Medrano v. Department of Social & Health Services

605 P.2d 783, 93 Wash. 2d 75, 1980 Wash. LEXIS 1252
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1980
DocketNo. 46156
StatusPublished

This text of 605 P.2d 783 (Medrano v. Department of Social & Health Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medrano v. Department of Social & Health Services, 605 P.2d 783, 93 Wash. 2d 75, 1980 Wash. LEXIS 1252 (Wash. 1980).

Opinion

Rosellini, J.

We are asked to interpret RCW 74.04.530, to determine how certain subrogation rights of the Department of Social and Health Services (Department) are to be computed.

In the Medrano case, the trial court entered a judgment for the Department. The cases of Valadez, Martinez and Cicil were heard in a different court, which ruled against the Department. The four cases, having one legal issue, were consolidated in this court.

The parties to this appeal, other than the Department, are injured workmen who received public assistance for themselves and their families, residing with them, during the periods in which their applications for industrial insurance were pending. Under RCW 74.04.530,1 the Department became subrogated to the right of each workman to recover time loss payments from the Department of Labor and Industries. That subrogation was limited to "up to eighty percent" of such time loss payments or the public assistance, payments which the workman had received, whichever was less. This right was further limited by a proviso and it is the intent and effect of this proviso which forms the issue before us here.

It will be seen that the proviso says that where public assistance has been furnished to one or more persons to [77]*77whom the workman owes a duty of support, the Department's right to recover time loss compensation shall be limited to that portion allocated to such persons by RCW 51.32.090. The parties are agreed the only applicable subdivisions of that section are the first two. They provide:

(1) When the total disability is only temporary, the schedule of payments contained in subdivisions (1) through (13) of RCW 51.32.060 as amended shall apply, so long as the total disability continues.
(2) Any compensation payable under this section for children not in the custody of the injured worker as of the date of injury shall be payable only to such person as actually is providing the support for such child or children pursuant to the order of a court of record providing for support of such child or children.

RCW 51.32.060, referred to in RCW 51.32.090(1), provides for monthly payments to a workman permanently disabled. The amount of such payments is determined in part by the number of dependents (spouse and children) the workman has.

As RCW 74.04.530 recognizes, public assistance and time loss payments to a given family are not equal. The problem before us arose because the amount of public assistance payments allotted to the head of the household is less than the amount of time loss payments so allotted; and the amount of public assistance payments allotted to his dependents is greater than the amount of time loss so allotted. The total amount of public assistance is less than the total amount of time loss. Consequently, if the Department's subrogation right is calculated with respect to the lesser total, it will be 80 percent of the total public assistance paid. But if it is calculated with respect to the lesser amount allocated to the workman (public assistance) and with respect to the time loss payments allocated to the children, it will be less than 80 percent of the total public assistance paid for the family. The issue is whether the legislature intended the latter calculation to be used with respect to all children supported by the workman.

[78]*78It is agreed by the parties that when the proviso to RCW 74.04.530 speaks of persons to whom the recipient owes a duty of support, it refers to his spouse and children, but the argument of the Department is that the proviso was meant to apply only when the particular dependent is not living with the workman.

We find nothing in the language of the proviso, or in RCW 51.32.090, to support that theory. The proviso makes no mention of custody or living arrangements. Subdivision (1) of RCW 51.32.090 incorporates RCW 51.32.060, which "allocates" payments to dependents, in the sense that it makes the amount of time loss depend upon the number and class of dependents. Neither of these provisions conditions such payments upon the workman's having custody. Subdivision (2), which is the paragraph in which the Department finds authority for its position, speaks of children not in the custody of the workman, but only for the purpose of designating the person to whom the time loss payments allocated to such children shall be paid. It denies the workman the right to receive such payments only if he is not actually supporting the child. If he is providing support for the child pursuant to court order, it matters not that the child is in the custody of another.

So, éven though we assume, as the Department argues, that the proviso was not meant to refer to subdivision (1) of RCW 51.32.090,2 there is nothing in subdivision (2) which supports a theory that the legislature intended that payments for children should be measured by time loss payments only when such children were not in the custody of [79]*79the workman. The most that can be gleaned from the proviso to RCW 74.04.530, when read in conjunction with this subdivision, is that subrogation need not be calculated with reference to time loss payments allocated to a child, if support for that child is actually being furnished by a third party. That is not a situation involved in this case.

It was the apparent intent of the legislature that subrogation should be based upon time loss payments wherever public assistance has been furnished to one to whom the workman owes a duty of support. The amount of such time loss payments allocated to the dependent can be determined only by turning to RCW 51.32.060, as provided in RCW 51.32.090(1).

The Department does not suggest a logical purpose which would have moved the legislature to restrict subrogation only in cases where the workman does not have custody of his children.

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Related

§ 74.04.530
Washington § 74.04.530
§ 51.32.090
Washington § 51.32.090
§ 51.32.060
Washington § 51.32.060

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
605 P.2d 783, 93 Wash. 2d 75, 1980 Wash. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medrano-v-department-of-social-health-services-wash-1980.