Prairie View Management Inc. v. Moran

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 27, 2023
Docket22-2023
StatusPublished

This text of Prairie View Management Inc. v. Moran (Prairie View Management Inc. v. Moran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prairie View Management Inc. v. Moran, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-2023 Filed September 27, 2023

PRAIRIE VIEW MANAGEMENT, INC., and ACCIDENT FUND GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Petitioners-Appellees,

vs.

ROSE MORAN, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Celene Gogerty, Judge.

An injured former employee appeals from judicial review of her workers’

compensation claim. AFFIRMED.

Gary B. Nelson of Rush & Nicholson, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellant.

Laura Ostrander of Accident Fund Holdings, Inc. d/b/a AF Group, Lansing,

Michigan, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Chicchelly and Buller, JJ. 2

BULLER, Judge.

Rose Moran appeals from the district court’s judicial-review ruling reversing

the Workers’ Compensation Commissioner’s award of temporary and penalty

benefits. We affirm the district court, finding that Moran’s employer, Prairie View

Management, Inc. (Prairie View), offered her suitable work through the effective

date of her voluntary quit and she is not entitled to penalty benefits.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Moran started working for Prairie View as a community service assistant in

September 2019. A few months later, on December 5, Moran emailed Prairie

View’s human resources specialist with her resignation. She cited stress,

complaints about coworkers, and paperwork as her reasons for resigning, and she

gave an effective end date of December 20. The human resources specialist

asked Moran to submit a letter of resignation to her direct supervisor. On

December 9, Moran slipped on a patch of ice while working for Prairie View,

injuring her right wrist and the side of her body. She submitted a formal letter of

resignation as instructed one day later, but she dated her submission December 5

and gave the same December 20 end date.

After Moran reported the injury to Prairie View, the company modified her

duties to light work according to her restrictions. These modifications were

effective through her last scheduled day of work on December 20. Moran never

made any written communication to Prairie View seeking to withdraw or rescind

her resignation, but she testified she verbally made a request on an unknown date.

Moran filed a petition for workers’ compensation benefits against Prairie

View. The deputy commissioner found that Moran was entitled to penalty and 3

temporary total benefits after December 20, 2019 (past her end date), based on

her attempt to rescind her resignation. The commissioner affirmed the deputy

commissioner’s decision in its entirety on intra-agency appeal.

Prairie View sought judicial review. As relevant to this appeal, the company

disputed the commissioner’s ruling on temporary and penalty benefits. The district

court reversed the commissioner’s grant of penalty and temporary total benefits

past Moran’s end date, while affirming on all other grounds. Moran appeals.

II. Standard of Review

This appeal comes before us under Iowa Code chapter 17A, the Iowa

Administrative Procedure Act. See Iowa Code § 86.26 (2019) (“Judicial review of

decisions or orders of the workers’ compensation commissioner may be sought in

accordance with chapter 17A.”). Under this chapter, we may only interfere with an

agency decision if it is erroneous under one of the enumerated grounds and a

party’s substantial rights have been prejudiced. Id. § 17A.19(10). For example,

we must reverse if the agency’s decision was “[b]ased on an erroneous

interpretation of a provision of law whose interpretation has not clearly been vested

by a provision of law in the discretion of the agency.” Id. § 17A.19(10)(c).

To the extent our review turns on interpretation of the workers’

compensation statute, interpretation has not been vested with the agency and we

do not defer to its legal conclusions. See id. § 17A.19(10)(c), (11)(b); Ramirez-

Trujillo v. Quality Egg, L.L.C., 878 N.W.2d 759, 769 (Iowa 2016) (“The legislature

has not expressly vested the workers’ compensation commissioner with the

authority to interpret the workers’ compensation statutes in chapter 85.”). 4

On questions of fact, we look only for substantial evidence. See Iowa Code

§ 17A.19(10)(f); Meyer v. IBP, Inc., 710 N.W.2d 213, 218 (Iowa 2006).

“Substantial evidence” is “the quantity and quality of evidence that would be

deemed sufficient by a neutral, detached, and reasonable person, to establish the

fact at issue when the consequences resulting from the establishment of that fact

are understood to be serious and of great importance.” Iowa Code

§ 17A.19(10)(f)(1).

III. Discussion

Moran argues that she was entitled to penalty and temporary total benefits

after her designated end date because she wanted to keep working and attempted

to withdraw or rescind her resignation. Temporary benefits are governed by Iowa

Code section 85.33. Under that section, an injured employee is disqualified “from

receiving temporary partial, temporary total, and healing period benefits if the

employer offers ‘suitable work’ that the employee refuses.” Neal v. Annett

Holdings, Inc., 814 N.W.2d 512, 519 (Iowa 2012) (citations omitted); Iowa Code

§ 85.33(3)(a).

We find Schutjer v. Algona Manor Care Center, 780 N.W.2d 549 (Iowa

2010), dictates the outcome here. On the facts, the Schutjer court found an

employee who announced “I’m leaving, I quit,” after her work-related injury was not

eligible for temporary benefits. 780 N.W.2d at 553, 558–59. On the law, the

Schutjer court clarified that the relevant inquiry is (1) whether the employee was

offered suitable work, and (2) whether the employee refused the suitable work. Id.

at 559. The Schutjer court then held the second prong can be met through a 5

voluntary quit. Id. (finding a voluntary quit was a refusal to work “on that date and

any future date”).

We conclude, on the facts here and applying the law set forth in Schutjer,

that Prairie View offered Moran suitable light work for the duration of her

employment up to the effective date of her voluntary quit. See id. The district court

correctly determined Moran was not owed temporary total benefits.

At first blush, Moran’s attempt to rescind her resignation appears to be a

thorny factual question. But the law is clear. As we have recognized in a published

decision,

An attempt to withdraw the resignation prior to [the effective] date is a request for reemployment. The employer may choose to return to status quo by rehiring the employee, or accepting a retraction of the notice. However, the employer is not required to accept the employee’s request to withdraw her resignation.

Langley v. Emp. Appeal Bd., 490 N.W.2d 300, 303 (Iowa Ct. App. 1992) (citations

and quotation marks omitted).

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