Hodges v. Alaska Constructors, Inc.

957 P.2d 957, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1998 WL 176712
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1998
DocketS-7815
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 957 P.2d 957 (Hodges v. Alaska Constructors, Inc.) 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
Hodges v. Alaska Constructors, Inc., 957 P.2d 957, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1998 WL 176712 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

J.L. Hodges suffered a lower back injury while working for Alaska Constructors. The Workers’ Compensation Board awarded him permanent total disability benefits. Hodges then sought reimbursement for an array of expenses that flowed from his injury and subsequent workers’ compensation proceedings. The Board denied his request to modify its previous orders. The superior court affirmed the Board’s decision, and Hodges appeals. With one exception, we conclude *959 that the Board appropriately denied Hodges’s petition for modification and resolved the issues before it. We remand in order for the Board to determine the costs of Hodges’s attendance at medical depositions and whether his attendance was necessary and hence compensable.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Hodges suffered a lower back injury while working for Alaska Constructors on June 6, 1977. 1 He underwent a series of seven back surgeries and was awarded permanent total disability benefits. The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board) has issued five decisions in connection with Hodges’s back injury. 2

We briefly summarize the facts from the relevant proceedings. In Hodges III, the Board increased Hodges’s compensation rate to reflect fringe benefits that Hodges was receiving at the time of his injury. The Board also ruled that Alaska Constructors would pay the cost of any medical prescriptions provided by an agreed-upon mail-order service. Additionally, the Board denied Hodges’s request for reimbursement for chiropractic treatment of his upper back ailments. The Board found these treatments to be unrelated to Hodges’s lower back injury and surgeries, and therefore not compensa-ble. Finally, the Board awarded attorney’s fees to Hodges, but denied his request for penalties against Alaska Constructors for late payment.

Hodges did not seek judicial review of the Hodges III decision. Instead, he filed an application for adjustment of claim with the Board in June 1992, almost ten months after the Board’s decision. Hodges sought to readdress the following issues: compensability of his upper back condition; reimbursement for medication not acquired through the mail-order program; travel costs associated with medical treatments; attendance at appellate proceedings, pre-hearing conferences, and depositions; compensation for a therapeutic bed and hot tub; and the award of attorney’s fees, costs, and interest.

The Board treated Hodges’s application for adjustment as an application for modification based on mistake or change of circumstances. After a hearing, the Board issued its Hodges TV decision in January 1994, resolving most of the travel-related issues. The parties and the Board agreed to treat Hodges IV as interlocutory and Hodges was allowed additional time to file supplemental documentation concerning his other challenges to the Hodges III decision.

In May 1995 the Board held a hearing to address Hodges’s remaining issues. In Hodges V the Board ruled that Hodges had failed to justify a modification regarding compensability of his upper back condition. Because the upper back injury was not com-pensable, the Board ruled that the employer was not responsible for payment of travel expenses associated with treatment of that injury. The Board also denied Hodges reimbursement of medication that he did not purchase through his mail-order drug supply company. The Board then ruled that reimbursement for Hodges’s travel to depositions was not warranted because Hodges had failed to provide the Board with a list of travel costs.

Finding that Hodges’s hot tub treated his entire back, not all of which was compensa-ble, the Board ordered that the employer reimburse Hodges only $4,640 of the approximately $15,000 that Hodges had spent on the installation of a gazebo-covered hot tub. For similar reasons, the Board found that Hodges’s therapeutic needs did not require a king-size therapeutic bed. The Board ordered Alaska Constructors to reimburse Hodges the cost of a queen-size therapeutic bed. Finally, the Board denied penalties for late payment of the bed and hot tub expenses and granted Hodges forty hours’ worth of attorney’s fees totaling $5,000.

*960 Hodges appealed the final decision and order of the Board in Hodges V to the superior court, which affirmed the decision in its entirety. Hodges appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

This court does not give deference to the decision of a superior court acting as an intermediate court of appeal. See Handley v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 838 P.2d 1231, 1233 (Alaska 1992). Instead, we “independently review the merits of an administrative determination.” Id.

“When an administrative decision involves expertise regarding either complex subject matter or fundamental policy formulation, we defer to the decision if it has a reasonable basis.” Keane v. Local Boundary Comm’n, 893 P.2d 1239, 1241 (Alaska 1995). The scope of review for an agency’s application of its own regulations to the facts is limited to whether the agency’s decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, or an abuse of discretion. See Rose v. Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 647 P.2d 154, 161 (Alaska 1982).

The substitution-of-judgment standard is appropriate “where the knowledge and experience of the agency is of little guidance to the court or where the case concerns ‘statutory interpretation or other analysis of legal relationships about which courts have specialized knowledge.’ ” Earth Resources Co. v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 665 P.2d 960, 965 (Alaska 1983) (quoting Kelly v. Zamarello, 486 P.2d 906, 916 (Alaska 1971)).

We employ the substantial evidence test “to review factual determinations made by an agency in the course of its proceedings.” Jager v. State, 537 P.2d 1100, 1107 (Alaska 1975). We have held that

[substantial evidence is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” The Board’s decision need not be the only possible solution to the problem, for it is not the function of the court to reweigh the evidence or choose between competing inferences, but only to determine whether such evidence exists.

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Bluebook (online)
957 P.2d 957, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1998 WL 176712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodges-v-alaska-constructors-inc-alaska-1998.