Gunter v. Kathy-O-Estates

87 P.3d 65, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2004 WL 541367
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 2004
DocketS-10931
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 87 P.3d 65 (Gunter v. Kathy-O-Estates) 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
Gunter v. Kathy-O-Estates, 87 P.3d 65, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2004 WL 541367 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Jerry E. Gunter was permanently and totally disabled by a brain injury he suffered while working for Kathy-O-Estates. Gunter and Kathy-O-Estates entered a compromise and release agreement settling their dispute over Kathy-O-Estates's workers' compensation liability due to that injury. This case involves Gunter's attempt to overturn that agreement. The superior court appointed the Community Advocacy Project of Alaska, Inc. as Gunter's guardian/conservator and gave it the power, which the Community Advocacy Project then exercised, to dismiss Gunter's claims. Gunter also sought reimbursement for various costs related to his brain injury. These claims were denied by the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board and this denial was upheld by the superior court. We affirm the denial of Gunter's reimbursement claims because the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board correctly concluded that it lacked the authority to reimburse Gunter for the financial consequences of his work-related injury. We affirm the denial of Gunter's attempt to overturn the compromise and release because the superior court properly vested Gunter's guardian/conservator with the authority to dismiss the claim on Gunter's behalf.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Jerry E. Gunter suffered a severe head injury in a traffic accident on April 4, 1988 while working for Kathy-O-Estates, his parents' business. He was permanently and totally disabled as a result of the accident. Kathy-O-Estates and its insurer, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, were liable for benefits under the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act. The parties 1 agreed to settle the workers' compensation disputes stemming from the injury by entering into a partial Compromise and Release (C & R). The C & R provided that Gunter would be paid $175 per week for ten years and $200 per week after that. It was signed by both Gunter's guardian and his attorney, and was approved by the board on November 18, 1992.

B. Proceedings

Gunter filed a workers' compensation claim requesting that the board overturn the C & *68 R in July 1998. The board originally refused to allow Gunter to proceed with his claim, ordering the Community Advocacy Project of Alaska, Inc. (CAPA) to seek a court-appointed guardian for Gunter. Gunter amended his complaint attempting to overturn the C & R in 1999 and added a number of claims against Kathy-O-Estates which have nothing to do with medical treatment, rehabilitation, or disability benefits. These claims included reimbursement for: a $500 fine imposed on him for disorderly conduct; the costs of court-ordered alcohol and drug testing and treatment; $500 in unpaid rent by one of his roommates; $10,000 for theft by a roommate; $4,000 for a stolen watch; and $6,000 for one-half of the value of his river boat. The board concluded that Gunter's claims were not com-pensable under the Alaska Workers' Compensation Act and, consequently, that it lacked authority to impose lability for them on Kathy-O-Estates. The board dismissed and denied all claims. Superior Court Judge Elaine M. Andrews affirmed the board's denial of Gunter's reimbursement claims in February 2002, citing as justification "the reasons stated in [the board's] decision, and based on the analysis contained in [Kathy-O-Estates's] brief."

The board's December 1999 opinion reaffirmed its earlier refusal to allow Gunter to proceed with his attempt to overturn the C & R unless he was represented by a court-appointed guardian or other competent representative. In September 2001, after an unsuccessful attempt to find counsel willing to represent Gunter, the superior court appointed CAPA as Gunter's guardian/conservator. In January 2002 the superior court ordered the board to dismiss all of Gunter's pending claims, including his challenge to the C & R, upon the filing with the board of a stipulation by CAPA to dismiss Gunter's claims. CAPA filed such a stipulation and the board dismissed Gunter's pending claims. 2 Gunter, appearing pro se, appeals these decisions. 3

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We independently review the merits of an administrative board's decisions when the superior court is acting as an intermediate court of appeal in an administrative matter. 4

We have established that "[in questions of law involving an agency's expertise, a rational basis standard will be applied and we will defer to the agency's jurisdiction as long as it is reasonable." 5 But we will use our independent judgment in reviewing questions of law that do not involve an agency's expertise. 6 In applying our independent judgment we will "adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy." 7

We review the appointment of a limited guardian or conservator for abuse of discretion. 8 We review factual findings involved in determining whether a guardian or conservator should be appointed for clear error. 9 We decide today that we will review a ward's challenge to the dismissal of his or her legal claims by a guardian or conservator *69 by determining whether the ward presents a colorable legal claim.

IV. DISCUSSION

A. The Board Was Correct in Deciding that Gunter's Claims Seeking Reimbursement for a Court-Imposed Fine, Court-Ordered Alcohol Treatment and Testing, Theft, Unpaid Rent, an Interest in a Boat, and an Interest in Kathy-O-Estates Are Not Compensable.

Gunter claims that Kathy-O-Estates should reimburse him for a court-imposed fine for disorderly conduct, related court-ordered alcohol treatment and testing, rent that his roommates failed to pay, money and a gold watch allegedly stolen by his roommates, and a half-interest in a boat that he transferred to a mechanic because he was unable to maintain the boat on his own. 10 He contends that Kathy-O-Estates should be held liable for all of these costs because none of them would have been incurred if his brain had not been injured in his work-related accident; he states that "[mly brain is broke in half from work. Therefore [Kathy-O-Estates] is responsible for everything that I do or what happen[s] to me." Specifically, he contends that he would not have been convicted of disorderly conduct and ordered to pay the associated fine and treatment costs if his brain had not been injured. He also reasons that if he had not been injured, he would not have been forced to live with roommates, and therefore would have been spared their alleged thefts.

The board found that it had to dismiss Gunter's claims because it lacked legal authority to award the relief he requested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P.3d 65, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 34, 2004 WL 541367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunter-v-kathy-o-estates-alaska-2004.