Puckett v. NORANDAL USA, INC.

710 S.E.2d 356, 211 N.C. App. 565, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 842
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMay 3, 2011
DocketCOA10-805
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 710 S.E.2d 356 (Puckett v. NORANDAL USA, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Puckett v. NORANDAL USA, INC., 710 S.E.2d 356, 211 N.C. App. 565, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 842 (N.C. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ERVIN, Judge.

*566 Plaintiff Derwood Sink Puckett appeals from an Opinion and Award entered by the Industrial Commission denying Plaintiffs motion to have the accrued interest relating to his workers’ compensation benefits calculated from 1 March 2004 instead of from 1 May 2006. On appeal, Plaintiff argues that a hearing held on 1 March 2004 should be treated as the initial hearing held with respect to his workers’ compensation claim for interest-related purposes, so that the amount of interest accrued with respect to his award should be calculated from that date. After careful consideration of Plaintiff’s challenge to the Commission’s decision in light of the record and the applicable law, we conclude that Plaintiff’s argument has merit, that the Commission’s order should be reversed, and that this matter should be remanded to the Commission for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

I. Factual Background

Defendant Norandal USA, Inc., owns and operates an aluminum plant located in Salisbury, North Carolina. Plaintiff worked for Defendant as a maintenance electrician from 1967 to 1998, and then returned to work at Defendant’s plant in 2000. On 18 June 2002, Plaintiff filed a claim alleging that he had been exposed to asbestos products while working for Defendant and that he was entitled to receive workers’ compensation benefits for asbestosis and asbestos-related pleural disease.

Plaintiff’s claim was initially pursued against four insurance carriers, each of whom had provided workers compensation coverage for Defendant during the period of Plaintiff’s employment — National Union Fire Insurance Company c/o GAB Robins of North America, Inc.; Argonaut Insurance Company; Royal Sun Alliance; and ACE USA/Cigna. Subsequently, the parties stipulated, with the approval of Deputy Commissioner George T. Glenn II, that Defendant ACE USA/Cigna would be responsible for providing any coverage relating to Plaintiff’s claim, leading Plaintiff to dismiss his claim as to National Union, Argonaut, and Royal Sun Alliance.

On 17 April 2003, Plaintiff filed a Form 33 requesting that his claim be assigned for hearing. ACE USA/Cigna filed a Form 61 denying the compensability of Plaintiff’s claim on 23 February 2004. On 23 February 2004, Plaintiff filed a motion requesting that Defendants’ defenses be stricken as a result of their failure to file a Form 61 within ninety days of the date upon which he filed his claim as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-18(d). On or around 25 February 2004, *567 Deputy Commissioner Glenn determined that, since Defendants “had not filed a Form 61 within 90 days of the initiation of [P]laintiff’s claim,” they were “barred . . . from disputing the compensability of [Plaintiffs] claim.”

Plaintiff’s claim came on for hearing before Deputy Commissioner Glenn on 1 March 2004. On 8 March 2005, Deputy Commissioner Glenn entered an Opinion and Award in which he found that neither Defendant had filed a Form 61 denying the compensability of Plaintiff’s claim in a timely manner, that Defendants had failed to properly respond to discovery, and that Plaintiff was entitled to receive workers’ compensation benefits on the grounds that he had established that he was disabled as the result of having contracted an occupational disease. As a result, Deputy Commissioner Glenn awarded Plaintiff compensation for injury to his lungs and pleura, increased this award by 10% because Plaintiff’s injury resulted from “the willful failure of the employer to comply with statutory requirement^],” and ordered Defendants to pay Plaintiff’s attorney’s fees on the grounds that the “defense of this matter was not based upon reasonable grounds but was based upon stubborn and unfounded litigiousness[.]”

Defendants appealed to the Commission from Deputy Commissioner Glenn’s order. On 12 September 2005, the Commission, by means of an order issued by Commissioner Christopher Scott with the concurrence of Chair Buck Lattimore and Commissioner Pamela T. Young, concluded that “[t]he appealing party has shown good ground to reconsider the evidence in this matterf;]” reversed the “verbal Order by Deputy Commissioner Glenn made on or about February 25, 2004[;]” vacated “the March 8, 2005, Opinion and Award of Deputy Commissioner Glenn[;]” and remanded “the matter ... to a deputy commissioner for a full evidentiary hearing on all of the issues in this matter.” Although Plaintiff noted an appeal to this Court from the Commission’s order, we dismissed his appeal as having been taken from an unappealable interlocutory order on 10 January 2006.

A consolidated hearing involving this and four other cases was held before Chief Deputy Commissioner Stephen T. Gheen beginning 1 May 2006. In an Opinion and Award filed 12 February 2008, Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen ruled that Plaintiff had developed asbestosis and asbestos-related pleural disease in the course of his employment with Defendant and was, for that reason, entitled to compensation in the amount of $20,000.00 per lung, medical expenses, and the “imposition of a 10% penalty for defendant’s willful *568 failure to comply with [OSHA] requirements for extended periods having known of the presence of asbestos that was a risk to the plaintiff and not eliminating plaintiffs exposure, by abatement or providing protective devices[.]” Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen did, however, reject Plaintiffs claim for attorney’s fees. Both parties appealed to the full Commission from Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen’s order. On December 2008, the Commission, by means of an Opinion and Award issued by Commissioner Christopher Scott with the concurrence of Chair Pamela T. Young and Commissioner Buck Lattimore, affirmed Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen’s order “with minor modifications.”

After the entry of the Commission’s order, Defendants sent Plaintiff a $44,000 check, with this amount consisting of the compensation award approved by the Commission plus the required 10% penalty, and another check for $9,479.89, which represented interest on the amount of the Commission’s award from 1 May 2006, the date of the hearing conducted by Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen. On 2 April 2009, Plaintiff filed a motion seeking the payment of additional interest covering the period between the date of the 1 March 2004 hearing before Deputy Commissioner Glenn and the 1 May 2006 hearing before Chief Deputy Commissioner Gheen and the payment of a 10% penalty as a sanction for Defendant’s failure to pay the entire amount due in a timely manner. In support of this motion, Plaintiff cited N.C. Gen. Stat. § 97-86.2, which provides, in pertinent part, that:

In any workers’ compensation case in which an order is issued either granting or denying an award to the employee and where there is an appeal resulting in an ultimate award to the employee, the insurance carrier or employer shall pay interest on the final award or unpaid portion thereof from the date of the initial hearing on the claim, until paid at the legal rate of interest provided in [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 24-1____

A hearing concerning Plaintiff’s motion was conducted before Deputy Commissioner Myra L. Griffin on 10 August 2009.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
710 S.E.2d 356, 211 N.C. App. 565, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puckett-v-norandal-usa-inc-ncctapp-2011.