Robinett v. Enserch Alaska Construction

804 P.2d 725, 1990 Alas. LEXIS 130
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1990
DocketS-3438
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 804 P.2d 725 (Robinett v. Enserch Alaska Construction) 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
Robinett v. Enserch Alaska Construction, 804 P.2d 725, 1990 Alas. LEXIS 130 (Ala. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION.

Oliver Robinett appeals the decision of the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (“Board”), affirmed by the superior court, denying his claim for a back injury allegedly suffered in October 1986 while working for Enserch Alaska Construction (“En-serch”). We reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS.

The relevant facts are not in controversy. Oliver Robinett has a long history of work related back injuries resulting from accidents in the heavy construction industry. Robinett first injured his back while working as a heavy equipment operator in Arizona in 1973, “and was hospitalized due to total inability to work.” 1 A myelogram *726 and an electro-myography preceded major back surgery; Robinett was then restricted to light work. Robinett, however, did not work for the next four years; he endured a second back surgery (again preceded by a myelogram) and received workers’ compensation benefits during that time.

In 1977, Robinett returned to work. He was hit by a falling log in Idaho in June 1979 and was hospitalized with broken ribs and a bruised kidney. Robinett returned to logging work in August 1979, but reinjured his back in a fall in July 1980. Robinett thereafter suffered increasing back and related leg pain, ceased working, received treatment, therapy, and x-rays, and finally underwent a third back surgery in July 1981.

In September 1982, Robinett was released for light to medium work with a rating of 20-25% permanent back disability. He settled his claim for the 1980 injury in November 1982, and then “ran his own business from 1983 until 1985, by renting and operating his own equipment as a contractor for other loggers.” In 1985, Robi-nett moved to Homer and engaged in “light work” as an operator and mechanic for Dietz Construction. In July 1986, Enserch hired Robinett to operate a bulldozer on the Bradley Lake Project near Homer.

“At the time of hire” by Enserch, Robi-nett “was asked to complete Enserch’s pre-placement Medical Questionnaire,” designed in part to elicit information about past employment related injuries. Robinett answered six of the seven questions. He disclosed only the first of his three back surgeries, omitted mentioning any “previous hospitalizations,” denied having “ever had any limitations put on [his] physical activities because of illness or injury,” and did not state whether he had “ever had a disability claim for health reasons.” The record discloses no follow-up inquiries by Enserch.

Robinett worked for Enserch for three months without apparent incident. On or about October 1986, however, Robinett began operating a bulldozer in a rock quarry. Robinett soon began to notice low back pain and “had to quit the dozer” after only two full days work in the quarry. Two of Robinett’s co-workers testified that Robi-nett informed them of his injury at the time he was hurt, and that they observed him “drag[ging] his legs” and walking “funny.” Robinett testified “that he told the three foremen on the job about the injury ... and was never asked to fill out a notice of occupation injury.”

Robinett ceased working in the quarry after the onset of pain, but continued to work for Enserch on a grader until he was laid off in late October due to a reduction in force. Robinett then left Alaska for Arizona where he was again hired by En-serch as an equipment operator. Robinett returned to Alaska, however, shortly thereafter. On December 16, 1986,. he telephoned Enserch’s Anchorage office to make a claim for a work-related injury. 2 *727 Robinett filed a claim adjustment application on February 19, 1987.

The Board denied Robinett’s claim in September 1987. The Board determined that because Robinett made false statements in his preemployment questionnaire, Robinett was “not actually an employee of Enserch” for purposes of the Workers’ Compensation Act. In the alternative, the Board concluded that the presumption of compensability did not apply to Robinett’s claim of work related injury. It found no medical evidence of reinjury attributable to Robinett’s work in Alaska and declared Ro-binett’s own testimony “not credible.” 3 The Board further discounted the testimony of Robinett’s co-workers “because neither of them personally observed [Robi-nett] being injured. All they could attest to was what Robinett had related to them.” The superior court affirmed the Board’s denial of benefits solely on the ground that Robinett’s alleged misrepresentations on Enserch’s employment questionnaire precluded him from claiming employee benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act.

III. DISCUSSION.

A. The Larson Test.

In rejecting Robinett’s claim, the Board relied upon the “Larson test” for analyzing employee responses to employer questionnaires. 4 The “Larson test” provides that an employee’s knowing and willful false representation of his or her physical condition may bar recovery of statutory workers’ compensation. 5 The test has essentially been codified in AS 23.30.022, which provides,

An employee who knowingly makes a false statement as to the employee’s physical condition on an employment application or preemployment questionnaire may not receive benefits under this chapter if
(1) the employer relied upon the false representation and this reliance was a substantial factor in the hiring; and
(2) there was a causal connection between the false representation and the injury to the employee.

*728 Alaska Statute 23.30.022, however, does not apply to injuries suffered prior to July 1, 1988, see Ch. 79, §§ 5, 48, SLA 1988, and we find no express statutory provision in the pre-July 1988 Alaska Workers’ Compensation Act that precludes benefits for false misrepresentation. We therefore decline to infer that the legislature intended Robinett’s intentional misrepresentation to disqualify his claim for an injury allegedly suffered in 1986. 6

B. The Preliminary Link.

Alaska Statute 23.30.120(1) provides, in relevant part,

In a proceeding for the enforcement of a claim for compensation under this chapter it is presumed, in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary, that (1) the claim comes within the provision of this chapter[.]

In deciding whether to apply the presumption, the Board must determine whether the employee has established some “preliminary link” between the alleged disability and the employment. See, e.g., Burgess Const. Co. v. Smallwood, 623 P.2d 312

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804 P.2d 725, 1990 Alas. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinett-v-enserch-alaska-construction-alaska-1990.