Jonathan Hawk v. Ms Companies

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 6, 2023
Docket2022 CA 000032
StatusUnknown

This text of Jonathan Hawk v. Ms Companies (Jonathan Hawk v. Ms Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jonathan Hawk v. Ms Companies, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 23, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

MODIFIED UPON DENIAL OF REHEARING: DECEMBER 27, 2022

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2022-CA-0032-WC

JONATHAN HAWK APPELLANT

PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION v. OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD ACTION NO. WC-17-01865

MS COMPANIES; WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD; AND HONORABLE GRANT ROARK, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE APPELLEES

OPINION VACATING AND REMANDING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; ACREE AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

TAYLOR, JUDGE: Jonathan Hawk appeals from a decision of the Workers’

Compensation Board (Board) vacating and remanding a July 26, 2021, order of an

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) that directed appellee, MS Companies, to pay Hawk workers’ compensation benefits.1 For the reasons expressed below, we

vacate the Board’s decision and direct the Board, on remand, to dismiss MS

Companies’ underlying administrative appeal.

BACKGROUND

Express Employment Professionals (“Express”) is a temporary

employment agency; Hawk is its former employee; and when Hawk worked for

Express, Express assigned him to work for one of its clients, Faurecia. Hawk’s

employment with Express terminated in April 2017. Hawk then filed a workers’

compensation claim against Express on November 7, 2017, alleging bilateral

hand/wrist/arm injuries from repetitive motion that manifested on November 15,

2016, while he was working on Faurecia’s assembly lines manufacturing car seats.

In 2018, Hawk began his employment with MS Companies and was assigned to

work again at Faurecia. On May 3, 2018, Express moved to dismiss Hawk’s claim

based upon Hawk’s deposition testimony that he had returned to work on

Faurecia’s assembly lines, albeit on behalf of a different temporary employment

agency employer, appellee MS Companies.

Express noted in its motion that Hawk testified he had been

performing work at Faurecia – on behalf of Express on November 15, 2016 –

1 Based on our review of the record, at least three different Administrative Law Judges (ALJ) participated in this case.

-2- where his job was to install the “side shield” on car seats approximately 35-45

times per hour on average. And, Hawk further testified that in February 2018, he

had returned to work at Faurecia – on behalf of MS Companies – once again

building car seats; this time, his job on the assembly line was to attach the “pork

chop” to the seats approximately 35-45 times per hour on average. In sum,

Express argued that because Hawk had alleged a “cumulative trauma”-type injury

caused by assembly line work, Hawk’s employer at the time of his “most recent

injurious exposure in the work place” – MS Companies – bore all liability in this

matter. Record, p. 132-34.

On July 26, 2018, MS Companies was joined to this litigation as a

defendant. On July 30, 2018, the ALJ then entered an order passing on the merits

of Express’s motion until “all proof has been developed,” explaining “[t]he fact

that the Plaintiff returned to work on the same assembly line is not dispositive of

the issues in this claim. He was performing a different job when he returned.”

On October 11, 2019, Express once again moved to dismiss; in

support, it made the same arguments and cited the same proof it had relied upon in

its prior motion. On March 6, 2020, following a telephonic status conference, the

ALJ then entered an interlocutory order granting Express’s motion.2 The ALJ’s

2 In granting Express Employment Professionals’ motion to dismiss, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) did not resolve all the claims involved in this matter, and his March 6, 2020, order of dismissal did not recite that it was “final” and that there was “no just reason for delay.”

-3- order contained no legal analysis or findings in support of its decision. Notably,

MS Companies did not oppose Express’s motion nor participate in the status

conference.

MS Companies did not make any attempt at litigating this matter until

July 22, 2021, when its attorney filed his first notice of appearance and, in

conjunction therewith, MS Companies’ post-hearing brief.3 Therein, MS

Companies argued in relevant part:

Even if causation is found to exist, the responsible employer is not MS Companies. Indeed, the parties have stipulated that the injury occurred on November 15, 2016. It is undisputed that the Plaintiff was working for Express Employment Professionals on this date. MS Companies acknowledges that the Plaintiff returned to work for MS Companies after November 15, 2016; however, there has never been an alternative injury date alleged. As a result, MS Companies had no obligation to defend a claim that was sustained prior to their employment. Moreover, the simple fact that one returns to work, does not mean that additional permanency developed. Simply put, the Plaintiff has stipulated to a November 15, 2016 injury date. While he returned to work, he never pled an alternative injury date for which an award can be generated.

Record, p. 306.

Therefore, the ALJ’s March 6, 2020, order remained interlocutory until July 26, 2021, when the ALJ resolved the remaining issues in this matter. See 803 Kentucky Administrative Regulation (KAR) 25:010 § 22(2)(b) (providing “a final award, order, or decision shall be determined in accordance with Civil Rule 54.02(1) and (2)”). 3 MS Companies did not participate in the benefit review conference or the final hearing before the ALJ, which was conducted by the ALJ on May 27, 2021.

-4- In an order entered July 26, 2021, the ALJ resolved the remaining

issues in this matter, ultimately directing MS Companies to pay Hawk the total

amount of his temporary total disability benefits (TTD), permanent partial

disability benefits (PPD), and his reasonable and necessary medical expenses

relating to his cumulative trauma work injury. Regarding MS Companies’

contention that it was not Hawk’s employer on the stipulated date of his injury, the

ALJ further held:

For the first time, on July 22, 2021, legal counsel entered an appearance on behalf of the defendant employer, MS Companies. At the same time, counsel filed a post[-] hearing brief. In its brief, the defendant attempts to argue plaintiff’s alleged injuries are not work- related. However, this defendant never filed a form 111, Notice of Claim Denial or Acceptance, and as such, all allegations alleged in plaintiff’s form 101, including those as amended, were deemed admitted. 803 KAR [Kentucky Administrative Regulation] 25:010 Sec. 5(2)(b). Moreover, causation and work relatedness were not listed as a contested issue at the benefit review conference conducted on May 27, 2021 at the beginning of the final hearing. Similarly, whether plaintiff was an employee of the defendant, MS Companies the date of the injury was also not listed as a contested issue so, again, the defendant is precluded from making that argument at this time. For these reasons, the defendant is precluded from arguing causation which is now presumed as a matter of law.[4]

4 After being named a party to this proceeding by order of the ALJ on July 26, 2018, inexplicably, MS Companies did not participate or appear in the case for almost three years, until the filing of its motion to file a brief on July 22, 2021.

-5- Record, p. 313.

Shortly thereafter, MS Companies filed a petition for reconsideration.

There, MS Companies stated it was “not asserting error in the ALJ’s finding that

the Plaintiff suffered a cumulative trauma injury.” Rather, as before, MS

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Jonathan Hawk v. Ms Companies, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-hawk-v-ms-companies-kyctapp-2023.