Liljestrand v. Dell Enters.

CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
DocketS-13-063
StatusPublished

This text of Liljestrand v. Dell Enters. (Liljestrand v. Dell Enters.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liljestrand v. Dell Enters., (Neb. 2014).

Opinion

Nebraska Advance Sheets 242 287 NEBRASKA REPORTS

Adam Liljestrand, appellee, v. Dell Enterprises, Inc., doing business as The Dundee Dell, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed January 24, 2014. No. S-13-063.

1. Appeal and Error. The construction of a mandate issued by an appellate court presents a question of law. 2. Constitutional Law: Due Process. Whether the procedures afforded an individ- ual comport with constitutional requirements for procedural due process presents a question of law. 3. Courts: Appeal and Error. An appellate court independently reviews questions of law decided by a lower court. 4. Judges: Evidence. Generally, a successor judge may not make a decision based on conflicting evidence that a predecessor judge heard. 5. Trial: Judges: Due Process: Witnesses. Due process entitles a litigant to have all the evidence submitted to a single judge who can see the witnesses testify and, thus, weigh their testimony and judge their credibility.

Appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court: Thomas E. Stine, Judge. Reversed and remanded for a new trial.

Thomas M. Locher and Joseph J. Kehm, of Locher, Pavelka, Dostal, Braddy & Hammes, L.L.C., and, on brief, Robert H. Grennan for appellant.

Ronald E. Frank and Harry A. Hoch III, of Sodoro, Daly, Shomaker & Selde, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.

Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Stephan, McCormack, Miller-Lerman, and Cassel, JJ.

Connolly, J. SUMMARY This workers’ compensation appeal presents a due process issue. The original trial judge retired while the case was on appeal. The original trial judge found that the appellee, Adam Liljestrand, was permanently and totally disabled. The appel- lant, Dell Enterprises, Inc., doing business as The Dundee Dell (Dell), sought review with a three-judge review panel. The review panel remanded the cause because it was not clear how the judge had treated the presumption of correctness afforded to the vocational rehabilitation specialist’s opinion of Nebraska Advance Sheets LILJESTRAND v. DELL ENTERS. 243 Cite as 287 Neb. 242

Liljestrand’s disability. Dell appealed, and the Nebraska Court of Appeals affirmed.1 But it left it to the chief judge of the Workers’ Compensation Court how to instruct the new trial judge on remand. On remand, the case was assigned to a new trial judge, who reviewed the record and issued an order without an eviden- tiary hearing. The new trial judge found that Liljestrand had rebutted the presumption afforded to the specialist’s opinion. We granted Dell’s motion to bypass the Court of Appeals. We conclude that this procedure violated due process because the witnesses’ credibility was relevant to the issues presented at trial. We reverse the order and remand the cause for a new trial.

BACKGROUND Liljestrand originally injured his back in September 2001 while he was working for Dell as a bartender. After surgery, Liljestrand was given work restrictions of 30 pounds for lift- ing and no repetitive bending or twisting. He required alter- native sitting or standing every 2 hours. In September 2002, the agreed-upon vocational rehabilitation specialist, Ronald Schmidt, concluded that Liljestrand had sustained a 60- to 65-percent loss of earning power. Schmidt recommended that Liljestrand attend college for retraining as a financial advisor. The original trial court awarded Liljestrand vocational rehabili- tation, which ended in 2004. Liljestrand eventually secured a job as an independent contractor providing financial advice to clients regarding insurance and mutual funds. But he reported that the narcotic pain medications he had to take for his back pain made him groggy and sleepy. He felt unable to advise clients about their financial affairs. Because of his lack of mental acuity and inability to sit for prolonged periods, he also could not perform the work in a subsequent position he took in recruiting nurses. He was last employed in May 2008. In 2010, the surgeon reexamined Liljestrand and deter- mined that he was suffering from mechanical low-back pain

1 Liljestrand v. Dell Enters., No. A-11-925, 2012 WL 3591087 (Neb. App. Aug. 21, 2012) (selected for posting to court Web site). Nebraska Advance Sheets 244 287 NEBRASKA REPORTS

and referred him to a pain clinic. He concluded that the restrictions that he originally ordered had not changed but deferred to the judgment of physicians who were currently treating Liljestrand’s pain. A different physician, however, determined that Liljestrand had scar tissue from the sur- gery and further disk herniation that was causing his current pain. He diagnosed Liljestrand with “failed back syndrome” and determined that his condition had deteriorated since his 2002 loss of earning power evaluation. He believed that Liljestrand’s medications were appropriate and that he was totally disabled. In November 2010, Liljestrand’s then vocational rehabili- tation specialist, Stephen Schill, prepared a loss of earning capacity report. Schill believed that Liljestrand was unemploy- able and was permanently and totally disabled. In January 2011, Schmidt, the 2002 specialist, provided an updated loss of earning capacity report. Schmidt determined that Liljestrand had access to many sedentary jobs and that his loss of earning capacity was 34 percent. He discredited Schill’s analysis and noted that Liljestrand’s ability to care for his two preschool daughters while his wife worked showed that he had some flexibility and strength. At the 2011 hearing, the sole issue was the nature and extent of Liljestrand’s permanent disability. The trial court found Liljestrand’s testimony credible that he needed his current medications to control his back pain and that these medica- tions reduced his mental acuity. The judge concluded that Liljestrand’s loss of earning capacity had increased since the original assessment and that he was completely disabled as of October 2010 because of the effect of his medications, coupled with his physical restrictions. He did not mention the rebut- table presumption of correctness afforded to Schmidt’s report.2 The review panel concluded that it could not tell whether the trial judge had considered the presumption afforded Schmidt’s report and determined that it must remand the cause for that purpose.

2 See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-162.01(3) (Reissue 2010). Nebraska Advance Sheets LILJESTRAND v. DELL ENTERS. 245 Cite as 287 Neb. 242

Court of Appeals’ Decision On appeal, the Court of Appeals determined that the review panel’s order was final because it effectively vacated the trial judge’s order, thus affecting Liljestrand’s substantial right: We think it goes without saying that a remand to a lower tribunal of necessity cancels out all or part of the lower tribunal’s original decision. . . . . . . . [W]hen the review panel’s decision is read in its entirety, it is clear that the intent was a remand for deter- mination of the applicability of the presumption of cor- rectness to Schmidt’s opinion, or whether such had been overcome by rebutting evidence from Schill. . . . . . . [I]t is clear that the effect of the remand, of neces- sity, is to take away the award of permanent total dis- ability from Liljestrand. Without this appeal, there would be further proceedings by the trial judge to determine the extent of permanent disability. The trial judge is directed to determine the applicability of the statutory presump- tion concerning the agreed-upon vocational rehabilitation counselor’s second opinion rendered January 21, 2011— necessarily meaning that the trial judge must decide the case anew after the consideration of the issue and evi- dence which was not discussed in the trial judge’s original decision.

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