Harris v. Sinclair Trucking

900 P.2d 1163, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 147, 1995 WL 479470
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1995
Docket94-221
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 900 P.2d 1163 (Harris v. Sinclair Trucking) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Sinclair Trucking, 900 P.2d 1163, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 147, 1995 WL 479470 (Wyo. 1995).

Opinions

GOLDEN, Chief Justice.

Appellant Bonnie Harris, acting in her capacity as representative of her deceased husband, sought worker’s compensation benefits on the basis her husband died of a compensa-ble coronary condition caused by unusual or abnormal exertion related to his employment. See Wyo.Stat. § 27-14-603(b) (Supp.1995). At the conclusion of a hearing, Harris was awarded benefits. The employer, Sinclair Trucking, filed a petition for review in the district court asking that additional evidence be taken before the hearing examiner. The district court remanded, finding the evidence Sinclair sought to add to the record was material and Sinclair had shown good cause why the evidence had not been presented at the original hearing. At the conclusion of the second hearing, the hearing examiner reversed his decision, denying Harris benefits.

Because we hold the district court erred in determining Sinclair had shown good cause to present additional evidence, we reverse and remand to the district court for review of the hearing examiner’s original findings and conclusions.

Harris and Sinclair agree these are the issues:

1. Whether the Administrative Law Judge’s decision rendered December 28, 1992, was correct as a matter of law and supported by substantial evidence.
[1165]*11652. Whether the District Court abused its discretion in remanding the case for additional evidence pursuant to Rule 12.08 W.R.A.P.?
3. Whether the Administrative Law Judge’s decision rendered May 20, 1994, is correct as a matter of law and supported by substantial evidence?

The Division provides this statement of issues:

A. Whether the district court’s remand to the Office of Administrative Hearings, for the taking of additional evidence, was an appropriate exercise of the discretion granted by Rule 12.08, W.R.A.P.
B. Whether the administrative conclusion that Sherman Harris’ heart attack was not compensable under the standards of W.S. § 27-14-608 is supported by substantial evidence, in accordance with law and not arbitrary, capricious or an abuse of discretion.

Harris filed a claim for worker’s compensation benefits on August 27, 1991, alleging her husband had died of a coronary condition on August 23, 1991. Sinclair began its discovery on November 12, 1991, including interrogatories. In answer to those interrogatories, dated April 23, 1992, Harris set out a theory of the ease to the effect the heart attack was brought about by unusual exertion necessary to change a tire on the truck her husband was driving in the oil patch. The claim asserted: “It had been raining and the roadway turn[ed] into a greasy gumbo.” Sinclair had expected a different tack (emotional stress, rather than unusual physical exertion) and, claiming surprise, asked that the hearing be continued. The hearing examiner continued the hearing until a date 33 days later.

At the original hearing, Sinclair cross-examined virtually all knowledgeable witnesses about changing a tire in muddy conditions and asked those questions on direct examination of its own witnesses as well. In its closing argument, Sinclair argued it is not unusual exertion to change a flat tire in muddy conditions; it is just that it is messier, not more strenuous. It is noteworthy that, in Sinclair’s written closing argument in the original hearing, Sinclair conceded “[a] great deal of hearing time was devoted to the discussion of mud and muck * * Sinclair’s argument was Harris had failed to prove the mud’s existence at the location and time her late husband changed the tire. Alternatively, Sinclair argued that, even if evidence of mud existed, the evidence was that changing a tire in mud was not unusual exertion for a professional truck driver. Of course, there was conflicting evidence in that regard. The hearing examiner awarded benefits to Harris and Sinclair filed a petition for review in the district court on January 26, 1993.

On June 11,1993, Sinclair filed a motion to present additional evidence in the district court. In that motion, Sinclair protested the hearing examiner “mistakenly believed that it rained and [it] was muddy on the day Mr. Harris changed the tire * * Sinclair claimed those mistaken findings by the hearing examiner led to an erroneous result and, moreover, it was Harris’s burden to prove it had rained and no such evidence by anyone with personal knowledge had been presented. Sinclair went on to claim the hearing examiner’s determination was “a surprise of the greatest magnitude.” At the original hearing, Harris testified her husband had shown no symptoms of heart disease or a heart attack prior to August 23, 1991. Further, she testified her husband came home on August 21, 1991, covered with mud and complaining he had had to change a tire under muddy conditions and “it about killed him.” She also testified she guessed it had been “raining out there where he was that day.” At the additional hearing, Sinclair presented evidence from a meteorologist to the effect that, based on available information, it had not rained in Medicine Bow or Rawlins, Wyoming, on the date Harris claimed it was muddy. Sinclair argued that evidence as follows:

“[D]uring the 24 hour period in August of 1991, between 8:00 Mountain Daylight Time on the 21st, ... and 8:00 a.m. on the 22nd, that, in fact, in Medicine Bow at the observation point that they recorded .05 inches of rain.
The task then became to pinpoint when that rain fell because we knew, or we know [1166]*1166now that this is the critical time period in order for it to be raining at the time he changed the tire, the rain had to have fallen before 2:45 for it to be muddy or raining at the time that he was changing the tire.
His opinion was that based upon all the information that he collected, including the Rawlins hourly observations, the lightning strike pattern, that the rain fell between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. on the 21st.

Continuing on, Sinclair argued that since it did not rain (statistically speaking), it could not have been muddy and, therefore, the changing of the tire was only normal exertion. The meteorological expert also opined, however, it could have rained in the location where Harris changed a tire, even though it had not rained in Medicine Bow or Rawlins.

The threshold question in this case is whether the district court properly remanded to the hearing examiner to take additional evidence. Wyo.R.App.P. 12.08 provides that the district court shall order that additional evidence be taken by an agency if it is shown to the satisfaction of the court the additional evidence is material, and good cause existed for failure to present it in the proceeding before the agency. Material evidence is such evidence as is offered to help prove a proposition which is a matter in issue. 1 John William STRONG, McCoRMICk on Evidence § 185 (4th Ed.1992). Obviously, in this instance, the evidence presented had the effect of reversing the hearing examiner’s original decision. We question whether that evidence was material as contemplated by Rule 12.08. In that context, “material” has a more precise meaning than merely relevant or pertinent. See Brown v. Avery, 850 P.2d 612, 615 (Wyo.1993); Racicky v. Simon, 831 P.2d 241, 244 (Wyo.1992);

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Harris v. Sinclair Trucking
900 P.2d 1163 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
900 P.2d 1163, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 147, 1995 WL 479470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-sinclair-trucking-wyo-1995.