Survivors of Iida v. Oriental Imports, Inc.

935 P.2d 105, 84 Haw. 390, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 18
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1997
Docket17948, 18253
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 935 P.2d 105 (Survivors of Iida v. Oriental Imports, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Survivors of Iida v. Oriental Imports, Inc., 935 P.2d 105, 84 Haw. 390, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 18 (hawapp 1997).

Opinion

KIRIMITSU, Judge.

In this consolidated workers’ compensation and attorney’s fee and costs case, Claimant-Appellant Survivors of Amy Iida (Steven and Lynda) appeal from the January 13, 1994 order of the Labor and Industrial Relations Appeals Board (LIRAB) ordering repayment of dependant benefits; 1 and Employer-Appellant Oriental Imports, Inc. (doing business as Ala Moana Gifts) and Insurance Carrier-Appellant Hawaiian Insurance Group (collectively, Ala Moana Gifts) appeal from the May 4, 1994 order of the LIRAB awarding attorney’s fees and costs to Steven and Lynda but denying attorney’s fees to Ala Moana Gifts. We vacate the LIRAB’s January 13, 1994 order and remand for action consistent with this opinion, but affirm the May 4, 1994 order.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1989, Amy Iida (Amy) was employed by Ala Moana Gifts. On April 21, 1989, she suffered a dissecting aortic aneurysm. 2 A few weeks later, she succumbed to complications resulting from the aneurysm. Amy died on May 11, 1989. She was survived by *394 two children, Steven and Lynda Iida, who were both full-time college students at the time of her death.

On May 23,1989, Steven and Lynda filed a claim for dependent benefits, which was opposed on behalf of Ala Moana Gifts by the Insurance Carrier-Appellee Hawaiian Insurance Group (HIG). Appellee-The Special Compensation Fund 3 later joined HIG in its opposition to Steven and Lynda’s claim. Following procedural maneuvering by both sides, a hearing was held on Steven and Lynda’s claim. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Director of Labor and Industrial Relations (the Director) found, among other things, that: (1) Amy’s death was work-related; (2) Amy’s employer was liable for Amy’s medical, funeral, and burial expenses; (3) Ala Moana Gifts was to pay Steven and Lynda weekly compensation benefits of $358.00 from May 12, 1989 through June 24,1990, for a total of $20,917.44, and, following Lynda’s twenty-second birthday, pay Steven $214.80 per week from June 25, 1990 through November 28, 1991, for a total of $16,017.94; and (4) the request for-Special Compensation Fund contribution was denied.

Ala Moana Gifts appealed the Director’s decision. Ala Moana Gifts’ initial primary contention before the LIRAB was that Amys death was not work-related. It maintained this position on appeal until September 10, 1992, when it withdrew the issue of compens-ability. Following the concession of the com-pensability issue, the primary contention for Ala Moana Gifts became Steven’s entitlement to dependent benefits. It argued that Steven had improperly received benefits because he had withdrawn from a number of classes or failed to enroll in the required number of classes to be considered a full-time student during a number of semesters. According to Ala Moana Gifts, Steven “was not entitled to benefits he received during the period from May 12, 1989 through November 28, 1991, as he failed to meet the definition of a dependent under [Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 386^42(a)(2) ] during the whole of that period.” 4

Ala Moana Gifts presented evidence that, after his mother’s death, Steven had either failed or withdrawn from a number of classes. In the years following Amy’s death, Steven attended the University of Hawai'i at Mánoa (UH), Hawaii Pacific University (HPU), and Kapiolani Community College (KCC). His transcripts revealed the following information about his scholastic career:

Semester Institution Enrolled Withdrawn Failed Received
Spring 89 UH O CO rH
Summer 89 UH O CO
Fall 89 UH CO 04 t—(
Spring 90 UH CO CO i—l
Summer 90 HPU O CD
Fall 90 HPU 05 O i—l
Spring 91 KCC 0 CO CO

In its January 13, 1994 findings of fact, conclusions of law, and decision and order, the LIRAB disagreed with the argument that Steven was not entitled to any of the compensation that he had received. It did, however, determine that Steven was a part-time student for the Fall 1989, Fall 1990, and Spring 1991 semesters because he withdrew *395 from a number of classes and fell below the required twelve credit-hour requirement for full-time status or never enrolled in twelve credits at any point during the semester. In this same decision and order, the LIRAB also decided that Steven’s part-time status in the Spring of 1991 rendered him ineligible for benefits during the Summer of 1991. 5 The LIRAB’s decision and order required Steven to repay $10,847.40 for the Fall 1990, Spring 1991, and Summer 1991 semesters ($214.80 x 50.5 weeks). Additionally, the LIRAB concluded that Lynda’s benefits were improperly calculated during the Fall 1989 semester when Steven was a. part-time student. 6 According to the LIRAB, Lynda’s benefits should have been reduced to $214.80 per week (($358 -⅞- .6667) x 40%). Consequently, the LIRAB ordered a reimbursement of $2,291.20 for the Fall 1989 semester (($358.00—$214.80) x 16 weeks).

Steven and Lynda’s subsequent motion for reconsideration was denied on March 3,1994, and both then filed a timely notice of appeal.

Following the LIRAB’s January 13, 1994 decision and order, Steven and Lynda filed a request for attorney’s fees and costs on January 24, 1994. Ala Moana Gifts filed its own request for attorney’s fees on February 11, 1994. On May 4,1994, the LIRAB issued an order approving Steven and Lynda’s request for attorney’s fees and costs but denying Ala Moana Gifts’ request for attorney’s fees. On June 1, 1994, Ala Moana Gifts filed a timely notice of appeal from the attorney’s fees and costs order.

On February 26, 1997, we issued an order consolidating Steven and Lynda’s appeal from the reimbursement order with the employer’s appeal from the attorney’s fees and costs order. As a result, the issues raised in both orders are addressed in this opinion.

II. DISCUSSION OF THE DEPENDENT BENEFITS ORDER

The dispositive issue that we decide in this portion of the appeal is the appropriate definition of the phrase “full-time undergraduate student” used in HRS §§ 386-42(a) and 386-43(a) (1993). Before we establish the appropriate definition of the phrase and the proper method for determining how benefits are paid to full-time students using principles of statutory construction, we first discuss the standard of review and touch on the purpose of the workers’ compensation statute. We then address the merits of the LIRAB’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

A. Standard Of Review.

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935 P.2d 105, 84 Haw. 390, 1997 Haw. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/survivors-of-iida-v-oriental-imports-inc-hawapp-1997.