Humphrey v. Lowe's Home Improvement Warehouse, Inc.

337 P.3d 1174, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 208, 2014 WL 5305861
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 2014
Docket6960 S-15140
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 337 P.3d 1174 (Humphrey v. Lowe's Home Improvement Warehouse, 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
Humphrey v. Lowe's Home Improvement Warehouse, Inc., 337 P.3d 1174, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 208, 2014 WL 5305861 (Ala. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In this case we are asked to determine whether an employee was entitled to temporary total disability benefits after he left employment under disputed cireumstances. The employee injured his back at work but returned after being cleared for lighter duty. His employment soon ended for reasons the parties dispute, and he moved with his family to Nevada, where he later had back surgery. *1176 The Alaska Workers' Compensation Board found his injury compensable and ordered the employer to pay medical costs and disability benefits from the surgery onward; however, the Board denied temporary total disability benefits from the end of his employment to the surgery, finding the employee had voluntarily left his job for reasons that were not injury-related.

The employee appealed to the Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commission, which affirmed the decision on disability but remanded to the Board for clarification of its attorney's fees award. The employee now appeals the Commission's decision of his claim for temporary total disability benefits and its denial of his request for attorney's fees for the appeal. We affirm the Commission's decision that the employee was not entitled to temporary total disability benefits, reverse its denial of attorney's fees for the appeal, and remand for further proceedings.

IL FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS .

Akeem Humphrey was working at Lowe's Home Improvement Warehouse in Fairbanks as a "less than truckload" stocker on November 30, 2009, when a cantilever shelf fell on him. He was treated for back pain and cleared for modified work in early January 2010. Lowe's moved him around to various positions in the store to accommodate his restrictions, but he continued to have pain.

On January 21 Humphrey was disciplined at work for reasons unrelated to his injury. On February 12 he received a generally favorable performance evaluation. On February 16 he wrote a note to Lowe's, saying he was giving two weeks' notice "due to personal reasons (no transportation [and] no house)." The note is somewhat ambiguous, though; it also states, "If nothing is new within these two weeks I will know it is submitted[;] if does [indecipherable] I will let store manager and Lisa know all new information." 1

Humphrey's last day of work at Lowe's was Monday, February 22. Humphrey testified that the store manager, Brandon Montgomery, called him into the office that day and told him he was being terminated because he had given his two weeks' notice. Lowe's disputes that Humphrey was terminated, and Montgomery denied having the conversation Humphrey described. Wage records from Lowe's show that Humphrey received a paycheck on February 22 for 40 hours in the week ending February 26; 2 Humphrey testified he was paid through March 1, which is two weeks from the date of his two weeks' notice.

Humphrey continued to receive medical care for his back, and in April 2010 his treating physician recommended that he consider surgery and consult with an orthopedic surgeon. In May, Humphrey moved with his girlfriend and their child to the Las Vegas area, where his girlfriend had family. Humphrey then filed an Alaska workers' compensation claim, seeking medical benefits, temporary total disability (TTD) benefits from January 30, 2009, a rating of permanent partial impairment (PPT), a penalty, interest, and attorney's fees. In January 2011 a Nevada orthopedic surgeon diagnosed Humphrey with "dise abnormalities" and back pain that "stem[med] from his initial work related injury" and in May 2011 performed surgery on Humphrey's back.

A number of medical and lay witnesses testified at the Board hearing on Humphrey's claim. The parties agreed that his last day of work at Lowe's was February 22, 2010, but they offered conflicting accounts of his departure. Humphrey testified that he notified Montgomery about his transportation and housing problems on February 16 and Montgomery told him to submit his two weeks' notice in case the problems prevented him from returning to work. Humphrey testified that his personal problems resolved within a few days, that he called Montgomery, and that Montgomery told him to come *1177 back to work. Humphrey could not recall exactly what day he returned.

Humphrey testified . that Montgomery called him on the intercom on February 22 and told him to come to the office. Humphrey said he thought it was related to one of two things: where he had parked his car that day (close to the store, in an area reserved for customers) or whether he had neglected his work while talking to another employee. But according to Humphrey, instead of discussing either of these issues, Montgomery told him that "because [Humphrey] wrote the two weeks' notice ... what they're going to do is just ... terminate [him], because after today [Humphrey] would no longer be working for Lowe's." Humphrey testified that Montgomery asked him to write out another two weeks' notice, which he did, 3 and said Lowe's would pay him for the coming two weeks if Humphrey cooperated in his termination.

Witnesses for Lowe's disputed Humphrey's account. Montgomery, the store manager, testified that Humphrey gave the "HR manager, Lisa," a two weeks' notice that he was leaving Lowe's for personal reasons. He testified that Humphrey said it was because he was moving to "Vegas or something like that, with his family and he wasn't going to be able to stay in Alaska." Montgomery said he did not recall saying either that Humphrey "would be able to work out his personal situation and come back to Lowe's and continue working there" or that Humphrey "was either going to have to resign or ... be terminated," as Humphrey claimed. Montgomery testified he could not terminate anyone "without consent from area HR" and that he would have to use progressive discipline first. He denied ever having "a sit-down conversation face-to-face with Mr. Humphrey," as Humphrey de-seribed, and said he did not recall ever paging Humphrey to his office.

Kimberly Cook, the operations manager, also testified. She said that Humphrey worked directly for her and was "a great employee" whom she wanted to keep. She testified that Lowe's had accommodated Humphrey's injury-related work restrictions and that it would have continued to do so had he stayed. She said she had not seen Humphrey's written two weeks' notice but that she knew, from Montgomery, that Humphrey "had put his notice in and he withdrew his notice and said he didn't want to leave, and then he decided that he wanted to leave again, and then ... he withdrew it again." What she remembered out of it, she said, was that Humphrey was going to quit. She testified that he would have talked to Montgomery about quitting, not to her, but that "[flor the most part" she would have had to be present if an employee she supervised was going to be terminated.

The Board decided a different issue first: that Humphrey's injury was compensable and that he was entitled to past medical benefits. It decided that Humphrey was not yet medically stable from his surgery so he could not be rated, but it ordered Lowe's to pay PPI compensation once that occurred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
337 P.3d 1174, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 208, 2014 WL 5305861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-v-lowes-home-improvement-warehouse-inc-alaska-2014.