Reforestation General Contractors, Inc. v. Filings of the National Council on Compensation Insurance

872 P.2d 423, 127 Or. App. 153, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 30, 1994
Docket90-03-030; CA A71621
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 872 P.2d 423 (Reforestation General Contractors, Inc. v. Filings of the National Council on Compensation Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reforestation General Contractors, Inc. v. Filings of the National Council on Compensation Insurance, 872 P.2d 423, 127 Or. App. 153, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 420 (Or. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*155 DEITS, P. J.

Petitioner seeks review of a Department of Insurance and Finance (DIF) amended final order requiring petitioner to pay additional workers’ compensation premiums to its carrier, SAIF, for the audit period of July 1,1987 to June 30, 1988. At issue are SAIF’s reclassification of two employees for purposes of determining premium rates and the determination that three other individuals were subject workers.

During the disputed audit period, petitioner was a forest management consultant that provided reforestation and logging consultation services to landowners. For logging consultations, the type of work at issue in this audit, petitioner contracted with forest property owners to develop and administer forest management plans. Once the plans were approved, petitioner selected a logger to carry out the logging operations. Petitioner, the landowner and the logger then entered into a written contract to complete the described job. Petitioner’s contractual obligations included performing certain forest management consultations, ensuring the logger’s performance and receiving and disbursing funds.

During the period in dispute, petitioner employed Johnson, as vice-president, and Schuette. Much of Johnson’s work was performed in an office. His duties included locating tree seedlings for purchase, approving expenditures and signing checks, and reviewing accounting results and contracts. Some of Johnson’s work, however, was performed outside of the office, including travel to and from job sites, timber cruising, installing road and property boundaries, administering the logging contracts 1 and picking up log scaling tickets from loggers on the job sites. Schuette’s office duties included accounting and record-keeping, performing timber cruise calculations, reviewing forest management appraisal data *156 and telephoning potential clients and subcontractors. His field duties were similar to those of Johnson.

In May, 1981, petitioner applied to SAIF for workers’ compensation insurance coverage and for personal election coverage for Johnson, a corporate officer. In its application, petitioner described the nature of its business as “forest management services.” In a telephone conversation with a representative of SAIF regarding Johnson’s application for personal election coverage, Johnson described the business as a “service organization” that “develop[ed] contractor arrangement[s] [and did] consulting work.” The SAIF representative’s notes from that conversation specify that “subcontractors” did the actual reforestation work. Apparently, no mention was made of logging operations. In Johnson’s application for coverage, he described himself as an ‘ ‘administrative and field representative for contacting clients and prospective clients [;] considerable vehicle travel and service sales.”

To determine an appropriate workers’ compensation premium rate to be paid by an insured, SAIF uses the business classifications and rates of the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), a licensed rating organization for workers’ compensation insurance. NCCI’s classifications and rates have been filed with and approved by DIF, to determine the premiums that SAIF charges individual businesses. See OAR 836-42-020; OAR 836-42-045. NCCI’s classifications are included in its publication entitled Scopes of Basic Manual Classifications (Scopes Manual). NCCI also publishes Basic Manual of Workers’ Compensation and Employers Liability (Basic Manual), which includes rules that guide NCCI’s interpretation and application of the classifications. Douglas Co. Farmer’s v. Natl. Council on Comp. Iris., 119 Or App 69, 849 P2d 1144 (1993).

Based on the information provided by petitioner, SAIF assigned Code 0124: Reforestation 2 and Code 8742: Outside Salespersons 3 to petitioner’s business and Code 8742 *157 to Johnson for his personal election coverage. Petitioner did not challenge either of the classifications at that time. See ORS 737.505. From the inception of the policy, petitioner reported Schuette’s and Johnson’s payroll to SAIF under Code 8742.

During the period in dispute, Johnson filed two injury claims for separate injuries that he sustained while doing field work. 4 The information contained in the claims alerted SAIF to the possibility of changes in petitioner’s business and provided the basis for an audit. As a result of the audit, SAIF transferred all payroll petitioner had reported in Code 8742 to Code 2702: Logging, and billed petitioner additional premiums for the revised classification. 5 SAIF also determined that three loggers, Blehm Logging Co. (Blehm), Forest Development Co. (Forest) and S. James Peterson Logging (Peterson), were subject workers and not independent contractors. As a result of the audit, SAIF billed petitioner for premiums owed for the loggers under Code 2702. Petitioner seeks judicial review of DIF’s amended final order upholding the results of the premium audit.

Before reaching the merits of petitioner’s challenges, we address SAIF’s argument that petitioner has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies. SAIF contends that ORS 183.460 and OAR 137-03-060(2) require a party in a premium audit appeal to file exceptions to a hearings officer’s proposed order. It argues that, by failing to do so, petitioner is precluded from seeking judicial review of those parts of the *158 final order that were incorporated, without modification, from the proposed order.

ORS 183.460 provides: 6

“Whenever in a contested case a majority of the officials of the agency who are to render the final order have not heard the case or considered the record, the order, if adverse to a party other them the agency itself, shall not be made until a proposed order, including findings of fact and conclusions of law, has been served upon the parties and an opportunity has been afforded to each party adversely affected to file exceptions and present argument to the officials who are to render the decision.”

OAR 137-03-060(2) provides, in part: 7

“When the agency serves a proposed order on the parties, the agency shall at the same time or at a later date notify the parties:
“(a) When written exceptions must be filed to be considered by the agency; and
“(b) When and in what form argument may be made to the officials who will render the final order.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
872 P.2d 423, 127 Or. App. 153, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reforestation-general-contractors-inc-v-filings-of-the-national-council-orctapp-1994.