SAIF Corp. v. Roles

826 P.2d 1039, 111 Or. App. 597, 1992 Ore. App. LEXIS 443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 26, 1992
Docket88-19267, 89-06314, 89-14455, 90-02445 CA A63713 (Control), CA A68593
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 826 P.2d 1039 (SAIF Corp. v. Roles) 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
SAIF Corp. v. Roles, 826 P.2d 1039, 111 Or. App. 597, 1992 Ore. App. LEXIS 443 (Or. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

*599 EDMONDS, J.

Claimant seeks review of two Workers’ Compensation Board orders that reversed referees’ orders awarding claimant temporary total disability benefits (TTD), attorney fees and penalties. We reverse.

Claimant compensably injured his left arm in June, 1980. The claim was closed by a 1982 determination order that awarded him permanent partial disability (PPD). Between 1983 and 1986, the claim was re-opened and re-closed four times. A February, 1984, order granted claimant additional PPD. Subsequent determination orders did not award any additional PPD, but did award him TTD from January 15, 1986, to March 3, 1986. Claimant’s requests for hearings on the determination orders were dismissed in September, 1987. After he had received vocational training, a November, 1986, determination order awarded no additional PPD. In March 1987, claimant underwent a surgical procedure, and that claim was closed in February, 1988, without an award of additional PPD.

The Board describes what happened next:

“On or about February 23, 1988, claimant requested a hearing contesting a February 17, 1988 Determination Order. At the hearing, claimant requested that Referee Michael Johnson set aside four prior Determination Orders, which issued February 8, 1984, February 16, 1984, April 26, 1985, and November 18, 1986. Johnson [set aside the orders and] ordered payment of over $10,000 in what he characterized as temporary total disability compensation [for the period of September 6, 1983, to November 2, 1987]. SAIF did not pay. Claimant requested a hearing, seeking enforcement of Johnson’s order. After a February 1989 hearing, Referee Harri ordered SAIF to pay the monies ordered by Johnson and assessed a 25 percent penalty and related attorney fee for SAIF’s failure to comply.
“SAIF did not pay. Claimant requested another hearing, seeking only penalties and related attorney fees. Referee Emerson awarded an additional 15 percent penalty and a related attorney fee for SAIF’s failure to comply with Harri’s enforcement order.
“SAIF still did not pay. Claimant requested a fourth hearing, seeking penalties and attorney fees for SAIF’s continued failure to comply with Harri’s order. Referee Podnar, *600 in WCB Case No. 89-14455, noted that Emerson had already penalized SAIF for refusing to comply with Harri’s order. Podnar also noted that the most recent order requiring payment of anything other than penalties and associated attorney fees was Harri’s. Podnar dismissed claimant’s request for a hearing, because he found no basis to award an additional or continuing penalty.”

Thereafter, SAIF requested board review of the orders issued by referees Johnson, Harri and Emerson and argued that Johnson did not have jurisdiction, because a timely request for hearing had not been made regarding the determination orders that Johnson had set aside. In its review of Johnson’s order, the Board concluded that Johnson had jurisdiction; however, it held for SAIF on the merits and reversed Johnson’s award of compensation. 1 On the same day, the Board affirmed Harri’s and Emerson’s orders, 2 except for the award of penalties. SAIF filed a petition for judicial review of Johnson’s order. Claimant moved to dismiss, and SAIF did not oppose the motion. We entered an order of dismissal in October, 1990.

In the meantime, SAIF continued to resist paying claimant TTD, so he sought yet another hearing regarding SAIF’s liability for penalties. In March, 1990, Referee Peterson concluded that, under the circumstances, it was not unreasonable for SAIF to refuse to pay TTD and entered an order dismissing the request for hearing.

SAIF sought judicial review of the Harri/Emerson order, which had adopted Johnson’s order for TTD. Claimant filed a cross-petition for judicial review but, before we rendered a decision, the Board withdrew its order. The Board then issued an order on reconsideration, in which it concluded that Johnson lacked jurisdiction to issue his order, because claimant’s requests for hearing were made more than a year after the determination orders that were the subject of the requests. Therefore, it held that Harri’s order requiring SAIF to pay TTD was void. It also said:

*601 “[E]ven if the issue were not ‘jurisdiction’ per se, Johnson lacked statutory authority to act. It is fundamental that an administrative agency does not have substantive authority beyond that delegated by the legislature. Former ORS 656.319(4) provides that a hearing ‘shall not be held’ if the request for hearing is not timely filed.”

On that basis, it concluded that SAIF had not unreasonably resisted the payment of compensation and that SAIF could not be held liable for attorney fees or penalties. On the same day, the Board issued its order regarding Podnar’s and Peterson’s orders 3 and affirmed the denial of additional attorney fees and penalties on the basis of the conclusion that Johnson’s order was void.

Claimant seeks judicial review of the Harri/Emerson order on reconsideration and the Podnar/Peterson order. He seeks reinstatement of Harri’s and Emerson’s orders and additional penalties and attorney fees for SAIF’s failure to pay the compensation ordered by Johnson. In the alternative, claimant argues that the Board erred in not ordering SAIF to pay him TTD while Johnson’s and Harri’s orders were pending on review. Claimant also seeks penalties and attorney fees in connection with those claims. SAIF argues that Johnson’s order was void for lack of jurisdiction, because the request for hearing was not timely filed. Therefore, according to SAIF, because the order was a nullity, it could not give rise to a duty to pay the compensation ordered by Johnson or to any subsequent duty to pay TTD.

Johnson’s order is not void for want of jurisdiction. A judgment is void only when the tribunal rendering it has no jurisdiction of the parties or the subject matter. Dolph v. Barney, 5 Or 191, 211 (1874), aff'd 97 US 652 (1878). Subject matter jurisdiction depends on whether the tribunal has the authority to make an inquiry. It exists when a statute authorizes the tribunal to do something about the dispute. See Callahan v. Employment Division, 97 Or App 234, 238, 776 P2d 21 (1989). Johnson had authority under ORS 656.708 4 *602 and ORS 656.704(3) 5 to decide the issue in dispute. Although the request for hearing was subject to denial as untimely under ORS 656.268

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
826 P.2d 1039, 111 Or. App. 597, 1992 Ore. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saif-corp-v-roles-orctapp-1992.