Knapp v. City of North Bend

732 P.2d 31, 83 Or. App. 350
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 28, 1987
Docket85-919; CA A38486
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 732 P.2d 31 (Knapp v. City of North Bend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knapp v. City of North Bend, 732 P.2d 31, 83 Or. App. 350 (Or. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

RICHARDSON, P. J.

Plaintiff was employed as a police sergeant by defendant city and suffered an on-the-job injury in January, 1983, for which he received workers’ compensation benefits. His physician released him for regular work in November, 1984. Between those dates, defendant promoted another officer to fill his former position. When plaintiff requested reinstatement to the position, defendant refused on the ground that the position was not available. Defendant later rehired him as a patrolman. The principal issue is whether defendant’s failure to reinstate plaintiff to his former position violated ORS 659.415(1),1 which provides:

“A worker who has sustained a compensable injury shall be reinstated by the worker’s employer to the worker’s former position of employment upon demand for such reinstatement, provided that the position is available and the worker is not disabled from performing the duties of such position. If the former position is not available, the worker shall be reinstated in any other position which is available and suitable. A certificate by a duly licensed physician that the physician approves the worker’s return to the worker’s regular employment shall be prima facie evidence that the worker is able to perform such duties.”

In Shaw v. Doyle Milling Co., 297 Or 251, 683 P2d 82 (1984), the Supreme Court answered essentially the same question under the statute as it read before it was amended by Oregon Laws 1981, chapter 874, section 14. The statute construed by the Supreme Court provided:

“A worker who has sustained a compensable injury shall be reinstated by the worker’s employer to the worker’s former position of employment or employment which is available and suitable upon demand for such reinstatement, provided that the worker is not disabled from performing the duties of such position. A certificate by a duly licensed physician that the physician approves the worker’s return to the worker’s regular employment shall be prima facie evidence that the worker is able to perform such duties.”

The court concluded:

“The main purpose of ORS 659.415 is to guarantee that an [353]*353employer shall not discriminate against a disabled worker for exercising the worker’s rights under the Workers’ Compensation Law. This statute is but one of a set of statutes reflecting the legislature’s concern to prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of handicap. * * * Where the position still exists, although filled by another employee, the returning employee is entitled by the statutory text to reinstatement. To hold otherwise would permit an employer unilaterally to vitiate the mandate of ORS 659.415 and to thwart the broader legislative scheme to afford employment opportunity and security to the handicapped.” 297 Or at 255.

Defendant and amici argue that the present statute cannot be interpreted as its predecessor was in Doyle, because the 1981 amendment added the proviso to the reinstatement requirement that the former position be “available.” They maintain that “available” means existing and vacant; plaintiff contends that a worker’s former position is “available” if it exists, whether or not it has been filled by another employe between the time when the worker was injured and the time when he qualifies for and demands reinstatement.

The parties’ most persuasive arguments turn on their views of the policy and purpose of the statute. However, defendant and amici make a number of other arguments which we will address first. They rely on the legislative history of the statute as originally enacted by Oregon Laws, 1973, chapter 660, section 5, the history of the 1981 amending act, the legislature’s decisions not to amend the statute in 19792 and 1983 and interpretations of the statute by the Bureau of Labor and Industries (Bureau). The thrust of the arguments is that, when it was originally enacted in 1973, the statute was intended to require reinstatement only if the employe’s former position was vacant; that the Bureau has always so interpreted the statute, before and after the 1981 amendment; that that amendment was designed to clarify and restate the original intent and was not meant as a substantive change; and that the legislature’s inaction in 1979 and 1983, like its action in 1981, reflected its awareness and acceptance of the Bureau’s administrative interpretation. Those arguments defeat themselves, because they presuppose that before the [354]*3541981 amendment the statute meant the opposite of what the Supreme Court construed it to mean in Shaw v. Doyle Milling Co., supra.

Amici state:

“Plaintiff argued below that (1) the Legislature’s 1981 amendment was not intended to change prior law, (2) Shaw v. Doyle Milling Co., supra, defined the plain language of the prior law, and (3) therefore, the Legislature intended its 1981 amendment to fall within the terms of the Shaw interpretation.
“This logic is a classic non sequitur. The erroneous logic fails because the Legislature intended to preserve what it believed to be prior law, not what the court some three years later read into the words of the prior statute. Far from intending no change from a Shaw interpretation, the 1981 amendments intended no change from requiring reinstatement — but only to an open or next available position.” (Emphasis amici’s.)

We think that the non sequitur is to be found in amici’s argument rather than plaintiffs. The court in Shaw declared what the prior law meant; it is circular to argue that the prior law had a different meaning, or that the legislature so believed, before the court said what it meant. Stated otherwise, the law meant at the beginning of 1981 what the court in 1984 interpreted it to have meant at the beginning of 1981.3

Defendant and amici contend that Shaw is not dis-positive, because it construed ORS 659.415(1) before it was [355]*355amended to add the language on which they rely. We agree that Shaw is not directly controlling regarding the meaning of that language.4 However, Shaw is fatal to defendant’s and amici’s arguments based on legislative history and the Bureau’s interpretations of the statute, because those arguments rest on the premise that, before the amendment, the statute meant what the court in Shaw held that it did not. We turn to whether the amendment changed that meaning.

The phrase “provided that the position is available” is ambiguous; “available” can reasonably be defined in two different ways, as the parties arguments demonstrate. The legislative history of the 1981 amendment is not helpful, much less decisive, in ascertaining which definition the legislature intended.

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Related

Knapp v. City of North Bend
741 P.2d 505 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1987)
Janzen v. Sunriver Lands, Inc.
735 P.2d 376 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
732 P.2d 31, 83 Or. App. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knapp-v-city-of-north-bend-orctapp-1987.