Sather v. Saif Corp.

347 P.3d 326, 357 Or. 122
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 2015
DocketAgency 10-01494; CA A149547; SC S062466
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 347 P.3d 326 (Sather v. Saif Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sather v. Saif Corp., 347 P.3d 326, 357 Or. 122 (Or. 2015).

Opinion

*124 BREWER, J.

The question before us in this workers’ compensation case is whether, under ORS 656.218(3) and (5), 1 claimant’s estate is authorized to pursue a request for hearing seeking an award of permanent partial disability (PPD) benefits that claimant filed before his death, when the cause of his death was unrelated to the work injury. The Court of Appeals held that claimant’s estate, through his personal representative, was not authorized to pursue the claim to final determination under ORS 656.218 (3) on the grounds that (1) the estate is not one of the “persons” described in ORS 656.218(5), and (2) the phrase “unpaid balance of the award” in the second sentence of subsection (5) restricts an estate’s entitlement to PPD benefits that were awarded before a worker’s death. Sather v. SAIF, 262 Or App 597, 325 P3d 819 (2014). The court therefore denied the motion for substitution and dismissed the petition for judicial review. We review those determinations for errors of law, ORS 183.482(8), and, for the reasons explained below, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand to that court for a determination of the merits of the petition for judicial review.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2009, claimant sought workers’ compensation benefits for a work-related injury. Before the date of his injury, claimant had preexisting multilevel degenerative disc disease and a history of intermittent low back pain with some bilateral radiation to his legs. SAIF, the employer’s workers’ compensation insurer, accepted a claim for a lumbar strain. Claimant subsequently sought acceptance of a combined condition, which SAIF ultimately denied on the ground that the accepted injury was no longer the major contributing cause of the combined condition. Claimant filed a request for hearing on the denial under ORS 656.283(1), which authorizes parties to file requests for hearings on matters concerning a claim. 2 The Workers’ *125 Compensation Board upheld SAIF’s denial, and claimant sought judicial review in the Court of Appeals. Before that court, claimant conceded that the accepted lumbar strain was no longer the cause of his combined condition. However, claimant contended that, in determining the compensa-bility of his claim, the board erroneously had framed the inquiry in terms of whether the accepted condition continued to be the major contributing cause of his disability or need for treatment. In claimant’s view, the proper inquiry was whether his accidental injury continued to be the major contributing cause of his combined condition. Claimant contended that there was no evidence that that injury was no longer the major contributing cause of his disability or need for treatment.

While judicial review was pending before the Court of Appeals, claimant died of causes unrelated to his workplace injury, without a surviving spouse or other beneficiary entitled to a death benefit under ORS 656.204. See also ORS 656.005(2) (defining “beneficiary” to mean “an injured worker, and the husband, wife, child or dependent of a worker, who is entitled to receive payments under this chapter”). After claimant’s death, SAIF moved to dismiss the petition for judicial review; in response, the personal representative of claimant’s estate sought to be substituted as the real party in interest for purposes of judicial review. SAIF objected to the proposed substitution on the ground that claimant’s estate is not a “person” entitled to pursue a claim under ORS 656.218(3).

As discussed, the Court of Appeals agreed with SAIF and dismissed the petition for judicial review. That court initially observed that, under the pre-2009 version of the statute, it had held in several cases that the persons entitled to pursue a claim under ORS 656.218(3) after a worker’s death were the same persons entitled to receive death benefits under ORS 656.204, and did not include the worker’s estate or personal representative. See, e.g., Cato v. Alcoa-Reynolds Metals Co., 210 Or App 721, 729-30, 152 P3d 981, rev den, 343 Or 115 (2007) (former ORS 656.218(3) and (5) limited the right to pursue a hearing after the death of a worker to persons entitled to death benefits under ORS 656.204).

*126 The Court of Appeals concluded that a 2009 amendment to ORS 656.218 did not fundamentally alter the analysis:

“[T]he only amendment of ORS 656.218 in 2009 was to subsection (5), by the replacement of the subsection’s former second sentence (Tn the absence of persons so entitled, a burial allowance may be paid not to exceed the lesser of either the unpaid award or the amount payable by ORS 656.204.’) with a new second sentence — Tn the absence of persons so entitled, the unpaid balance of the award shall be paid to the worker’s estate.’”

Sather, 262 Or App at 604. The court reasoned:

“ORS 656.218(3) continues to describe the persons who may pursue a claim as ‘the persons described in subsection (5).’ The first sentence of ORS 656.218(5) continues to state that the payments required by the statute are to be made to ‘the persons who would have been entitled to receive death benefits [.]’ The most straightforward reading of the text is that those are the ‘persons’ to whom ORS 656.218(3) refers, and they do not include the worker’s estate or personal representative.

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Related

Brown v. SAIF
Oregon Supreme Court, 2017
Brown v. SAIF Corp.
391 P.3d 773 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2017)
Sedgwick Claims Management Services v. Norwood
365 P.3d 671 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
Sather v. Saif Corp.
355 P.3d 196 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)
Sather v. SAIF
Oregon Supreme Court, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 P.3d 326, 357 Or. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sather-v-saif-corp-or-2015.