Multiple Injury Trust Fund v. Pullum

2001 OK 115, 37 P.3d 899, 72 O.B.A.J. 3695, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1575141
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 2001
Docket95,834
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 2001 OK 115 (Multiple Injury Trust Fund v. Pullum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Multiple Injury Trust Fund v. Pullum, 2001 OK 115, 37 P.3d 899, 72 O.B.A.J. 3695, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1575141 (Okla. 2001).

Opinion

LAVENDER, J.

T1 Today's cause requires us to decide whether a Workers' Compensation Court (WCC) three-judge panel erred in ruling permanent total disability (PTD) benefits awarded to Elizabeth Ann Pullum (Pullum or claimant) from the Multiple Injury Trust Fund (Fund) 1 would "acerue" from the date of the panel's order. We hold the panel erred because 85 0.8. Supp.1995, § 172 (effective November 4, 1994)-the law when claimant's last job-related injury occurred and which unambiguously set the boundaries of Fund's PTD liability to her-required PTD benefits from Fund to begin on a date certain, said date being determined by a formula-based time period mandated to elapse before commencement of weekly PTD payments by Fund. 2 We also hold the Court of Civil Appeals (COCA) erred in sustaining the panel's order based on the view a 1999 amendment to 85 O.S. Supp.1995, § 172 should be retroactively applied to allow for "accrual" of PTD benefits from the date of the panel's order. Neither the 1999 amendment of § 172 nor a further amendment in 2000 were intended to have retroactive sweep so as to allow for "accrual" of PTD benefits during the applicable lapse-time period where, as in Pullum's situation, the last compensable injury occurred during the effectiveness of the 1995 version of § 172. We finally decide that the lapse-time period mandated by § 172(E) 3 was intended by the Legislature to begin running from the last date temporary total disability (TTD) was paid to a claimant by the employer or insurer responsible for paying permanent partial disability (PPD) benefits for the claimant's last job-related injury, not from the date of the PPD joint petition lump-sum settlement between a claimant and his/her employer/insurer. Today's opinion is consistent with Samman v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, 2001 OK 71, 33 P.3d 302 and Stidham v. Special Indemmity Fund, 2000 OK. 33, 10 P.3d 880, recent decisions of this Court, and Barnhill v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, 2001 OK 114, 37 P.3d 890, also decided today.

PART I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY.

12 It is uncontested that when claimant suffered her last work-related injury on or about August 25, 1998, she was considered a "physically-impaired person" under the Special Indemnity Fund Act (Act) 4 by virtue of previously adjudicated job-related injuries. Also undisputed is the fact claimant, her employer and employer's insurer settled Pultum's workers' compensation claim for the *902 1998 injury by a joint petition settlement approved by the WCC in a February 2000 order. The settlement: 1) represented a determination claimant suffered a ceratin percentage of PPD from the 1998 injury and 2) was paid by employer/insurer in a lump sum. 5 After the settlement, as the Act allows, claimant sought PTD benefits from Fund, asserting combination of the last infu-ry with her prior injuries rendered her permanently totally disabled.

T3 In a November 2000 order the WCC trial judge ruled that combination of the previously adjudicated on-the-job injuries and the 1998 injury did render her permanently totally disabled. 6 The order also provides that Fund begin making weekly payments to claimant of $162.40 immediately, i.e. from the November 2, 2000 file date of the PTD order.

T4 Fund appealed the trial judge's order to a WCC three-judge panel contending, in essence, 85 0.8. Supp.1995, § 172-particu-larly subsection (E) thereof-required ninety-one (91) weeks elapse from the date of the PPD joint petition settlement date (between claimant, her employer and employer's insurer) before Fund was responsible for paying any PTD benefits to claimant. 7 In a January 2001 order the three-judge panel partially vacated the trial judge's November 2000 order, agreeing with Fund that ninety-one (91) weeks did, have to elapse from the PPD joint petition settlement date before Fund was required to begin weekly PTD payments to claimant. The three-judge panel's order, however, also contained language which seemed to rule that benefits from Fund would "accrue" from the January 2001 date of the panel's order, ie. that while PTD benefits from Fund were not immediately payable because the lapse-time period of subsection (E) had not yet expired, benefits were owed from the date of the panel's order. Fund appealed and the matter was assigned to Division IV of the Court of Civil Appeals (COCA).

15 The COCA sustained the panel's order. It basically held:; (1) 1999 legislative amendment of § 172, including addition of the following last sentence to § 172(B), "Multiple Injury Trust Fund awards acerue from the file date of the court order finding the claimant to be permanently and totally disabled[ ]", authorized "accrual" of PTD *903 payments from the time claimant was adjudicated totally disabled (ie. the date of the PTD order) to the date the lapse-time period ended; (2) the 1999 amended version, as opposed to showing legislative intent to change 85 O.S. Supp.1995, § 172, was intended to clarify the law and, thus, should be retroactively applied; and (8) apparently, that the "acerued" amount was due claimant immediately after expiration of the lapse-time period. We also note the 1999 amended version of § 172 deleted the lapse-time formula contained in the 1995 version of § 172(E). 8

16 Before the COCA claimant relied on the further amendment of § 172 in 2000 to support her view she was, indeed, entitled to PTD benefits from the date of the panel's order. The COCA did not rely on the 2000 amendment of § 172 in reaching its decision, but the amendment had become effective (May 26, 2000) before either the trial judge or the three-judge panel reached their respective decisions. 9 Thus, although neither party appears to have cited to the 2000 amendment before the WCC, we reach its applicability here because where the public interest and welfare is involved, this Court has discretion to (ie. we may) consider a theory not presented to the trial tribunal. See Special Indemnity Fund v. Reynolds, 1948 OK 14, 188 P.2d 841 (public interest and welfare certainly involved in application of workers' compensation laws which result in award against Fund).

17 As indicated in Barnhill v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, supra, 2001 OK 114, at ¶ 7, 37 P.3d 890 at, three decisions of the COCA [two from Division I and one from Division II] are generally contrary to the COCA decision in the instant case. These cases hold the 1999 amended version of § 172 does not retroactively apply when a claimant's last job-related injury occurred before the amendment's effective date. See Multiple Injury Trust Fund v. Hill, 2001 OK CIV APP 8, 16 P.3d 1148; Fry v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, 2000 OK CIV APP 129, 16 P.3d 1132; Spurgin v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, 2000 OK CIV APP 85, 10 P.3d 240. Fund sought certiorari in this case, as it did in Barnhill We previously granted certiorari here and in Barnhill to resolve the conflict in the COCA's decisions.

PART II. STANDARD OF REVIEW.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 OK 115, 37 P.3d 899, 72 O.B.A.J. 3695, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 134, 2001 WL 1575141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/multiple-injury-trust-fund-v-pullum-okla-2001.