Fowler v. Titus Manufacturing Co.

1986 OK CIV APP 33, 734 P.2d 1309, 1986 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 4, 1986
DocketNo. 66407
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1986 OK CIV APP 33 (Fowler v. Titus Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. Titus Manufacturing Co., 1986 OK CIV APP 33, 734 P.2d 1309, 1986 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 72 (Okla. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

Did the employer’s failure to advise its employee of her right to file a workers’ compensation claim following notice of -her job-related heart attack toll the statute of limitations? The lower court held it did not. We hold, however, it did and vacate its order.

I

The 57-year-old claimant, Joy Fowler, went to work as a laborer for Titus Manufacturing Company in October 1981. One day she began lifting and carrying some large metal air vents weighing “probably sixty or seventy pounds.” Suddenly, she said, “I felt like I had a heartburn, I started getting weak and I broke out in a sweat and my arm and even my back was killing me, felt like somebody had something squeezing me....” She went to her supervisor. “I gotta sit down for a minute,” she said. He took her to the front office and seated her. The shop foreman came over to talk with her and noticed she had broken out with a sweat and was complaining of pain down her arm and of chest pressure. He became alarmed and immediately called an ambulance for the employee’s removal to a hospital. This was February 18, 1982.

At the medical care center a cardiologist examined claimant and, after analyzing various laboratory test results, concluded Ms. Fowler had suffered a heart attack causing an “acute myocardial infarction.” She remained in the hospital about two weeks, half of which was in intensive care. Some four months later, on June 28, 1982, she was released for light duty work and at the time of trial she was working as a welder with the company.

A Form 3 was filed on February 7, 1985, seeking benefits due claimant for the heart attack sequelae. The matter was heard January 2, 1986, at which time the trial judge found that claimant had sustained a job-related accidental injury as a result of the heart attack, that she received § 8 advice December 5, 1983, that she did not file her claim within a year thereafter, and then concluded it was now barred by the statute of limitations.1

Claimant contends the trial court’s conclusion — that the claim was barred — is contrary to law because under the undisputed evidence the employer had actual notice of claimant’s heart attack and since it never once advised her she had the right to file a claim for compensation for her heart injury, the running of the § 43 one year statutory limitation was tolled under the provisions of § 8.

Titus on the other hand defends the order on both technical and substantive grounds. Preliminarily it admits that once it receives notice of an injury it must advise the injured employee of the right to file a [1311]*1311claim in order to start the statute of limitations running; that it had early notice of claimant’s injury; and that it never specifically advised her of her right to file a claim for the heart injury. Its argument in defense of the court en banc’s order, however, centers on these two points: (1) claimant “failed to preserve any issues for review by this court,” and (2) it, the employer, never knew until after this claim was filed that claimant’s heart attack was job related because claimant concealed such fact from it.

Given the nature of the issues raised by petitioner and the concessions of respondents, the appeal can best be disposed of by addressing the defensive contentions of respondent Titus.

II

The employer’s first contention — that claimant failed to preserve any issue for appeal — is not supported by the record.

In her request for the court en banc to review, Ms. Fowler set out the following ground: “That paragraph Five (5) of the Order is contrary to the evidence and the law.” While that assertion standing alone is general in nature it is transformed into a specific one when read with referenced paragraph five of the order, which states: “That claimant was advised of her right to file a claim for workers’ compensation benefits on or about December 5, 1983. She failed to file [a] claim for her December 18, 1982 heart attack until February 8, 1985 and [her] claim is therefore barred by the Statute of Limitations.”

Thus though the format of the complained of error in claimant’s appellate request may not be paragonic, it is sufficient to invoke a challenge of the findings and conclusions in paragraph five of the trial court’s order. It was unnecessary for claimant to recite such findings and conclusion in her quest of an en banc review.2 When her complaint and paragraph five are read together two clear issues emerge: (1) Whether the trial court’s finding that claimant was advised of her right to file a claim is contrary to the evidence; and (2) Whether the court’s conclusion that the claim is barred by the statute of limitations is contrary to law under the undisputed evidence introduced.

We hold, therefore, that claimant adequately preserved the statute of limitations question for review by this court.

Ill

Titus’s other contention — that the claim is barred by the statute of limitations — is also without merit.

It concedes, as we said earlier, that the one-year statute of limitations prescribed in 85 O.S.1981 § 43 is tolled if an employer who has notice of an injury to an employee fails to advise the injured employee of his right to file a claim.3 Its argument is, however, that while it knew claimant had an injurious heart attack on the job it did not know until this claim was filed that the attack arose out of and in the course of the employment and therefore it never became obligated to tell claimant she had a right to file a claim. It lays its ignorance at the feet of claimant who, it says, was told by her physician back in 1982 that the attack was “caused by her employment” and “did everything in her power to prevent her employer from finding out the truth.” They point to her testimony as proof of this.

“When did he [the doctor] mention it to you, that he thought it was job connected?” claimant was asked.

[1312]*1312“Well,” she answered, “I told him not to put it on there that it was job related because if he did, they probably wouldn’t let me work; and I’m still paying on it, as a matter of fact, I’ve still got about three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) worth of hospital bills I'm paying on.”

Frankly we are dismayed at the respondent’s stance in this case. Subject statute does not place a burden on the employee to advise the employer of anything but only on the employer to advise the employee of certain rights. Given the knowledge that the employer had about the facts and circumstances leading up to claimant’s hospitalization and given the fact it knew or should have known claimant was hospitalized for two weeks, most of which time she was in intensive care, and given the further fact that claimant was not permitted to return to work until June 28, 1982, and then only for light duty, it is incredible that the employer now urges that the reason it did not tell Ms. Fowler she had a right to file a claim for the heart injury was because she did not advise it that her heart attack arose out of and in the course of her employment.

The short answer to this contention is that the § 8 command is to be obeyed early on and is not contingent upon the employer first making a definitive determination of the nature and extent of an injury or of relevant legal issues such as whether the injury arose out of or in the course of the employment.

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Bluebook (online)
1986 OK CIV APP 33, 734 P.2d 1309, 1986 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-titus-manufacturing-co-oklacivapp-1986.