SAIF Corporation v. Eller

74 P.3d 1093, 189 Or. App. 113, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1028
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 6, 2003
DocketH00-117; A116500
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 74 P.3d 1093 (SAIF Corporation v. Eller) 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 Corporation v. Eller, 74 P.3d 1093, 189 Or. App. 113, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1028 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*115 BREWER, J.

In this medical fee dispute arising out of a workers’ compensation claim, petitioners SAIF Corporation and its insured, Miller Timber Services, Inc. (Miller), 1 seek judicial review of a final order of the Department of Consumer and Business Services (DCBS), Workers’ Compensation Division (WCD or the division). In that order, DCBS concluded that the services of a nonlicensed surgical assistant, Inez Eller, were reimbursable. SAIF makes both a procedural and a substantive challenge to the order, the first relating to the authority of a WCD employee to file exceptions to the hearing officer’s proposed order and the second relating to DCBS’s conclusion that Eller was entitled to reimbursement. We affirm.

We take the undisputed facts from DCBS’s final order and the record. On November 2,1998, claimant, Ernest Lloyd, suffered a compensable right knee injury while working for Miller. SAIF, on behalf of Miller, accepted the injury and several conditions that resulted from it. On May 22, 2000, Dr. Walton performed a compensable surgery to repair claimant’s right knee. Eller assisted in the surgery under the direct supervision and control of Walton. Eller was certified as a Surgical Technologist/First Assistant (CFA) by the Liaison Council on Certification for the Surgical Technologist. However, the State of Oregon does not require licensing of CFAs, and Eller was not licensed to provide medical services. Eller was not employed or paid by the hospital where the surgery was performed or by Walton. Eller billed SAIF for her services in the amount of $374. SAIF declined to reimburse Eller.

Eller sought administrative review of SAIF’s disal-lowance of her bill. The Medical Review Unit (MRU) of WCD reviewed the matter and, on November 9, 2000, it issued an administrative order directing SAIF to reimburse Eller. SAIF requested a contested case hearing on the dispute. On February 27, 2001, a telephonic hearing was held before a hearing officer assigned from the Hearing Officer Panel. See *116 Or Laws 1999, ch 849. On March 16, the hearing officer issued a proposed order in which he concluded that, under the division’s administrative rules pertaining to categories of services eligible for reimbursement, Eller was not entitled to reimbursement. Consistently with OAR 137-003-0650(2) and OAR 436-001-0275(1) and (2), 2 the proposed order notified the parties that, “[i]f no exceptions are filed, this order shall become final upon expiration of 30 days following the date of service on the parties.”

On April 10, 2001, the manager of WCD’s Dispute Resolution Section (DRS) sent a memorandum to the director of DCBS, stating that she was “filing exceptions” to the hearing officer’s proposed order and asserting that the hearing officer erred in various respects in interpreting and applying the relevant administrative rules pertaining to reimbursement for medical services. DCBS notified SAIF and other participants in the matter that WCD’s “exceptions” had been filed in a timely manner and that responses were due by a specified date. On April 25, 2001, SAIF responded by letter, disputing WCD’s interpretation and application of the relevant rules. Approximately three months later, in July 2001, SAIF moved to dismiss WCD’s “exceptions” on the ground that the DRS manager “lack[ed] standing to file exceptions” to the proposed order and that “only the Assistant Attorney General can file such exceptions in this case.”

On September 21, 2001, DCBS, through the WCD administrator, issued a final order in the case. As pertinent here, DCBS denied SAIF’s motion to dismiss WCD’s exceptions to the proposed order, concluding that the DRS manager was authorized to file the exceptions in her capacity as the authorized agency representative in the proceeding under ORS 183.452 and OAR 436-001-0030 and under the model rule providing for filing exceptions to proposed orders, OAR 137-003-0650. On the merits, DCBS concluded that Eller’s services were reimbursable.

In its first assignment of error on judicial review, SAIF asserts that DCBS erred in denying its motion to dismiss the DRS manager’s “exceptions” to the hearing officer’s *117 proposed order and, relatedly, in modifying the hearing officer’s proposed order in response to those exceptions. SAIF contends that the division, through the DRS manager, was not authorized to file exceptions because it was not a “party” to the proceeding and because the proposed order was not “adverse” to the agency, within the meaning of the quoted terms in OAR 137-003-00650(1). SAIF reasons that, under ORS 183.464, because no valid timely exceptions were taken, the proposed order became the final order 30 days after it was served. 3

DCBS responds that it properly denied SAIF’s motion to dismiss the manager’s “exceptions” to the proposed order because those “exceptions” were authorized under OAR 137-003-0650(4), providing that “[a]gency staff may comment to the agency * * * on the proposed order, and the agency * * * may consider such comments,” subject to rules relating to ex parte communications with, respectively, a hearing officer and an agency. At oral argument, DCBS postulated that the division also was authorized to file exceptions under OAR 137-003-0650(1), because a proposed order is “adverse” to an agency when it is inconsistent with the agency’s view of the proper analysis or outcome in the proceeding. Finally, DCBS argues that, even in instances in which no exceptions are filed, an agency is authorized to modify a hearing officer’s proposed order under OAR 137-003-0655. 4

*118 SAIF replies that DCBS cannot rely on the subsection of OAR 137-003-0650 providing for submission of comments by agency staff because, as a factual matter, the DRS manager herself and the division expressly treated the manager’s submissions as “exceptions” and because substantial evidence supports that factual “finding.” It also contends that, consistently with OAR 137-003-0655, DCBS lacked authority to issue a final order unless a party—not agency staff—has filed exceptions, or unless the order was adverse to the agency.

Although DCBS does not contend that SAIF failed to preserve its first assignment of error, we nevertheless are obligated to consider that question. State v. Wyatt, 331 Or 335, 346-47, 15 P3d 22 (2000); Peiffer v. Hoyt, 186 Or App 485, 490 n 4, 63 P3d 1273 (2003). In its motion to dismiss the DRS manager’s exceptions, SAIF argued that she “lacked standing” to file exceptions to the proposed order and that only an assistant attorney general was authorized to file exceptions. In particular, SAIF argued that, consistently with ORS 183.452

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P.3d 1093, 189 Or. App. 113, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saif-corporation-v-eller-orctapp-2003.