State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Compensation Division v. Brown

805 P.2d 830, 1991 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1991
DocketNo. 89-134
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 805 P.2d 830 (State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Compensation Division v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wyoming Workers' Compensation Division v. Brown, 805 P.2d 830, 1991 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1991).

Opinions

URBIGKIT, Chief Justice.

The Wyoming Worker’s Compensation Division appeals from a district court order restoring legal fees and costs billed by the attorney appointed to represent an injured worker. Counsel petitioned for review by the district court following an administrative hearing examiner’s reduction of her compensation by more than thirty-three percent and disallowance of about half of her costs. The immediate issue is whether a district court can hear an appeal from an order by an administrative hearing examiner and modify the order when the district court judge finds the amount awarded is unreasonable and is established by an improper legal standard within the worker’s compensation statutes, W.S. 27-14-101 through 27-14-805, and the state constitution.

The issues in this case involve the right of an injured worker to counsel when pitted against the private attorneys who represent the employer in conjunction with state employed attorneys in the Attorney General’s office who represent the Wyoming Workers’ Compensation Division. Also presented is the right of any attorney who represents the injured worker to be compensated fairly. Justification for the attorney fee reduction and cost denial came from the application of adopted rules supplemented by applied practice.

We affirm the district court.

I.ISSUES ARGUED

Appellant, Wyoming Workers’ Compensation Division (Division), asks whether the district court:

I. lack[ed] statutory authority and jurisdiction to enter an order awarding attorney fees for representation of appellee before the Office of Administrative Hearings.
II * * * err[ed] as a matter of law in holding a hearing and taking additional evidence regarding attorney fees for representation of appellee before the Office of Administrative Hearings.
III. * * * err[ed] as a matter of law by substituting its judgment on the amount of attorney’s fees and costs [] reasonably incurred in the representation of appellee before the Office of Administrative Hearings.
IV. * * * err[ed] as a matter of law by failing to follow W.S. 16-3-114(c) when entering its findings and order.

Appellee, James L. Brown (Brown), asks whether the district court:

1. * * * lack[ed] authority and jurisdiction to change the order of the Office of Administrative Hearings regarding the award of attorney fees and costs for representation of appellee?
2. * * * err[ed] as a matter of law in holding a hearing and taking additional evidence regarding attorney fees for representation of appellee before the Office of Administrative Hearings?
3. * * * after holding a hearing and taking additional evidence, err[ed] as a matter of law by entering an order directing the Workers’ Compensation Division to pay the amount of attorney fees and costs reasonably incurred in the representation of appellee before the Office of Administrative Hearings?
4. * * * err[ed] as a matter of law when omitting from its decision specific reference to one of the alternate legal conclusions set forth in section 16 — 3— 114(c) of Wyoming’s Administrative Procedure Act?

We address these issues within the substantive context presented of the injured worker’s right to competent counsel and the counsel’s right to reasonably adequate compensation for legal services.

[832]*832II. WHAT HAPPENED

Valerie Hafner Phifer (Phifer) was appointed in the summer of 1988 to represent an employee injured during the winter of 1986. The case was sufficiently difficult and complex to cause a prior attorney to withdraw prematurely. Pour months later, Phifer obtained an award of approximately $46,000 for her client. The injury claim, resulting from a motor vehicle accident, was settled with a stipulated sixty-five percent per annual total disability resulting from the initial head injury and succeeding vertigo and/or mental problems. Following settlement success, Phifer submitted a motion and billing for attorney fees of $1,533.50 and costs of $248.96 to the Office of Administrative Hearings. The administrative hearing officer’s order reduced her attorney fees to $1,000 and her costs to $167.07. The letter from the hearing examiner to Phifer explained the reduction in fees by stating that “Section 4, Rules of the Office of Administrative Hearings, Practices and Procedures in Contested Cases” requires legal fees over $1,000 to be approved in advance and that attorney’s costs for office copy machine charges and express mail costs are routinely denied.1

Phifer filed a motion for reconsideration. Neither a response to the motion for reconsideration nor a factual hearing was provided within the limited time available to request judicial review. Consequently, Phi-fer appealed to the district court where the reviewing court heard testimony from Phi-fer and another attorney, who routinely handles worker’s compensation cases, each claiming reduction error and unreasonableness of the allowance in this case for the [833]*833services furnished. Evidence presented to the district court included statements that the current amount of fees generally allowed in worker’s compensation cases are unreasonably low, so low in fact that a problem with broad implications is beginning to emerge in the shrinking pool of attorneys who can afford to represent injured wage earners.2 The district court order stated, however, that the court did not rely on that hearing testimony in making the decision as a conclusion of law rejecting reduction when there was no factual basis to determine that the fees billed by Phifer were not reasonable and necessary.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Judicial review of an agency action is directed by W.S. 16-3-114, under which 16-3-114(a) allows any person aggrieved or adversely affected in fact by the actions or inactions of an agency to obtain judicial review by the district court. “This court is governed by the same rules of review as was the district court.” Atchison v. Career Service Council of State of Wyoming, 664 P.2d 18, 20 (Wyo.), cert. denied 464 U.S. 982, 104 S.Ct. 424, 78 L.Ed.2d 359 (1983). See also Banda v. State ex rel. Wyoming Workers’ Compensation Div., 789 P.2d 124 (Wyo.1990). While this court typically remands an administrative decision back to the agency when that decision relies upon findings of fact, Cook v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment for the City of Laramie, 776 P.2d 181 (Wyo.1989); FMC v. Lane, 773 P.2d 163 (Wyo.1989), remand is not mandatory when the question before the district court or this court is a question of law or a mixed question of fact and law. Natrona County School Dist. No. 1 v. McKnight, 764 P.2d 1039, 1049 (Wyo.1988). The rationale underlying remand when findings of fact by an agency are involved is our reliance on the expertise of an agency. “[W]e have indicated we defer to the experience and expertise of the agency in its weighing of the evidence and will disturb its decisions only where it is clearly contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence on record.” Southwest Wyoming Rehabilitation Center v. Employment Sec. Com’n of Wyoming, 781 P.2d 918, 921 (Wyo.1989) (emphasis added) (accord Cody Gas Co. v. Public Service Com’n of Wyoming, 748 P.2d 1144, 1146 (Wyo.1988)).

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Bluebook (online)
805 P.2d 830, 1991 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wyoming-workers-compensation-division-v-brown-wyo-1991.