Hays v. Tillamook County General Hospital

979 P.2d 775, 160 Or. App. 55, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 612
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 21, 1999
DocketWCB 95-13427; CA A102275
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 979 P.2d 775 (Hays v. Tillamook County General Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hays v. Tillamook County General Hospital, 979 P.2d 775, 160 Or. App. 55, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 612 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

*57 KISTLER, J.

The Workers’ Compensation Board reduced the amount of attorney fees the administrative law judge (ALJ) awarded claimant. On review, claimant argues that the Board should not have decided whether the ALJ’s fee award was excessive because employer failed to make a timely objection to her fee request. We affirm.

Employer denied claimant’s request for workers’ compensation because it concluded that her claims were not compensable. After a hearing before the ALJ, the parties submitted written closing arguments. In her closing argument, claimant primarily addressed compensability. She also “request[ed] a reasonable attorney fee based upon the statement of services Claimant’s counsel will file when appropriate.” In its response, employer did not object to claimant’s request for a reasonable attorney fee if the ALJ found her claims were compensable. In rebuttal, claimant stated for the first time that she was asking for “an extraordinary assessed attorney fee” of $28,250. She explained that her attorney fee request was based in part on an hourly rate of $250. No further arguments were submitted to the ALJ. The ALJ found that the claim was compensable. The ALJ also awarded claimant the full amount of the attorney fees she requested, noting that her fee request was “uncontested.”

Employer sought review of the ALJ’s order. Before the Board, employer argued, among other things, that even if the claim were compensable, the ALJ’s fee award was excessive. After considering the parties’ arguments, the Board upheld the ALJ’s determination that the claim was compen-sable. It agreed that claimant was entitled to an award of attorney fees but found that the fee the ALJ had awarded was too high. Specifically, the Board found that an hourly rate of $175 rather than $250 was appropriate. It accordingly reduced the fee award to $19,775.

Claimant petitioned for reconsideration. She argued for the first time that the question whether the fee award was excessive was not properly before the Board because employer had failed to object to her fee request before the *58 ALJ. On reconsideration, the Board explained that, as a matter of statute, it has “de novo review authority and may reverse or modify the ALJ’s order or make any disposition of the case [it] deem[s] appropriate.” The Board recognized that even though it had statutory authority to reach unpreserved issues, it had “consistently refused to consider issues raised for the first time on Board review.” The issue, as the Board framed it, was whether a request for or an objection to attorney fees under ORS 656.386(1) should be an exception to that general rule. The Board concluded that it should, reasoning:

“This case is distinguishable from Fister [v. South Hills Health Care, 149 Or App 214, 942 P2d 833 (1997)]. While the issue in Fister was the admissibility of evidence, the issue in the instant case is entitlement to an attorney fee under ORS 656.386(1). We have previously held that a represented claimant’s entitlement to assessed attorney fees under ORS 656.386(1) is the ‘natural derivative’ of a determination that the claimant prevailed over a denied claim. For this reason, we have not required that a represented claimant ‘preserve’ entitlement to attorney fees as a separate issue at a hearing concerning the compensability of a denied claim. If a represented claimant prevails over a denial at hearing, we have held that his entitlement to an assessed attorney fee for his counsel’s efforts at hearing is an automatic result of the compensability determination.
“Because a represented claimant is not required to ‘preserve’ the issue of attorney fees at a hearing concerning a compensability determination, we have treated the issue of attorney fees (for prevailing over a denied claim) as an exception to our general practice of considering only issues raised by the parties at hearing. See Wray A. Renfro, 49 Van Natta at 1752 n 2. For this reason, we likewise treat the ‘excessive fee’ defense as an exception to our general practice as well. That is, if a represented claimant prevails over a denied claim at hearing, and submits a statement of services and/or attorney fee petition for services at hearing, the carrier need not ‘preserve’ at the hearing its defense that the fee amount requested was excessive. Rather, we conclude that the carrier may raise its ‘excessive fee’ defense for the first time on Board review of the ALJ’s fee award.”

(Some citations omitted.) Thé Board accordingly denied claimant’s petition for reconsideration.

*59 On review, claimant argues that the Board should not have reached the question whether the ALJ’s fee award was excessive. 1 She does not argue that either a statute or a rule limits the Board’s ability to reach an unpreserved issue. 2 Rather, she claims that the Board’s decision in this case impermissibly departs from its earlier decisions. Starting from the proposition that the Board has consistently declined to reach unpreserved issues, she argues that its decision to do so here is contrary to this court’s decision in Fister as well as the Board’s own decisions.

Claimant’s argument raises two related but separate issues. She argues initially that our decision in Fister precludes the Board from considering any issue that was not presented to the ALJ. Claimant reads Fister too broadly. In Fister, this court recognized that “[t]he Board’s own precedent establishes the rule that it will consider only issues raised by the parties at the hearing.” 149 Or App at 218. The court also recognized that the Board is bound to follow its own precedent unless it “set[s] forth an adequate reason for deviating from that well-established practice.” Id. at 218-19. Fister thus requires that once the Board has announced a policy in the course of issuing a decision, it must follow that policy in future decisions. Fister leaves open, however, the possibility that the Board, much like a court, may recognize exceptions to its precedent, distinguish them, or even reverse them as long as it “set[s] forth an adequate reason” for doing so. See also ORS 183.482(8)(b)(B). 3 To the extent claimant *60 views Fister as an absolute bar to the Board’s order here, she misperceives what Fister says.

Claimant argues alternatively that the Board erred in relying on its decision in Wray A. Renfro, 49 Van Natta 1751 (1997), to resolve her petition for reconsideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
979 P.2d 775, 160 Or. App. 55, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-tillamook-county-general-hospital-orctapp-1999.