Samman v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund

2001 OK 71, 33 P.3d 302, 72 O.B.A.J. 2703, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 85, 2001 WL 1104458
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 2001
Docket94,807
StatusPublished
Cited by160 cases

This text of 2001 OK 71 (Samman v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samman v. Multiple Injury Trust Fund, 2001 OK 71, 33 P.3d 302, 72 O.B.A.J. 2703, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 85, 2001 WL 1104458 (Okla. 2001).

Opinion

LAVENDER, J.

{1 To resolve today's cause the Court must ascertain whether the trial judge in her October 10, 1996 order which established liability against respondent, the Special Indemnity Fund [now the Multiple Injury Trust Fund (Fund) ], exceeded the Workers' Compensation Court's [WCC] jurisdiction because her order provided that permanent total disability [PTD] payments due Larry Samman [claimant or Samman] would acerue from the order's filing date rather than the date the employer concluded making permanent partial disability [PPD] payments to the claimant. We hold the trial judge was correct when (by a May 26, 2000 order) she decided the October 1996 order-to the extent that it expanded the Fund's liability for PTD-was facially void under the terms of 85 0.8.1991 § 172 1 and the criteria enunciated in Stidham v. Special Indemmity Fumd, 2000 OK 33, ¶ 7, 10 P.3d 880, 883-884. We also hold the May 2000 WCC order should not have been vacated by the Court of Civil Appeals [COCA].

I

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

T2 The parties do not contest that as of April 25, 1990 Samman had suffered 28.90% PPD to the body as a whole as a result of an on-the-job injury. When he suffered a later work-related injury in August 1992 while apparently working for another employer, claimant by virtue of his previous work-related injury was a "physically-impaired person" under the provisions of the Special Indemnity Fund Act. 2 It is also uncontested that by reason of his 1992 injury Samman sustained 60.8% PPD. In response to the second injury the WCC (on September 25, 1995) awarded Samman 312 weeks of PPD at a rate of $185.00 per week, payable by the second employer or its insurer.

13 On October 10, 1996 the WCC determined that as a consequence of the two injuries Samman is permanently and totally disabled. The October 1996 order awarded him PTD of $185.00 per week for five years or until he reached the age of sixty-five (65) years whichever is longer. The order further provides:

"THAT beginning with the date of filing of this Order, respondent [Fund] is ordered to pay compensation to claimant at the rate of $185.00 per week as stated in the above paragraph (less attorney fee)." [Emphasis added.]

It is what legal effect should be accorded the italicized language which is at the heart of today's appeal.

T4 In 2000 Samman sought to have Fund pay him (in a lump sum) an amount equal to the ordered PTD rate times the number of weeks for which his second employer paid him PPD after the October 10, 1996 order's filing. This sum, he argued, was to be in addition to, and not in diminution of, the weekly payments which he was to receive for PTD after his second employer made its final PPD payment. Samman reasoned that he was entitled to the acerued lump sum under the terms of 85 O.S.Supp.1999 § 172 (B). 3 *305 Neither party disputes that the Fund is statutorily precluded from making PTD payments until after Samman's last employer makes its final PPD payment.

15 The WCC, in its May 2000 order, rejected claimant's argument(s) and found that the October 1996 order was facially void to the extent it (a) required accrual of PTD payments from its filing date to the date when the second employer or its insurer concluded making PPD payments and (b) could be construed to mandate a lump-sum payment of the same. Samman appealed.

T6 The COCA vacated the WCC's May 2000 order. In so doing it held: (1) 85 0.8.8upp.1999 § 178 (B) authorizes accrual of PTD payments from the time a claimant is adjudicated totally disabled until the final PPD payment is received from the last employer; (2) the 1999 amended version of § 172, rather than changing 85 0.8.1991 § 178 (B)(the effective provision on the date of Samman's August 1992 injury), merely clarifies earlier law and henee should be retroactively applied; and (8) that the accrued amount is due claimant immediately after the final PPD payment by the second employer or its insurer.

T7 Fund then sought certiorari which was granted.

II

STANDARD OF REVIEW

%$8 In the instant cause the Court is called upon to assess whether the WCC's jurisdiction was properly invoked to determine if the October 1996 order's terms comported with then applicable statutory standards or were facially void. Today's case involves the WCC's jurisdictional boundaries when it considers the Fund's liability to a claimant and, necessarily, implicates statutory interpretation because the Fund's lability is legislatively set. The standard of review employed when jurisdiction is in question was succinetly stated in Stidham, supro, as follows: "[olnee an issue is identified as jurisdictional, it calls for a de novo review. 4 Statutory interpretation, involving a question of law, also demands a de novo review standard. 5 This Court has plenary, independent and non-deferential authority to examine a trial court's legal rulings. 6

III

THE TRIAL COURT'S OCTOBER 10, 1996 ORDER IS FACIALLY VOID INSOFAR AS IT EXPANDS THE FUNDS LIABILITY TO PAY PTD BEYOND WHAT WAS STATUTORILY MANDATED AT THE TIME OF THE CLAIMANT'S LAST - COMPENSA-BLE INJURY

19 Samman-by way of a March 8, 2000 Form 13-sought an order requiring Fund to pay him an amount equal to $185.00 (his weekly PTD rate) times the number of weeks which had elapsed between October 10, 1996 and February 2000 (the month dur *306 ing which he received his last PPD payment from his employer). Fund made no PTD payments to him for this time period. Claimant's quest for additional monies was denied when the WCC ruled in May 2000 that the provision in its earlier order (requiring PTD payments to begin on the date the order was filed) was void as it did not comport with the Fund's statute-made liability as of the time of the claimant's last compensable injury. 7 Samman mistakenly relies upon the rule adopted in Ferguson v. Ferguson Motor Co., 1988 OK 137, 766 P.2d 335, to support his position that the October 10, 1996 order was not subject to collateral attack since Fund did not timely bring an appeal from its terms. Ferguson holds that an erroneous finding in a WCC's order that is not detectable from the decision's four corners is safe from collateral vacatur when a timely appeal has not been sought. Here, the complained-of error is facially apparent upon an inspection of the WCC proceedings, i.e., observable in the order's enunciated terms when viewed in conjunction with the entire WCC record of the proceedings (the functional equivalent of a district-court judgment roll).

110 The Stidham analysis 8 is conclusive of the issue whether the WCC had jurisdiction to enter its May 2000 order which ruled the earlier (October 1996) order was facially void to the extent that it provided that PTD payments were to begin upon the memorial's filing.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 OK 71, 33 P.3d 302, 72 O.B.A.J. 2703, 2001 Okla. LEXIS 85, 2001 WL 1104458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samman-v-multiple-injury-trust-fund-okla-2001.