Perea v. Amtrust Ins.

2025 MT 130
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2025
DocketDA 24-0162
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 MT 130 (Perea v. Amtrust Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perea v. Amtrust Ins., 2025 MT 130 (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

06/24/2025

DA 24-0162 Case Number: DA 24-0162

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 130

JORDAN PEREA,

Petitioner and Appellant,

v.

AMTRUST INS. CO.,

Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM: Montana Workers’ Compensation Court, WCC Nos. 2023-6389 and 2023-00010 Honorable Lee Bruner, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Stacy Tempel-St. John, Linnell, Newhall, Martin & Schulke, P.C., Great Falls, Montana

For Appellee:

Steven W. Jennings, Marina A. Tucker, Crowley Fleck, PLLP, Billings, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: September 4, 2024

Decided: June 24, 2025

Filed: Vor-641•—if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice James Jeremiah Shea delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Jordan Perea appeals from the Workers’ Compensation Court’s (“WCC”)

January 29, 2024, Order Denying Parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment and

Establishing Applicable Compensation Rates; and March 13, 2024, Order Denying

Petitioner’s Motion for Reconsideration.

¶2 The dispositive issues on appeal are as follows:

Issue 1: Whether AmTrust’s payment of the full amount of Perea’s claimed benefits removes our jurisdiction over the case.

Issue 2: Whether the WCC erred by declining to award a penalty against AmTrust pursuant to § 39-71-2907, MCA.

¶3 We reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶4 This dispute arises from an injury Perea suffered to his knee on November 11, 2022,

while working at Truss Works, Inc. (“Truss Works”).

¶5 In the four pay periods prior to his injury, Perea earned the following wages1 from

Truss Works:

10/17/22-10/30/22 (paid 10/31/22) $2,013.00 10/3/22-10/16/22 (paid 10/17/22) $1,935.00 9/19/22-10/2/22 (paid 10/3/22) $2,081.25 9/5/22-9/18/22 (paid 9/19/22) $2,107.00

1 All payments containing overtime in this table are reduced to straight time. 2 ¶6 On November 8, 2022, Perea started a second job at Life in Bloom at the rate of

$16.00 per hour for 20 hours per week. On November 16, 2022, Perea ceased work at

Truss Works due to his injury but continued to work at Life in Bloom. Truss Works

terminated Perea’s employment on November 28, 2022. On November 29, 2022, Perea

asked his employer’s workers’ compensation insurer, AmTrust Insurance Co.

(“AmTrust”), to confirm acceptance of his claim and payment of wage loss benefits. On

December 3, 2022, Perea started a third job at The Block earning $14.00 per hour.

¶7 AmTrust accepted Perea’s claim on December 15, 2022. Between December 15,

2022, and February 21, 2023, Perea and AmTrust exchanged differing calculations of the

benefits owed to Perea.

¶8 On March 5, 2023, Perea underwent surgery for his injury and ceased working at

both Life in Bloom and The Block.

¶9 Perea filed a Petition in the WCC on April 6, 2023, arguing in relevant part:

(1) AmTrust incorrectly calculated his Average Weekly Wage (“AWW”) for Temporary

Total Disability (“TTD”) benefits based on his wages from Life in Bloom; (2) that he was

entitled to attorney’s fees, costs, and a penalty pursuant to §§ 39-71-611 and -2907, MCA;

and (3) § 39-71-712(2), MCA’s limitation of the AWW for Temporary Partial Disability

(“TPD”) to 40 hours per week is unconstitutional as applied to his circumstances.2 On

April 24, 2023, AmTrust paid Perea the full amount of his claimed benefits based on

Perea’s calculations; however, AmTrust reserved the right to seek repayment or

2 Perea also raised a facial challenge to § 39-71-712(2), MCA’s 40-hour limitation, but he does not appeal the WCC’s denial of that claim, so we need not consider it. 3 recoupment subject to the WCC’s decision. On April 25, 2023, AmTrust filed a response

to Perea’s petition.

¶10 On June 8, 2023, Perea moved for summary judgment. AmTrust filed a

cross-motion for summary judgment on June 29, 2023. On October 19, 2023, the WCC

requested additional materials from both parties, including a Joint Statement of Facts. The

parties filed their Joint Statement of Facts on November 15, 2023.

¶11 On January 29, 2024, the WCC issued an Order Denying the Parties’ Cross-Motions

for Summary Judgment and Establishing Applicable Compensation Rates. In its Order,

the WCC set forth three time periods in which it determined the question of the correct

calculation of Perea’s benefits would have three different answers:

Period #1, November 28 to December 2, 2022: The WCC determined that Perea was not able to work at Truss Works due to his injury but was able to continue working at Life in Bloom. Therefore, the WCC determined that Perea was entitled to TTD based on his Truss Works wages only. Neither party contests the WCC’s determinations as to this period.

Period #2, December 3, 2022, to March 4, 2023: The WCC determined that Perea was not able to work at Truss Works, he was working at The Block, and he had ceased working at Life in Bloom on January 20, 2023, for reasons unrelated to his injury. Therefore, the WCC determined Perea was entitled to TPD calculated by subtracting only his wages from The Block from his lost wages at Truss Works.

Period #3, March 5 to April 30, 2023: The WCC determined that Perea was not working anywhere, so he was entitled to TTD benefits based on his pay from Truss Works and The Block only.

¶12 The WCC determined that Perea was not entitled to attorney’s fees, costs, or a

penalty for AmTrust’s failure to correctly calculate his benefit entitlement in any of these

three periods because the correct calculation “involve[d] an issue of first impression in

4 Montana.” The WCC therefore determined that AmTrust’s calculation was not

unreasonable.

¶13 Regarding Perea’s constitutional challenge to § 39-71-712(2), MCA’s 40-hour

restriction, the WCC held that Perea had standing to bring an as-applied equal protection

challenge under Article II, Section 4, of the Montana Constitution because the restriction

lowered the amount of money to which he was entitled for TPD benefits. The WCC held

that because the “only distinguishing factor between” workers who were working more

than 40 hours per week prior to injury and those working less than 40 hours per week prior

to injury was “the number of hours worked,” they were similarly situated classes. The

WCC held that the restriction passed rational basis scrutiny because it was reasonably

related to the government’s interest in providing “a system of no-fault compensation to

injured workers while maintaining a reasonable cost for employers.”

¶14 On January 31, 2024, Perea moved for reconsideration pursuant to Admin. R. M.

24.5.337(1)(a) (2018). Perea argued that the WCC had “overlooked” the material fact in

the parties’ briefs that Perea had ceased working at Life in Bloom on March 4, 2023, not

January 20, 2023, and that he left Life in Bloom because of surgery for his injured knee,

therefore entitling him to TTD benefits that included his AWW at Life in Bloom in Period

#3. AmTrust responded to Perea’s motion for reconsideration by agreeing that

the Court’s conclusion that Petitioner terminated his employment with Life in Bloom on January 20, 2023 was factually incorrect. Respondent further agrees and concedes that Petitioner was taken off work at Life in Bloom for reasons due to his workplace injury and therefore as of March 5, 2023, Petitioner suffered an injury [which] caused wage loss at both Truss Works and Life in Bloom from March 5, 2023 to April 30, 2023.

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Bluebook (online)
2025 MT 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perea-v-amtrust-ins-mont-2025.