Dart Container Company, Inc. v. Justin Bailey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 18, 2024
Docket2023 CA 000867
StatusUnknown

This text of Dart Container Company, Inc. v. Justin Bailey (Dart Container Company, Inc. v. Justin Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dart Container Company, Inc. v. Justin Bailey, (Ky. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 19, 2024; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2023-CA-0867-WC

DART CONTAINER COMPANY, INC. APPELLANT

PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION v. OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD ACTION NO. WC-17-70726

JUSTIN BAILEY; AMANDA M. PERKINS, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: ACREE, CALDWELL, AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: Dart Container Company, Inc., (Dart) has petitioned this

Court for review of the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board)

reversing the decision of the Administrative Law Judge (the ALJ). The Board

determined that Dart was not entitled to an offset for post-injury wages it paid to Justin Bailey against past due temporary total disability (TTD) benefits the ALJ

awarded him because it did not file timely proof of net wages pursuant to

Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 342.730(7). We affirm.

Bailey, who was born in 1983 and is a high school graduate, began

working for Dart as a machine operator in 2002. On August 5, 2017, he sustained

a work-related injury to his head when he fell after being electrocuted. As a result,

Bailey received TTD benefits from Dart from August 6, 2017, through January 9,

2020, at a rate of $547.17 over 127 weeks for a total of $70,601.40. While Bailey

attempted to return to work about six months after the incident, he fell and hit his

head again. He successfully returned to work approximately two and one-half

years after the injury date.

Bailey filed an application to resolve his injury claim on October 5,

2021, in which he alleged an injury to his brain, and, in an amended application,

neurological, cervical spine, and right shoulder injuries. As Bailey’s physical

issues are not before the Court, we shall not address the various medical proof

introduced into evidence.

At the Benefit Review Conference (BRC), held in November 2022,

the parties stipulated to various facts, including the payment of TTD benefits as set

forth above and the amount of Bailey’s pre-injury average weekly wage (AWW).

Contested issues included when Bailey was entitled to TTD benefits and whether

-2- Dart was entitled to a credit for wages paid during the payment of TTD benefits as

well as any overpayment. After the BRC, the ALJ kept proof open to allow the

filing of a rebuttal medical report and “post-injury wage records.” Thereafter, Dart

filed corrected AWW forms establishing a pre-injury AWW of $822.69 and a post-

injury AWW of $1,269.90. The AWW form showing post-injury earnings

included the total gross pay Bailey received each week. The ALJ held a formal

hearing in December, during which the parties agreed that Bailey was alleging he

did not have the physical capacity to return to the work he was performing at the

time of the injury, but they stipulated that he had returned to work for Dart at the

same or greater wage. The ALJ ordered the parties to file simultaneous briefs and

amended Bailey’s pre-injury AWW to $822.69.

In its post-hearing brief, Dart argued that it was entitled to a credit for

TTD benefits it paid to Bailey. Dart had paid Bailey TTD benefits from August 6,

2017, through January 9, 2020. But Bailey, Dart claimed, had also received wages

from Dart in the amount of $11,197.581 between November 11, 2017, and June 22,

2019, for which Dart asserted it was owed an offset pursuant to KRS 342.730(7).

Dart also sought a credit for overpayment of TTD benefits after June 25, 2018,

when Dart argued Bailey had reached maximum medical improvement (MMI)

1 This amount is incorrect. Bailey received gross wages of $5,598.39 during this time period.

-3- pursuant to a physician’s conclusion that he was able to return to work. In his

brief, Bailey addressed the TTD issue as follows:

The defendant is alleging a credit for wages paid during the TTD period as well as overpayment of TTD. The post-injury wage records filed by the defendant indicate that Mr. Bailey’s first paycheck on returning to work is dated 8/14/21. Since Dr. Nazar did not put Bailey at MMI until 12/1/21, Mr. Bailey would be entitled to TTD until he returned to work on 8/14/21. In short, there was no wages paid during plaintiff’s period of TTD, nor was he overpaid TTD. Consequently, the defendant is entitled to no such credits.

The ALJ entered an opinion, award, and order on February 16, 2023,

concluding that Bailey had sustained a 15% permanent impairment due to his

headaches and dizziness/vestibular condition but none to his shoulder or neck.

After finding that Bailey had the physical capacity to perform his pre-injury work,

the ALJ calculated his permanent partial disability (PPD) award to be $82.27 per

week for 425 weeks beginning August 5, 2017 (with exceptions for periods when

TTD benefits were awarded). Relevant to this appeal, the ALJ went on to address

TTD, noting that “Dart paid TTD benefits from August 6, 2017, through January 9,

2020, at the weekly rate of $547.47.” It then determined that Bailey had reached

MMI as of January 25, 2020.

Thus, the ALJ finds Bailey is entitled to TTD benefits at the weekly rate of $548.46 from August 25, 2017, through January 25, 2020. Dart shall take credit for benefits previously paid.

-4- Dart also argues it is entitled to a credit for wages paid during TTD under KRS 342.730(7). Dart alleges it paid Bailey wages in the amount of $11,197.58 between November 11, 2017, and June 22, 2019. Under KRS 342.730(7), Dart is entitled to a weekly credit for wages paid during periods of modified or alternate work and [TTD] paid.

Both Bailey and Dart filed petitions for reconsideration. Dart’s

petition addressed the date Bailey reached MMI and, therefore, the date on which

TTD benefits should be terminated. Bailey’s petition addressed whether Dart was

entitled to a credit pursuant to KRS 342.730(7) because it had not filed net wage

records for the time period during which the ALJ awarded it a credit, meaning that

there was no way to calculate the credit. He cited to the Board’s opinion in

Jennifer Whitaker v. Irvine Nursing & Rehab., Claim No. 2019-86691, in support

of his position. In response, Dart disputed that Bailey should be permitted to

receive duplicative payments of both TTD benefits and wages during the TTD

period.

In addition to its petition, Dart filed a notice of filing of corrected

wage records showing post-tax net wages. It described its failure to do so earlier

as a harmless, administrative error. In the notice, Dart stated that it was due a

credit of $4,534.81, which it calculated from the records of Bailey’s gross wages,

less taxes. Bailey objected to this notice as it was an attempt to file additional

proof without any authority under the Regulations. In reply, Dart pointed out that

-5- Bailey had not objected to the initial filing of post-injury wage records showing

that wages were paid during the TTD period, and the ALJ’s order did not specify

the amount of the credit.

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Dart Container Company, Inc. v. Justin Bailey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dart-container-company-inc-v-justin-bailey-kyctapp-2024.