Kolkman v. Greens Creek Mining Co.

936 P.2d 150, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 185919
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1997
DocketS-6675
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 150 (Kolkman v. Greens Creek Mining Co.) 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
Kolkman v. Greens Creek Mining Co., 936 P.2d 150, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 185919 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice Pro Tern.

I. INTRODUCTION

Robert Kolkman challenges a decision of the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (Board) denying him benefits. The Board found that he failed to give timely notice of his injury and failed to meet the requirements for an exception to the notice requirement. The superior court affirmed. Because we conclude that Kolkman met the requirements for an exception to the notice requirement, 1 we reverse the superior court’s affirmance of the Board’s decision and remand for the Board to determine the com-pensability of Kolkman’s injury.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Robert Kolkman had worked as a miner for over twenty years before Greens Creek Mining (Greens Creek) hired him to work in Alaska in August 1989. His duties at Greens Creek encompassed a wide variety of mining tasks. The work was very strenuous, and included moving rock with hand tools, carrying fifty-pound powder boxes, and drilling holes in the rock and loading them with dynamite.

Kolkman was a former smoker whose father had apparently died of a heart attack. Subsequent to Kolkman’s heart attack which is described below, it was discovered that he *152 had elevated cholesterol levels, a forty-five percent stenosis (narrowing) of the interior descending coronary artery and a fifty percent stenosis in the origin of the posterior descending artery.

On Friday, June 22, 1990, Kolkman was working the 4:00 p.m. to midnight shift. His activities included moving loose ore with a hand tool (“mucking”) and driving a loader. Kolkman claims he began to feel tired and ill after the mucking. (He had moved about a ton of rock that day.) At the end of his shift, Kolkman took a shower, as was his practice, before returning by boat to Juneau. While in the shower, Kolkman claims he felt worse, felt nauseous, and began to sweat and feel pain in his arms. He described “pain that was so bad I didn’t know what was wrong” and thought he might be suffering from a “charlie horse” in his arms or muscle spasms. He was sweating “real bad,” and experienced nausea: “I felt like I wanted to throw up.”

After he left the shower, the pain subsided a bit, and Kolkman began to dress for his trip home. Kolkman told a co-worker that he was feeling ill. The co-worker commented that he looked ill and suggested that Kolkman visit the emergency medical technicians (EMTs) at the mining facility, as did another co-worker. He did so, describing all of his symptoms to the EMTs. An EMT took Kolkmaris blood pressure and pulse, which he found to be normal. The EMT offered to let Kolkman lie down, but Kolk-man declined, preferring to take the bus and then a boat to return to his home in Juneau. 2

Kolkman arrived home about 2:30 a.m., ate some popcorn, and went to bed. At that point, although Kolkman thought he was still feeling a “dull ache” in his arms, the nausea and sweating had gone. At 6:00 a.m., he got up and had some coffee, but then became nauseous and began vomiting. Then the pain came back to his arms. Kolkman then woke his wife, Pearl Kolkman, who took him to the emergency room at Bartlett Memorial Hospital.

Kolkman was placed in the care of Dr. William Cole, a specialist in internal medicine. While in the coronary care unit, Kolk-man suffered an anterior wall myocardial infarction, a heart attack, at 11:13 a.m. Saturday, June 23,1990. Kolkman developed cardiac arrhythmia and required cardiac resuscitation. His condition was unstable, so that same day he was transferred by air ambulance to a Seattle hospital.

Shortly after Kolkman was taken to the Juneau hospital early Saturday morning, friends of the Kolkmans called Greens Creek to tell of Kolkman’s hospitalization and to explain his absence from work. Two days later Pearl Kolkman spoke with Greens Creek management personnel, including the mine superintendent, the mill manager (who was her husband’s supervisor), and the head of personnel, and told them of the heart attack. Pearl Kolkman was told everything would be “taken care of.”

Kolkman was treated in Seattle by Dr. Milton English, a specialist in cardiovascular disease. His condition stabilized, but lack of oxygen to the heart had killed part of the heart and caused permanent damage. He remained in the Seattle hospital until July 4. He then returned to Juneau.

On September 4, Kolkman returned to work as a miner for Greens Creek. Dr. Cole gave Kolkman a work release which limited his physical activities because of the heart damage. He had to miss work from September 13 through September 25, for medical tests in Seattle.

In February 1991 Kolkman was called into a meeting with Greens Creek management about his absences and physical limitations. Kolkman soon became afraid that he would be fired because of his physical limitations, so during an April 22, 1991, visit with Dr. Cole, he asked about other types of work.

During this meeting, Dr. Cole told Kolk-man that his heart attack might be work related. He suggested that Kolkman contact Dr. English, his treating cardiologist, to determine whether the heart attack entitled him to workers’ compensation. On April 29, *153 Kolkman consulted an attorney and requested clarification from Dr. Cole. Dr. Cole provided a letter, dated May 6, 1991, explaining the nature of the heart attack. On May 14, Kolkman wrote to Dr. English for confirmation of Dr. Cole’s opinion that the heart attack was work related. Dr. English responded with a letter dated September 12, which gave his opinion that the heart attack was work related.

Kolkman filed a Report of Injury on June 11,1991, and his attorney filed an Application for Adjustment of Claim (AAC) that same day. The AAC requested temporary total disability benefits from June 28,1990 to September 20, 1990, permanent partial disability benefits, medical costs, vocational rehabilitation, and attorney’s fees.

A hearing before the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board took place in January 1992. The Board heard testimony from the Kolkmans, Greens Creek supervisors, and Greens Creek’s medical expert Dr. Preston, and received deposition testimony from Dr. Cole and Dr. English. By a 2-1 decision the Board found that Kolkman’s claim was not barred by AS 23.30.100, 3 and that his heart attack was work-related and compensable. Greens Creek appealed.

The superior court issued a Memorandum of Decision and Order (Order) vacating the Board’s decision. The Order affirmed the Board’s decision regarding the admissibility of expert medical testimony, reversed the Board’s determination that the presumption of compensability had not been rebutted by Greens Creek, and remanded for further consideration the determination that Kolkman’s late filing was not time barred.

On remand, the Board found that Kolkman had not met the deadline for filing a claim. Thus, the Board held that the claim was barred unless it met one of the statutory exceptions.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wollaston v. Schroeder Cutting, Inc.
42 P.3d 1065 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2002)
Aleck v. Delvo Plastics, Inc.
972 P.2d 988 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1999)
Dafermo v. Municipality of Anchorage
941 P.2d 114 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1997)
Cogger v. Anchor House
936 P.2d 157 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 150, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 185919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolkman-v-greens-creek-mining-co-alaska-1997.