Marquez v. Pierce Painting

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 2018
Docket45415
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Marquez v. Pierce Painting, (Idaho 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO Docket No. 45415

ELFEGO MARQUEZ, ) ) Claimant-Respondent, ) ) Boise, May 2018 Term v. ) ) Filed: August 3, 2018 PIERCE PAINTING, INC., Employer, and ) STATE INSURANCE FUND, Surety, ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk ) Defendants-Appellants. ) ) ________________________________________ )

Appeal from the Industrial Commission of the State of Idaho.

The order of the Commission is reversed and this case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.

Cantrill Skinner Lewis Casey & Sorensen, LLP, Boise, for appellants. Clinton O. Casey argued.

Racine Olson Nye & Budge, Chartered, Pocatello, and Middleton Law, PLLC, Middleton, for respondent. James C. Arnold argued. _______________________________________________

BEVAN, Justice. Elfego Marquez (“Marquez”) sustained an impairment from an industrial accident while employed at Pierce Painting, Inc. (“Pierce Painting”). Marquez subsequently filed a workers’ compensation complaint. Pierce Painting through its surety, the State Insurance Fund (“SIF”), paid Marquez’s medical bills, total temporary disability benefits, and permanent partial impairment benefits. SIF did not pay Marquez’s permanent disability benefits, claiming that Marquez was not eligible for permanent disability due to his status as an undocumented immigrant. The Industrial Commission (the “Commission”) disagreed and ordered that Marquez was entitled to pursue a claim for permanent disability without reference to his status as an undocumented immigrant. Pierce Painting and SIF appeal the order of the Commission. We reverse.

1 I. FACTS AND PROCEDURE Marquez was born in 1970 and is a citizen of Mexico. He received a university degree in Mexico where he became a teacher and taught first and third year elementary school for seven years. In approximately 2000, Marquez illegally immigrated from Mexico to the United States. After entering the United States, Marquez went to southern California, where he purchased a social security card and used it to obtain employment washing dishes at a restaurant. After working in California for approximately seven months, Marquez moved to Emmett, Idaho and soon after began working at Pierce Painting. Marquez’s primary job at Pierce Painting was to prepare buildings to be painted. He was able to work at Pierce Painting by providing the social security card he purchased in California. Pierce Painting knew Marquez was an undocumented immigrant and that his social security card was not legally issued to him. Not long after beginning at Pierce Painting, a supervisor received a notice of garnishment associated with the social security number used by Marquez. Evidently, the individual to whom the social security number had been legally issued had an outstanding child support delinquency. The supervisor instructed Marquez to obtain a different social security card. Marquez complied by illegally obtaining a different social security card. On May 20, 2010, Marquez sustained an impairment from an industrial accident while preparing a building to be painted. Marquez was standing on two five gallon buckets stacked on top of each other to reach an area above a tall doorway when he fell onto a concrete floor fracturing his right wrist and injuring his right arm and shoulder. His right wrist was put into a cast and he eventually underwent multiple right shoulder surgeries performed by Dr. Hassinger. Dr. Hassinger rated Marquez’s right shoulder impairment at 5% of the whole person. He recommended permanent restrictions on overhead activities and that Marquez not return to his position at Pierce Painting. In July of 2010, Marquez was referred to the Industrial Commission Rehabilitation Division (“ICRD”) by SIF. ICRD consultant Ken Halcomb (“Halcomb”) was assigned to Marquez’s case. ICRD’s primary objective was to preserve Marquez’s time-of-injury job and to return him to that job following his recovery. This required Halcomb to meet with an agent of Pierce Painting, and then with Marquez. Halcomb interviewed Marquez about his education, past work history, and transferable job skills. Notably, the interview did not include questions about Marquez’s immigration status. When it became evident that Marquez would not be able to return to his time-of- injury job, Halcomb assisted Marquez in identifying other potential employment opportunities consistent with his restrictions and within his geographic area. Ultimately Halcomb closed

2 Marquez’s file without placing him with another employer. Halcomb never learned that Marquez was an undocumented immigrant. Marquez was then referred to the Idaho Department of Labor for additional placement services. Marquez received substantial benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act for his injuries. SIF paid $87,526.64 for medical bills, $30,985.87 for total temporary disability benefits, and $8,487.60 for permanent partial impairment benefits. Marquez then sought permanent disability benefits in excess of his impairment because his post-accident medical restrictions excluded him from a significant portion of the undocumented immigrant labor market in Idaho. SIF refused to pay Marquez any permanent disability benefits because of his status as an undocumented immigrant. On April 14, 2015, Marquez filed a workers’ compensation complaint against Pierce Painting and SIF (“the appellants”) seeking permanent disability benefits in excess of his impairment. On May 1, 2015, Marquez filed an amended workers’ compensation complaint. The appellants filed answers to both Marquez’s original and amended complaints denying that Marquez was entitled to any permanent disability benefits. On July 28, 2016, the parties stipulated to the following: 1. Marquez is not legally in the United States. 2. Marquez had no legal access to the Idaho or United States labor market. 3. Marquez sustained an industrial injury on May 20, 2010. 4. Marquez injured his right wrist and right shoulder in the industrial accident on May 20, 2010. 5. The appellants have paid Marquez’s medical bills and permanent partial impairment in full. 6. The only dispute is whether Marquez is entitled to permanent disability in excess of his impairment.

On July 28, 2016, a hearing was held before a Referee. The sole issue presented at the hearing was whether Marquez was entitled to permanent disability benefits. Marquez was a witness at the hearing and spoke through an interpreter. Halcomb also testified before the Referee. He noted that since it is the purpose of the ICRD to return injured workers to their time-of-injury job, or failing that, to some other suitable job in their geographic area, it is ICRD policy that such placement services cannot be offered to undocumented workers. Halcomb further acknowledged that there is a labor market for undocumented workers in the Treasure Valley; however, he was unable to characterize the size and components of that labor market. Halcomb did confirm that Marquez’s

3 access to the labor market is limited because of both his undocumented immigration status and the permanent effects of his work injury. On May 1, 2017, the Referee issued his written recommendation. The Referee found Marquez’s undocumented immigration status precluded him from receiving permanent disability benefits. In doing so, the Referee relied upon two prior cases from the Commission that supported his conclusion. See Otero v. Briggs Roofing Company, 2011 WL 4429193 (Idaho Ind. Com.); and Diaz v. Franklin Building Supply, 2009 WL 5850572 (Idaho Ind. Com.). Both of these proceedings held that an undocumented immigrant’s status is a pertinent nonmedical factor that precludes the claimant from receiving any permanent disability benefits. On July 10, 2017, the Commission issued its written findings of fact and conclusions of law.

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Marquez v. Pierce Painting, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquez-v-pierce-painting-idaho-2018.