King v. State, Department of Natural Resources

742 P.2d 253, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 298
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1987
DocketNo. S-1715
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 742 P.2d 253 (King v. State, Department of Natural Resources) 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
King v. State, Department of Natural Resources, 742 P.2d 253, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 298 (Ala. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

Robert King appeals the superior court’s dismissal of his appeal from a final decision of the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND.

On July 29, 1985, Robert King timely appealed to the superior court from a decision of the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board). King claimed that the Board erred in the manner in which it calculated his pre-injury earning capacity. On August 15, 1985, King filed a motion to hold the appeal in abeyance pending a decision of the Board on King’s petition for reconsideration and to grant the Board jurisdiction to decide the petition. The superi- or court granted King's motion.

The Board denied King’s petition on October 17, 1985. No further action was taken in the appeal until April 30, 1986, when King notified the superior court and the opposing parties of the Board’s reconsideration decision. At that time King requested that the superior court reassume jurisdiction of the case and enter an appropriate briefing schedule. The state opposed, and the appeal was dismissed for lack of prosecution.

II. DID THE SUPERIOR COURT ERR IN DISMISSING KING’S APPEAL?

King argues that the superior court erred in dismissing his appeal for lack of prosecution because it never vacated its previous order holding the appeal in abeyance.1 King further contends that confusion existed as to the proper process of appeal because the Board has held that the filing of an appeal from a Board decision divests it of jurisdiction in the case, and no statute provides that the filing of a motion for reconsideration by the Board suspends the time for filing an appeal. King also maintains that because the superior court never requested preparation of a transcript of the Board proceeding and because the Board did not file a copy of its decision with the court, the court never established a briefing schedule for the appeal. Thus, he asserts that he never missed any briefing deadline or other deadline in this matter.

The state contends that King is required by Appellate Rule 602(a) to file an appeal within thirty days after the agency’s reconsideration decision.2 It points out that Appellate Rule 210(g) requires preparation of the record within forty days from the date of filing the notice of appeal and makes the appellant ultimately responsible for compliance with that time limit,3 and further [255]*255maintains that the order holding King’s appeal in abeyance did not negate his responsibility for the timely prosecution of the appeal. It argues that the superior court’s order by its terms stayed King’s appeal only until the Board issued its reconsideration decision, at which point it became King’s responsibility to timely prosecute, and that Rule 602(a)(2) should not be relaxed because King failed to demonstrate that strict adherence thereto would work surprise or injustice.4

Under Appellate Rule 604, the agency must prepare the record in an appeal of an administrative decision, and the record must be prepared and certified in conformity with Rule 210, which in turn requires appellant to designate the record on appeal.5 As noted by the state, Rule 210(g) requires the record to be prepared within forty days from the date of filing the notice of appeal. Of particular significance to the resolution of the question presented by this appeal is subsection (l)[c] of Rule 602(b), which reads in part:

The clerk shall also notify the agency of the date by which it must prepare the record in accordance with Rules 210 and 604.

No notice in accordance with Rule 602(b)(l)[c] was given to the Board by the clerk of the superior court in this case, and the Board never prepared the record which King had designated.6

The state correctly notes that Rule 210(g) explicitly places the ultimate responsibility for compliance with the forty-day time period of that section on the appellant, and further provides for dismissal as a sanction for noncompliance as provided in Rule 511.5.7 Nevertheless, these provisions do not relieve an agency of its obligation to prepare the record on appeal in accordance with Rule 210,8 nor do they [256]*256excuse the superior court clerk’s failure to notify the agency of the date by which it had to prepare the record, as required under Rule 602(b)(l)[c]. Thus, the resolution of the merits of this appeal hinges on whether the inherent confusion in the appellate procedures applicable to this case rendered the superior court’s dismissal of King’s appeal an abuse of discretion.9

It is clear that King relied on the superior court's abeyance order as grounds for not proceeding in a more timely fashion. The Board’s failure to prepare the record designated by King suggests that it did not believe that it was required to prepare the record within forty days of either the filing of the initial notice of appeal or its reconsideration decision. Further, it is not apparent that King should have known that he was required to have the record prepared at those times.

In Union Oil Co. v. State, Dep’t of Natural Resources, 526 P.2d 1357, 1365 (Alaska 1974), we noted that:

[In Aleutian Homes v. Fischer, 418 P.2d 769, 773-74 (Alaska 1966)] we held that where a question of administrative procedure was uncertain, and counsel for a party reasonably could have been in doubt about how to proceed, we would not invalidate a mode of proceeding which could have appeared to be correct under one of several interpretations of the applicable statutes.10

In our view the procedures pertaining to appellate review of the Board’s decision were uncertain. King’s counsel reasonably could have been in doubt as to how to proceed with this administrative appeal. In light of the facts that the superior court’s order of abeyance was never vacated, that the Board did not furnish the superior court clerk with a copy of its decision on reconsideration, that the Board did not prepare and certify the record on appeal, and that the clerk of the superior court never notified the Board of the date by which it was to complete the record on appeal, we hold that the superior court erred in dismissing King’s administrative appeal.11

REVERSED.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
742 P.2d 253, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-state-department-of-natural-resources-alaska-1987.