Robles v. Providence Hospital

988 P.2d 592, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 129, 1999 WL 743992
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1999
DocketS-8543
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 988 P.2d 592 (Robles v. Providence Hospital) 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
Robles v. Providence Hospital, 988 P.2d 592, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 129, 1999 WL 743992 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Margarita Robles petitioned this court to vacate the superior court’s second remand of her case to the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board. Because the Board properly interpreted and acted upon the original remand, we vacate the superior court’s second remand order.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Factual Background

Margarita Robles is a 60-year-old former employee of Providence Hospital (Providence) in Anchorage. Robles ceased her education at the eighth grade. She began working at Providence in 1970 as a nurse’s assistant. She was promoted after approximately twelve years to a sterile processing technician position, a job which she held until December 1992. At that time her physician, Dr. McGuire, determined that her knees were degenerating and that the job requirements had become too physically demanding for her.

Robles has suffered two separate knee injuries, one to each knee. The first was an on-the-job injury in 1989 and required surgery. The second occurred off the job in 1992. Robles sought treatment from Dr. David McGuire for both injuries. While treating the latter, Dr. McGuire determined that Robles was experiencing “considerable pain in both legs.” On November 10, 1992, Dr. McGuire informed Providence that Robles “must have a job that requires minimum walking and standing.” To meet this requirement, Dr. McGuire recommended to Providence that Robles change her occupation.

On December 21, 1992, Robles met with Providence representatives who informed her that as of that day she was removed from her job. They further informed her that she had ninety days to secure another position within the hospital or she “might be” terminated. This meeting was memorialized in a letter to Robles dated December 24,1992.

On January 26, 1993, Robles filed a request for a reemployment benefit evaluation, based on her 1989 on-the-job knee injury, pursuant to AS 23.30.041. 1

Providence offered Robles a temporary job in its Vocational Evaluation Program on February 12, 1993. Robles accepted the offer. Providence later said she was able to perform the sedentary non-skilled tasks assigned to her, such as filing and assembling notebooks.

Aetna, Providence’s insurer, controverted Robles’s claim for reemployment benefits, asserting that her current problems in both knees were a result of her 1992 non-work-related injury.

On April 8, 1993, Robles filed an application for various other workers’ compensation benefits. Aetna/Providence also controverted all of these claims.

Robles was deemed eligible for reemployment benefits by a rehabilitation specialist on July 6,1993.

On July 14, 1993, Robles was examined by Dr. Shawn Hadley at the request of Aet-na/Providence. Dr. Hadley determined that Robles suffered from degenerative joint disease in both knees, a condition that Dr. Had-ley said would worsen with time. Like Dr. McGuire, Dr. Hadley cleared Robles for sedentary work.

Robles met again with Providence representatives on July 29, 1993. This meeting was memorialized in a letter which informed her:

*594 At the present time we are unable to continue your placement for task work which we have accommodated since February 1993. We have also been unsuccessful in locating a position for you based on your current skills, work experience and physical capacities. Therefore, we will not be assigning you to any other tasks effective Monday, August 2,1993.

Robles was also notified that she had three options available to her. First, she could elect to participate in a reemployment plan. Under this option, Providence would place Robles on an “Educational Leave of Absence for up to one year.” Upon completion of the reemployment plan, Robles would “be eligible to apply for transfers to available positions for which [she was] qualified.” Under this option, if Robles did not complete her program in less than one year, she would be ineligible to apply for other jobs at Providence as a current employee. At the time this option was presented to Robles, Providence was undergoing a “large layoff.”

Second, Robles could opt to apply for Long Term Disability (LTD). Providence explained to her that “[i]f you elect Long Term Disability please be advised that the waiting period for benefits may be six months and the usual requirement is that you are unable to work.” Under this option, Robles would have no income for six months, after which time she would likely be denied the benefit since she was able to work and had been doing so until Providence ran out of “task work” for her.

It should be noted that Aetna has historically used this “unable to work” language in its LTD policies. 2 However, it is undisputed that this language cannot be applied literally. 3 Aetna has conceded that “unable to work” does not mean unable to work at any gainful employment. 4 But it is doubtful that Robles understood this distinction when making her decision of which of the three options to choose.

The third option Providence presented to Robles was early retirement. Providence informed her that “[a] review of the records indicates you are eligible at the present time. If you elect early retirement the approximate monthly benefit is $294.92.” Robles chose this option.

A prehearing conference for Robles’s various workers’ compensation claims was held on October 21, 1993. At that conference, Robles — now unemployed/retired — added a claim for permanent total disability benefits (PTD) under AS 23.30.180. 5 Aetna/Provi-dence controverted this claim as well.

B. Procedural Background

The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board heard Robles’s case on January 19, 1994 and issued an order denying all of her claims on March 21, 1994. The Board found that the “presumption of compensability attaches to [Robles’s] claim for PTD benefits.” Once an employee is presumed compensable, this court has found that “the law presumes that the employee remains disabled unless and *595 until the employer introduces substantial evidence to the contrary.” 6

The Board further found that Aetna/Provi-dence had come forward with substantial evidence to rebut the presumption. The evidence the Board cited was:

Dr. McGuire, her treating physician and surgeon, and Dr. Hadley [Aetna’s doctor] have stated in no uncertain terms that Robles is physically capable of doing sedentary work. The only thing holding her back was the need for retraining. Further, it is undisputed that she had the physical capacity to work eight hours a-day, five days a week in the employer’s office from February through July 1993.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 P.2d 592, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 129, 1999 WL 743992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robles-v-providence-hospital-alaska-1999.