was

“[w]hether the Department correctly determined that the injury or occupational disease/condition

was a duplicate of the injury or occupational disease/condition covered by Claim SE-64111

[(September 2011)].” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 514. The court further noted that all parties “agreed

that the motion for summary judgment was going to be determinative in this case.” CP at 515.

2 The record provided to this court does not reference or give a claim number for this claim. 3 The subpoena was cancelled by the prosecutor’s office shortly after it was issued.

4 56979-5-II

Wright argued that he was re-exposed when he received the subpoena, supported by Dr.

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