Pruitt v. Providence Extended Care

297 P.3d 891, 2013 WL 1279660, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 44
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
Docket6766 S-14687
StatusPublished

This text of 297 P.3d 891 (Pruitt v. Providence Extended Care) 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
Pruitt v. Providence Extended Care, 297 P.3d 891, 2013 WL 1279660, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 44 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

An employee filed an affidavit of readiness for hearing in her workers compensation case approximately four years after her employer filed a controversion of her written workers' compensation claim. The employer petitioned to dismiss her claim based on the statutory deadline for a hearing request in AS 23.30.110(c). After a hearing, the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board dismissed her claim, and the Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commission affirmed the Board's decision. Because the employee did not file a timely request for a hearing and was not excused from doing so, we affirm the Commission's decision.

II FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Brenda Pruitt worked as a licensed practical nurse at Providence Hospital in 2004. On March 10, 2004, Pruitt injured her back while pushing a medication cart. She had to turn the cart around to respond to a call, and in so doing, the cart got caught where the flooring changed from carpet to linoleum. When Pruitt tried to free the cart, she heard a popping sound and then felt pain in her left lower back.

Providence initially accepted the claim and paid disability benefits from April 17, 2004, through January 11, 2005. On February 2, 2005, it controverted temporary total disability (TTD), permanent partial impairment (PPI), reemployment, and medical benefits based on its doctor's opinion that Pruitt was medically stable and had no permanent impairment.

On February 8, 2005, an attorney filed a workers' compensation claim on Pruitt's behalf, seeking TTD, permanent total disability (PTD), further medical costs, a second independent medical evaluation (SIME), and attorney's fees and costs. Providence answered, denying all claims except the request for the SIME. Providence also filed a contr-oversion on February 10, 2005, which raised the same issues and controverted the same benefits as its earlier controversion.

Providence deposed Pruitt on April 7, 2005. During the course of the deposition, Providence produced a report of injury for Pruitt's similar on-the-job injury with a different employer. It also produced a copy of a medical history form Pruitt had completed in 2008, prior to beginning work at Providence. On that medical history form, Pruitt denied "experienc[ing] any health problems or injuries connected with [her] past jobs" or having "been under a doctor's care for back problems," and stated that she had never had an on-the-job injury. During her deposition, Pruitt testified that she had experienced an injury very similar to the one at Providence when she was working at the Fairbanks jail in 1995. She had also filed a stress-related workers' compensation claim when she worked at Bassett Community Hospital in Fairbanks. Pruitt was unsure whether she had filed another stress claim when she was working for a contractor at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center. She also testified that she hurt her back and knee in a slip-and-fall at a store in 1998.

Pruitt's attorney withdrew in May 2005, mailing a copy of the withdrawal notice to Pruitt on May 5, 2005. Pruitt later testified that the mailing address on the withdrawal notice's certificate of service was her mailing address in May 2005. On July 1, 2005, Providence filed another controversion notice, this time controverting all benefits, and it mailed the notice to Pruitt. The July controversion was based on AS 23.30.022 1 and on a supplemental report by Providence's doctor.

*893 A prehearing conference was held on February 8, 2006, which Pruitt attended by telephone. According to the prehearing conference summary, "[the chair directed Ms. Pruitt to call our office and make an appointment with a Workers' Compensation Technician for assistance in filing an [affidavit of readiness for hearing], if she decides that she wants to continue with the case." The summary also indicates that Pruitt was "reminded" that she had to file an affidavit requesting a hearing within the time limits set out in AS 28.30.110(c); the relevant part of the statute was included in the prehearing conference summary. 2 A copy of the summary was served on Pruitt on February 9, 2006. Pruitt did not file an affidavit of readiness for hearing at that time.

Pruitt left Alaska in 2007 and moved to Oklahoma. She received long-term disability from Providence, but in 2008, after a medical evaluator for the long-term disability insurance company reported that Pruitt's only disabling condition was depression, those benefits stopped. Pruitt filed a new application for workers' compensation benefits on August 7, 2009, making claims for all benefits. On August 26, she filed an affidavit of readiness for hearing for her February 8, 2005 workers' compensation claim. Providence filed a notice of controversion of the 2009 claim on September 2, 2009, raising a number of defenses, including the defense that the affidavit of readiness for hearing was untimely under AS 28.30.110(c). In October 2009 Providence filed a petition to dismiss the 2005 claim based on AS 28.30.110(c) and AS 28.30.022.

The Board held a hearing on the petition to dismiss. Pruitt represented herself and was the only witness. Providence argued that Pruitt's elaim should be dismissed under AS 28.30.110(c) because she failed to file anything within two years of the 2005 contr-oversions. It argued in the alternative that her claim should be barred because of her misleading answers on the 2008 employee health questionnaire.

Pruitt testified that she had not received the notice of withdrawal from her attorney, although she agreed that the address on the certificate of service was her mailing address in May 2005. She also testified that she was under the impression that her attorney would submit or had submitted the necessary paperwork for her claim. She did not remember the details of the February 2006 prehearing conference, nor did she remember getting a copy of the prehearing conference summary. Pruitt testified that she "didn't even think of" the fact that her attorney was not at the prehearing conference in 2006 and so did not realize then he was no longer representing her. She indicated that she had no contact with the attorney from the time she left Alaska until sometime in 2009, when she contacted him again. She allowed that she had frequently submitted copies of her medical records to Providence but explained that she was sending information to Providence in relation to her long-term disability claim rather than workers' compensation claims.

The Board dismissed Pruitt's claim pursuant to AS 28.30.110(c) and retained jurisdiction over a possible denial of benefits based on AS 28.30.022. The Board decided that Pruitt's statements at different times were inconsistent and not credible. It also found her statement that she did not understand the workers' compensation process to be not credible. And it found not credible her statements that she did not know her attorney had withdrawn until 2009 and that she did not know that she had to request a hearing within two years.

The Board decided that Pruitt had not "establish[ed] a legal exeuse" for failing to file a timely affidavit of readiness for hearing and found that the Board had met its duty to *894 inform Pruitt of the statutory deadline.

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Bluebook (online)
297 P.3d 891, 2013 WL 1279660, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pruitt-v-providence-extended-care-alaska-2013.