O'Mara v. State of Minn./u. of M.

501 N.W.2d 603, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 370, 1993 WL 186795
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 4, 1993
DocketC3-92-1276
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 501 N.W.2d 603 (O'Mara v. State of Minn./u. of M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Mara v. State of Minn./u. of M., 501 N.W.2d 603, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 370, 1993 WL 186795 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

*604 COYNE, Justice.

We review by certiorari a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals reversing an award of benefits pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3j (1992). We reverse.

Annette L. O’Mara sustained a compen-sable low back injury on May 26, 1987 while employed by the University of Minnesota as a laundry worker. O’Mara made an unsuccessful attempt to return to work in the employer’s laundry in the fall of 1987. In August 1988 O’Mara found work she was capable of performing at Town and Country Dodge.

O’Mara attained maximum medical improvement (MMI) in April 1989 and within 90 days thereafter the University offered O’Mara a clerical job. Soon after starting the clerical job at the University, she experienced an increase in low back symptoms and on the advice of her treating physician, who considered the job inappropriate, she returned to her part-time bookkeeping job at Town and Country Dodge.

Contending that the University had not offered a job which met the criteria of Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3e(b), O’Mara sought economic recovery compensation (ERC) for a 7 percent permanent partial disability. Although it did not contest the extent of O’Mara’s permanent disability, the University asserted that it had offered a suitable job and that, having rejected the employer’s offer of a 3e(b) job, O’Mara was entitled to neither ERC 1 nor temporary partial disability benefits 2 but only impairment compensation. 3 The parties settled that dispute by stipulation in September 1990 and shortly thereafter O’Mara was laid off from her job at Town and Country Dodge for economic reasons. The stipulation provided that O’Mara would receive temporary partial disability benefits based on “a 22.5 hour work week at Town and Country Dodge, or other suitable employment until” the employee’s actual hours worked or medical evidence warranted an increase in work hours beyond 22.5 hours per week. The stipulation also provided that the employee’s claim for permanent partial disability compensation should be compromised by payment of an amount equal to impairment compensation plus 50 percent of the difference between ERC and impairment compensation. It was agreed that payment of the stipulated sum should constitute full settlement of all claims for temporary partial disability through May 26, 1990, of “all claims for permanent partial disability benefits to the extent of 7 percent of the body as a whole as impairment compensation and economic recovery compensation,” and of penalties and interest. The settlement stipulation makes no reference to future temporary total disability or to compensation pursuant to section 176.101, subd. 3j.

After O’Mara was laid off at Town and Country Dodge, she found a part-time (approximately 22 hours per week) job as an office worker at Perfection Graphics, Inc., where she worked until May 13,1991, when her employment was terminated because her employer needed an employee who could work almost full time and who could handle more physically demanding tasks. Two weeks later her treating physician judged that O’Mara was medically unable to work anywhere because of the severe deterioration of the condition of her low back as a result of the 1987 work injury. On October 22, 1991 O’Mara underwent spinal fusion surgery to ameliorate the effects of her work-related injury.

As long as O’Mara worked at Perfection Graphics the University continued to pay temporary partial disability benefits. About a month after termination of her employment there, the University served a Notice of Intention to Discontinue Benefits. Then O’Mara instituted these proceedings seeking temporary total disability benefits pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3j (1986) 4 for the period beginning May 13, *605 1991 when she became medically unable to continue working. On October 7, 1991 the University was allowed to discontinue payment of temporary partial disability benefits, but following a hearing on O’Mara’s petition, the compensation judge found that O’Mara’s job at Perfection Graphics was a “3e” job, that she became medically unable to continue in this job, and that, therefore, she was entitled to temporary total disability “3j” benefits. On appeal, the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals reversed, concluding that because the job at Perfection Graphics, Inc., had not been procured within 90 days after O’Mara attained MMI, it did not meet the statutory criteria. Having determined that the employment from which O’Mara was medically unable to continue was not “3e” employment, the WCCA departed from its earlier rulings 5 and declared O’Mara’s “disablement from that job did not result in either a new MMI period nor [sic] eligibility for temporary total benefits under the terms of subdivision 3j.” O’Mara v. State, University of Minnesota, No. 472-72-3274, slip op. at 3 (WCCA June 18, 1992).

The proceedings before the compensation judge and the WCCA have revolved around the stipulation for settlement. Both parties’ characterization of their stipulation, however, strikes us as disingenuous. The employer contends that the compensation paid the employee for permanent partial disability constituted economic recovery compensation, and that having been paid ERC, O’Mara is barred from further temporary total benefits. If the employer’s payment of compensation for permanent partial disability could actually be said to constitute payment of economic recovery compensation, it was paid pursuant to a void contract because it was for a lesser amount than prescribed at Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3a (1986). 6 What was paid was a negotiated sum based and calculated on a compromise. On the other hand, the employee insists that the employer’s agreement to pay temporary partial disability benefits based on her “22.5 hour work week at Town and Country Dodge, or other suitable employment” constitutes an agreement that her job at Town and Country Dodge and her subsequent employment at Perfection Graphics, Inc., were jobs which met the criteria of Minn.Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3e(b) (1986). If the employee's job at Town and Country Dodge were classified as a “3e” job, O’Mara would have been eligible for monitoring period compensation had she been laid off prior to the end of the monitoring period. More to the point, she argues that she would be eligible pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 176.101, subd. 3j for temporary total compensation in the event she became medically unable to continue her employment at Town and Country Dodge or her later job at Perfection Graphics, Inc., because of her 1987 compensable back injury. In essence, then, O’Mara’s position is that the University is estopped by the settlement stipulation from asserting that O’Mara’s job at Perfection Graphics was not a “3e” job or that O’Mara is not entitled to “3j” temporary total disability benefits. In the context of a stipulation for payment of temporary partial disability benefits, however, “suitable employment” cannot be said to import any meaning ex *606

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Bluebook (online)
501 N.W.2d 603, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 370, 1993 WL 186795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omara-v-state-of-minnu-of-m-minn-1993.