Parris-Eastlake v. State, Department of Law

26 P.3d 1099, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 90, 2001 WL 818284
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 2001
DocketS-9156
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 P.3d 1099 (Parris-Eastlake v. State, Department of Law) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parris-Eastlake v. State, Department of Law, 26 P.3d 1099, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 90, 2001 WL 818284 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

An assistant district attorney applied for workers' compensation, claiming that "[wjork-related stress was a substantial factor in creating headaches, neck and back pain and a resulting addiction to preseription medication." The Alaska Workers' Compensation Board held that AS 28.30.285(2), which prohibits recovery for any injury proximately caused by an "employee being under the influence of drugs unless the drugs were taken as prescribed," barred her claim for *1101 work-related drug addiction. The superior court affirmed, and the employee appeals. We reverse the superior court's decision and remand because we hold that AS 28.30.285(2) does not bar recovery when the injury itself is addiction.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Development of the Addiction

Jacquelyn Parris-Eastlake began working as an assistant district attorney in Fairbanks in November 1990. During her employment she suffered recurring headaches and occasional neck and back pain.

Dr. J. Michael Carroll began regularly prescribing narcotic painkillers to treat her pain in June 1993. Parris-Eastlake's use of painkillers accelerated in April and May 1994. Parris-Eastlake testified that after taking painkillers in April 1994, she noticed that she was "enjoying" a "buzz." Parris-Eastlake also began seeing Dr. Roy S. Pierson about neck pain, a problem soon diagnosed as a herniated disk. He also prescribed painkillers. Her psychiatrist, Dr. Robert D. Schults, testified that Parris-Eastlake had a "heightened interest" in narcotics in April and May 1994, but that it was "unlikely that she was physiologically addicted" at that point.

Parris-Eastlake continued to receive prescription painkillers from Dr. Carroll through the summer of 1994. In August 1994 she saw a neurologist about headaches and neck and arm pain. He recommended that Dr. Carroll prescribe further painkillers. Par-ris-Eastlake also received painkillers from a dentist in late August and early September for tooth pain.

On October 1, 1994, Parris-Eastlake was injured when she fell down a flight of stairs at home. She was admitted to the hospital for three days for "pain control" and was treated with several narcotic painkillers. Dr. Pierson prescribed more painkillers when she left the hospital, but she continued to have headaches and pain from the herniated disk. Parris-Eastlake testified that at some point between April and October 1994, she began lying to her doctors and exaggerating pain in order to get more painkillers.

Dr. Pierson had long encouraged Parris, Eastlake to have neck surgery on her herniated disk. She ultimately agreed, and Dr. Pierson performed the surgery on November 11, 1994. Parris-Eastlake received morphine, Demerol, Percocet, and Vicodin while in the hospital. After she left the hospital, Parris-Eastlake began showing signs that she was addicted to painkillers. She stated in an interrogatory answer that after this surgery, she began using the painkillers to deal with stress, rather than to treat pain. On November 29 Parris-Eastlake visited Dr. Pierson to complain of a growing dependency on the painkillers. On December 20 Dr. Carroll met with Parris-Eastlake and they began a program designed to address her now full-blown addiction.

The Alaska Workers' Compensation Board later concluded that Parris-Eastlake was physically addicted to painkillers no later than December 1994, and Parris-Hastlake agrees. Parris-Eastlake testified that over the next eight months she "spent a lot of time figuring out how I was going to get [more painkillers]." She engaged in "drug-seeking" activities, including lying to her doe-tors, exaggerating her pain to get medication, and hoarding pills for later use in higher-than-prescribed doses. During this time, Parris-Eastlake had considerable difficulty at work on an interpersonal level, due in part to her drug addiction. In August 1995 Parris-Eastlake checked into a drug detoxification center, and agreed to resign from her job with the district attorney's office.

B. The Workers' Compensation Claim

Parris-Eastlake filed a workers' compensation claim in October 1995 alleging work-related injuries including "headaches, back & neck pain, and drug addiction." Two board members-a quorum under AS 28.30.005(f)-formed a panel and held a hearing; the board issued its decision in October 1996. The board acknowledged its obligation under AS 283.30.120(a) to presume that the injury was both work-related and "not proximately caused ... by the employee being under the influence of drugs" used not as prescribed by a physician. But it found that Parris-East- *1102 lake had engaged in "drug-seeking behavior," including "exaggerating symptoms, and deceiving her physicians in order to obtain narcotics" beginning in April or May 1994. The board found that Parris-Eastlake's own testimony regarding her drug-seeking behavior was substantial evidence to rebut the presumption of AS 28.30.120(a)(8) that her addiction was not caused by her being "under the influence."

The board then concluded that the "overwhelming preponderance of the evidence" showed that Parris-Eastlake's drug addiction "came about because of her systematic drug abuse and drug seeking behavior under the influence of that abuse." The board also found that "the drugs obtained by the employee during the spring of 1994 [to treat her headaches] were not sufficient to cause physical addiction." These two findings controlled the board's ultimate decision, because AS 28.30.285(2) precludes compensation for an injury "proximately caused by the employee being under the influence of drugs unless the drugs were taken as prescribed by the employee's physician." The board concluded that Parris-Eastlake's addiction "was proximately caused by her being under the ongoing influence of improperly obtained drugs," and thus that AS 28.30.235(2) barred her claim for compensation.

Although the board's conclusion that the statute barred Parris-Eastlake's claim disposed of her claim, the board nonetheless then addressed her contention that work had been a substantial factor in the development of her drug addiction. The two panel members disagreed as to this contention; one found that Parris-Eastlake's work was a substantial factor in the development of her addiction; the other did not. Because both panel members agreed that subsection .235(2) applied, their disagreement on the substantial-factor issue did not alter the outcome. The board therefore declined to appoint a third panel member to break their "tie." The board made no findings at all regarding the work-relatedness of Parris-Eastlake's headaches, neck pain, and back pain.

Parris-Eastlake appealed to the superior court, which affirmed the board's denial of her claim. Parris-Eastlake appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

We directly review the merits of a decision of the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board, giving no deference to the decision of the superior court in its capacity as an intermediate court of appeal. 1

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Bluebook (online)
26 P.3d 1099, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 90, 2001 WL 818284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parris-eastlake-v-state-department-of-law-alaska-2001.