Ott v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board

118 Cal. App. 3d 912, 173 Cal. Rptr. 648, 46 Cal. Comp. Cases 545, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1714
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1981
DocketCiv. 5951
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 118 Cal. App. 3d 912 (Ott v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ott v. Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, 118 Cal. App. 3d 912, 173 Cal. Rptr. 648, 46 Cal. Comp. Cases 545, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1714 (Cal. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

ZENOVICH, J.

This petition for writ of review challenges the propriety of a decision allowing a credit against permanent disability indemnity to respondent Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company for sums paid under its employee benefit plan. For reasons to be explained, we find that the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board incorrectly allowed the credit, and we annul the order.

Petitioner Lunette Ott (hereinafter Ott) was employed with respondent Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company (hereinafter Pacific Telephone) as a marketing representative. On January 15, 1970, she was struck by an automobile in a crosswalk and suffered a compensable injury arising out of and in the course of employment to her neck, knees, left hip, left arm and lower back. At all times, Pacific Telephone was duly certified as a self-insured employer. Following a 1973 hearing on the matter, Ott was awarded temporary disability payable at $78.11 per week, and the parties stipulated that Pacific Telephone paid the above amount up through December 4, 1972. 1 In 1974, a referee terminated Pacific Telephone’s liability for temporary disability compensation.

Subsequent activity centered upon the permanent disability compensation due to Ott and any credit to be allowed for benefits paid by Pacific Telephone. In late 1979, the parties stipulated to a perma *915 nent disability rating of 55 -3/4 percent, amounting to a total sum of $11,707.50. They also agreed that the claim for self-procured medical treatment was to be offset by Ott’s third-party settlement, thereby eliminating any further claim for self-procured treatment. However, the parties never agreed on the credit issue; written argument and oral testimony focused on this dispute at a later hearing.

At that hearing, Pacific Telephone contended that it was entitled to credit in the amount of $13,650 against the permanent disability indemnity. This was based on the fact that Pacific Telephone had paid benefits to Ott since 1975 from its “Plan For Employees’ Pensions, Disability Benefits and Death Benefits” (hereinafter Plan), which amounts exceeded the sum allowable under workers’ compensation law. Petitioner objected to Pacific Telephone’s efforts to obtain a credit for payments made pursuant to the Plan. Oral testimony was adduced from Robert D. Harless, a personnel manager in the San Francisco office of Pacific Telephone’s employees’ benefits department, and Ott.

Following this hearing, a workers’ compensation judge denied “any credit against compensation payment” to Pacific Telephone. The judge disallowed Pacific Telephone’s lien claim for $13,650.

Thereafter, Pacific Telephone’s petition for reconsideration was granted by the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (hereinafter Board) on August 11, 1980. The Board set aside the earlier decision of the workers’ compensation judge and substituted its decision allowing credit against permanent disability indemnity to Pacific Telephone. Ott then filed the instant petition.

The pertinent evidence for resolution of the petition can be found in selected provisions of Pacific Telephone’s Plan and in testimony provided by Robert D. Harless.

In a section summarizing “Accident Disability Benefits,” the Pacific Telephone Plan states, “The accident disability benefits specified above include payments required by Workmen’s Compensation Laws.”

Section 8, paragraph 27, of the Plan provides: “In case any benefit or pension, which the Committee shall determine to be of the same gener *916 al character as a payment provided by the Plan, shall be payable under any law now in force or hereafter enacted to any employee of the Company, to his beneficiaries or to his annuitant under such law, the excess only, if any, of the amount prescribed in the Plan above the amount of such payment prescribed by law shall be payable under the Plan; provided, however, that no benefit or pension payable under this Plan shall be reduced by reason of any governmental benefit or pension payable on account of military service or on or after June 1, 1969 by reason of any benefit which the recipient would be entitled to receive under the Social Security Act. In those cases where, because of differences in the beneficiaries, or differences in the time or methods of payment, or otherwise, whether there is such excess or not is not ascertainable by mere comparison but adjustments are necessary, the Committee in its discretion is authorized to determine whether or not in fact any such excess exists, and in case of such excess, to make the adjustments necessary to carry out in a fair and equitable manner the spirit of the provision for the payment of such excess.” (Italics added.)

Robert D. Harless, a personnel manager at Pacific Telephone’s employees’ benefits department in San Francisco, expressed familiarity with administration of the Plan under dispute. Harless stated that Pacific Telephone had a committee to which accident cases were referred for consideration of benefit payouts. Harless then testified as follows:

“Q. In the case of Mrs. Ott, was her case submitted to the committee?
“A. Yes, it was.
“Q. And did the committee determine that this was an on-the-job injury?
“A. Yes, it did.
“Q. And did the committee thereafter order benefits be paid in accordance with the plan?
“A. Yes, it did.
“Q. And to your knowledge have those benefits been paid continuously since that date?
*917 “A. Yes, they have.” Harless also indicated that the Plan was administered in accordance with its self-contained provisions.

In denying credit to Pacific Telephone, the workers’ compensation judge succinctly noted: "... there is no proof that the committee has made a determination as required under Section [8], Para 27 of the plan.”

The Board rescinded the decision of the workers’ compensation judge and granted credit to Pacific Telephone. It apparently believed that the company had integrated the administration of its workers’ compensation liability and its liability under the Plan. The Board stated: “Here, we are persuaded that an amount not to exceed $52.50 weekly of [Pacific Telephone’s] payments after January 1975 should be considered as advances of permanent disability indemnity, and that it would not be inequitable to allow a credit in that amount against the award of permanent disability indemnity. (See Carver v. WCAB (Writ denied) (1980) 45 CCC 331.)”

We dispose of several threshold contentions before addressing the main issue presented by this writ of review.

Ott initially contends that Pacific Telephone is not entitled to a credit for permanent disability payments because its Plan does not unambiguously provide for such a credit. She principally relies upon the case of Russell v. Bankers Life Co. (1975) 46 Cal.App.3d 405 [120 Cal.Rptr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 Cal. App. 3d 912, 173 Cal. Rptr. 648, 46 Cal. Comp. Cases 545, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ott-v-workers-compensation-appeals-board-calctapp-1981.