Mother Tucker's Food Experience & Insurance v. Industrial Commission

690 P.2d 797, 142 Ariz. 496, 1984 Ariz. App. LEXIS 648
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedSeptember 13, 1984
Docket1 CA-IC 3022
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 690 P.2d 797 (Mother Tucker's Food Experience & Insurance v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mother Tucker's Food Experience & Insurance v. Industrial Commission, 690 P.2d 797, 142 Ariz. 496, 1984 Ariz. App. LEXIS 648 (Ark. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinions

OPINION

CORCORAN, Judge.

This is a special action review of an Industrial Commission award for a compensable claim. The sole issue is whether the administrative law judge (AU) abused his discretion by denying a request for further hearing which was included in petitioners’ Request for Review that alleged newly discovered evidence of fraud. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm the award.

The claims made by petitioner employer and petitioner carrier (petitioners) are in their own words:

(1) The AU erred in failing to rule upon petitioners’ request for a further hearing so as to determine whether such request for further hearing was pursued with due diligence;
(2) Evidence of perjury which first becomes known after entry of a decision upon hearing mandates the granting of a further hearing once the AU has determined that there was no absence of due diligence by the party alleging fraud.

I. The Industrial Claim

On June 6, 1982, the respondent employee Keith Lisauskas (claimant) filed a workers’ compensation claim against petitioner employer Mother Tucker’s alleging that he fell from a ladder while at work in Phoenix and hurt his back on February 20, 1982. The claim was denied and the denial protested. On November 30, 1982, claimant took the deposition of co-worker Dennis P. Dowdall because that witness intended to leave town. Petitioners took the deposition of claimant at that same time. Hearings were held on December 29,1982 and February 1, 1983.

At the December 29 hearing, the claimant testified about his fall off the ladder. He also testified that he reported the incident to the general manager, John T. Hreben. Co-worker Charles R. Creasy testified that he saw the claimant on the ladder painting and that, although he did not see the actual fall, he heard claimant yell, saw him on the floor with the ladder on top of him, and helped lift it off of him. He also confirmed that he heard claimant report the incident to Mr. Hreben. Dowdall testified that he saw Creasy helping the claimant off the floor. The examinations of these three witnesses (including the 38-page Dowdall deposition) were extensive. Claimant submitted all of his testimony on the first hearing day.

At the February 1, 1983 hearing, petitioners presented the testimony of Mr. Hreben and Steven W. Beyer, successor to Mr. Hreben as general manager. Mr. Hreben had indicated in the employer’s report the previous August, “We doubt validity of claim because it was never reported to us.” Mr. Hreben testified that claimant had not reported to him any injury alleged to have occurred in the course of his employment during the months of January through March, 1982; that he had not specifically asked claimant to do any painting; that claimant was transferred to Mother Tucker’s in Dallas, Texas, in March where he worked for almost five months,' returning in June, at which time claimant indicated his back was hurting him and that he injured himself in Dallas while painting a ceiling; that before claimant went to Dallas he did not have “even a slight limp” and that when he returned from Dallas he had a slight limp; and that he did not ask claimant whether he was working for Mother Tucker’s in Dallas at the time he [498]*498injured himself. When Mr. Hreben was asked if he spoke to claimant to ask him about the claimed industrial accident, his response was: “No. Why should I?” When asked if he attempted to interview anybody that was working in the kitchen in February 1982, his response was: “No. Why should I?”

Mr. Beyer was first assistant to Mr. Hreben in February 1982. Mr. Beyer testified that he did not receive any information that claimant sustained an accident or injury or fall in February 1982; that the passageway where claimant claimed to have been painting was not painted for a year after the alleged accident; that claimant complained about his back after he returned from Dallas and that claimant had a limp at that time; that claimant mentioned a ladder and paint, and indicated his injury occurred in Dallas; that the first time he heard about claimant’s claim was in January 1983, which would have been after the conclusion of the first hearing day; and that he had not noticed any limp that claimant may have had before he went to Dallas.

At the conclusion of this second hearing day, Joseph L. Moore, Esq., who appeared on behalf of petitioners in September 1982 and has represented them throughout these proceedings, acknowledged that there was a report in the file by Nigel da Silva, D.O., containing the following:

The patient [claimant], at the time that I saw him on March 11,1982, also described a fall, which he stated occurred at his work. He stated that he fell from a ladder and his back, at the time of being seen, was treated with Hot Packs and Spinalator.

(Emphasis added.) The report refers to a back complaint by claimant made less than a month after the claimed accident, and before he was transferred to Dallas. Mr. Moore further acknowledged that there was sufficient medical support for the claim and therefore “it’s a credibility question” to be decided by the AU. Petitioners did not move for continuance of hearing or further hearing at the conclusion of this two-day hearing. See R4-13-156, Rules of Procedure for Workmen’s Compensation Hearings Before the Industrial Commission (hereinafter rule 56).

The AU resolved the credibility conflict in claimant’s favor and issued an award for a compensable claim. Petitioners filed a request for review requesting that the AU reverse the award so granted. The AU affirmed the award. As part of the request for review, the petitioners also filed a request for further hearing. This request will be discussed below.

II. The Request for Further Hearing

Rule 56 provides:

Continuance of hearing
A. The granting of a continuance of a hearing shall be discretionary with the presiding hearing officer.
B. If at the conclusion of a hearing held by a hearing officer [administrative law judge], any interested party desires a further hearing for the purpose of introducing further evidence, the party shall state specifically and in detail the nature and substance of the evidence desired to be produced, the names and addresses of the witnesses and the reason why the party was unable to produce such evidence and such witnesses at the time of the hearing. If it appears to the presiding hearing officer that with the exercise of due diligence, such evidence or witness could have been produced, or that such evidence or testimony should be cumulative, immaterial or unnecessary, he may deny the request for a continued hearing. He may, on his own motion, continue a hearing and order such further examinations or investigations as, in his discretion, appear warranted.

Rule 56(B) requires that the petition for further hearing be made at the conclusion of the hearing held by the AU. The policy of the rule is to require “adequate pre-hearing preparation in order to achieve the speedy, fair, and final administrative adjudication of workmen’s compensation claims.” Wood v. Industrial Comm’n, 126 Ariz. 259, 261-62, 614 P.2d 340, 342-43 (App.1980). Petitioners’ request for further hearing did not comply with Rule 56 [499]

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Mother Tucker's Food Experience & Insurance v. Industrial Commission
690 P.2d 797 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1984)

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690 P.2d 797, 142 Ariz. 496, 1984 Ariz. App. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mother-tuckers-food-experience-insurance-v-industrial-commission-arizctapp-1984.