Hulse v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

63 Cal. App. 3d 221, 133 Cal. Rptr. 678
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1976
DocketCiv. 38360
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 Cal. App. 3d 221 (Hulse v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hulse v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 63 Cal. App. 3d 221, 133 Cal. Rptr. 678 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, Acting P. J.

In proceedings regularly conducted upon his application for benefits pursuant to the workers’ compensation law, *224 P. illip Hulse (hereinafter “applicant”) was granted an award which, ar long other things, entitled him to receive weekly permanent disability payments over a period of eight years. He petitioned respondent Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board for “commutation,” or lump sum payment, of the permanent disability award pursuant to Labor Code section 5100, subdivisions (a) and (b). 1 The stated purpose of the commutation, as proposed, was to protect him against inflation by providing for deposit of the commuted lump sum in an income-producing investment with a financial institution.

A board referee denied the petition, and the board denied applicant’s petition for reconsideration. We granted review for the purpose of examining his contention that the board abused its discretion by denying commutation in light of the statute, the relief sought in terms of a “hedge against inflation,” and the circumstances made to appear.

Applicant was injured in the course of his employment in 1973. Subsequent proceedings before the board resulted in an award (“Findings and Award”) made on April 14, 1975. The award. granted him “permanent disability indemnity at the rate of $70.00 per week commencing April 24, 1974 and continuing until 413.25 weekly payments shall have been made in the total amount of $28,927.50” and a life pension, payable thereafter, of $22.62 per week. It also commuted, from the “far end” of the $28,927.50, the sum of $2,000 to pay his attorney’s fees as fixed by the board in that amount. 2

On August 5, 1975, applicant filed a petition for total commutation of the then-unpaid balance of the net permanent disability award, exclusive of the life pension. The petition was opposed by respondent insurer, *225 which is the carrier obligated to pay the award. At a subsequent hearing upon the petition before a board referee, applicant amended it to state the ground and terms of the proposed commutation in the following language:

“Comes Now the applicant herein and Petitions for Commutation of the remaining portion unpaid of the permanent disability of 74%, excluding the life pension as awarded applicant by the Findings & Award of April 14, 1975.
“1. That Applicant requests that the monies remaining aforesaid be commuted and ordered paid to the Contra Costa County Employees’ Credit Union ... to be deposited therein and not to be withdrawn therefrom . . . without special order from the Worker’s Compensation Appeals Board ... if it is felt by the . . . Board that such withdrawal is in the best interest of Applicant.
“2. That by permitting this commutation, Applicant will earn interest presently being paid at the rate of 6!4% per annum which will tend to off-set the depreciation which is occurring in the purchase value of the monies awarded to applicant as he periodically receives the same because of the inflationary process now going on in the State of California and the United States of America.” 3

No testimony was received at the hearing, but applicant made an offer of proof. The facts offered, which may be accepted as true for the limited purposes of this review, are recorded in the minutes of the hearing as follows: “. . . [Applicant] . . . has adequate income from outside sources without need to resort to the award of permanent disability to sustain his needs. His income is $905.00 a month from other sources and his wife has an income of approximately $1,400.00 a month. The only members of his household are himself and his wife. They own their residence and have no major outstanding indebtedness.” (Italics added.) The referee *226 also received evidence of the financial return to be anticipated from the lump-sum deposit proposed in the petition. 4

The referee denied the petition for reasons which he stated in a report made to the board upon applicant’s petition for reconsideration. A majority of the three-member board panel (see § 115) denied reconsideration, stating in the order of denial that they took this action “for the reasons stated in said report which . . . [the majority] . . . hereby adopt and incorporate.” The third member dissented in a separate opinion. We thereupon granted applicant’s petition for review, upon which the board and the insurer appear as respondents.

As used in sections 5100 and 5102 (see fns. 1 and 3, ante), the word “ ‘may’ is permissive.” (§ 15.) Whether to order commutation in the present case, and whether to order the commuted lump sum deposited subject to the board’s continuing control, therefore rested within the board’s discretion. (Jenkins v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd. (1975) 48 Cal.App.3d 570, 573 [121 Cal.Rptr. 812].) Its discretion may not be exercised arbitrarily, however (ibid.), and its arbitrary denial of a petition for commutation is subject to judicial annulment, as “unreasonable.” (§ 5952, subd. (c); City of Los Angeles v. Industrial Acc. Com. (1965) 63 Cal.2d 263, 264, fn. 1 [46 Cal.Rptr. 110, 404 P.2d 814]; Jenkins v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra, at pp. 573-574.) Applicant claims this result here upon the grounds that the proposed commutation scheme is in fact “necessary” for his “protection,” arid in his “best interest,” within the meaning of section 5100. (See fn. 1, ante.)

The reported commutation decisions of the board and of the Industrial Accident Commission (its predecessor, hereinafter “Commission”) are few in number. Judicial precedent on the subject is virtually nonexistent. The substance of the present commutation statutes (§§ 5100-5104) appeared in the workers’ compensation law when it was first enacted and has not been materially changed since. (See Stats. 1913, ch. 176 [p. 279], § 33, pp. 296-297; Stats. 1917, ch. 586 [p. 831], § 28, pp. 856-857. See also Stats. 1937, ch. 90 [p. 185], pp. 290-291 [codifying the earlier commuta *227 tion provisions at their present location in the Labor Code].) The Commission stated at a very early date that, notwithstanding its view that the commutation-discount factor (see present § 5101) “affords a fair remuneration to the insurance carrier for the advance payment, . . . this Commission regards the authority vested in it to compel lump, sum payments as one to be exercised with great care and discretion and only in cases of very great urgency.” (Wilson v. Gallegher (1914) 1 I.A.C., Pt. II, 306, 308.)

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Bluebook (online)
63 Cal. App. 3d 221, 133 Cal. Rptr. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulse-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1976.