Thompson v. Anchor Glass Container Corp.

2003 OK 39, 73 P.3d 836, 74 O.B.A.J. 1292, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 42, 2003 WL 1818140
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 8, 2003
Docket97,863
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2003 OK 39 (Thompson v. Anchor Glass Container Corp.) 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
Thompson v. Anchor Glass Container Corp., 2003 OK 39, 73 P.3d 836, 74 O.B.A.J. 1292, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 42, 2003 WL 1818140 (Okla. 2003).

Opinion

OPALA, V.C.J.

{1 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the Court of Civil Appeals erred in sustaining the trial judge's denial of a compensation claim by an opinion rested on the claim's untimeliness and on the Workers' Compensation Court's want of cognizance to dfford relief from the statutory time bar by interposition of "equitable concepts." We answer in the affirmative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

T2 Lisa Thompson [claimant] testified that on 3 April 1999 she slipped at work on a *837 piece of glass and injured her back. She went to a local hospital emergency room the next day when she began to experience pain in her lower back. The medical staff took some x-rays, treated her back, gave her a prescription and released her from work for three days. On her return to the workplace she reported the injury to her foreman. She was then directed to Kathy Bennett's office to fill out an accident report. The employer, Anchor Glass Container Corporation, stipulated that if Bennett were called as a witness, she would testify that a supervisor told claimant her accidental injury report would not be accepted because she had not submitted it within eight hours of the accident. The union president also advised claimant that the report had to be turned in not later than eight hours after the injurious event.

T8 Claimant testified that she intended the accident report to be her workers' compensation claim, but because of what the supervisor told her, she instead submitted the medical expenses to her health care insurer. She eventually underwent back surgery on 20 November 2001. A contract nurse for the employer testified that she provided to the claimant medication and a back brace. The nurse also helped her prepare a report that was submitted to the compensation carrier before the November 20 surgery. Claimant filed a compensation claim on 28 November 2001, more than two years and seven months after her 3 April 1999 injurious event. Employer's answer interposes two affirmative defenses-statutory time bar and a pre-existing condition.

T4 The trial judge denied the claim, resting his decision on two grounds-(a) the claim was barred by the statute of limitations, 85 0.8.8upp.2001 § 43(A), 2 and (b) the Workers' Compensation Court is without jurisdiction to entertain pleas based on "equitable remedies under theories of laches or es-toppel" for relief from claimant's failure to file a claim within the time period prescribed by § 48(A). The Court of Civil Appeals [COCA] sustained the claim's denial, holding that the employer was not "equitably es-topped" from asserting a time bar because of a statement made by claimant's supervisor about the timeliness of her accident report. 3 According to COCA, the Workers' Compensation Court is a "statutory tribunal of limited jurisdiction" and may not extend its cognizance to include "equitable estoppel." 4

15 On certiorari granted upon the claimant's petition, we now vacate COCA's opinion as well as the trial judge's order and, for the reasons to be stated, remand the claim for further proceedings.

II

THE TRIAL JUDGE'S AUTHORITY TO ENTERTAIN CLAIMANTS TOLLING QUEST

T6 Claimant urges the trial tribunal has "equitable authority" to consider the doctrine of estoppel based on tolling to counter employer's limitations defense. She urges the employer's actions here clearly tolled the time bar.

17 Employer argues the trial tribunal was "without jurisdiction" to hear and entertain the claimant's equitable estoppel plea. According to employer, this court has rejected numerous attempts to engraft upon the § 48 time bar conceptual transplants from the common law as well as those from district- *838 court litigation. 5 Employer claims COCA correctly announced the controlling principle: the trial tribunal has no authority to consider the employer "equitably estopped" to assert its limitations defense. 6

The Remedial Nature of the § 43 Time Bar

¶ 8 This court has an unswerving commitment to the view that § 43 is a remedial rather than a jurisdictional barrier. 7 Munsingwear, Inc. v. Tullis 8 gave recognition to the law's ancient verity that statutory time bars do not limit the trial tribunal's jurisdiction of the claim but rather defeat its authority to make an award. An untimely claim is as much within the tribunal's cognizance as one that was brought earlier than the expiration of the temporal limit prescribed by law for its filing.

¶ 9 Statute-of-limitations issues in compensation cases ordinarily tender mixed questions of law and fact. 9 By taking limitations out of the law's rubric of cases calling for de novo review, 10 Tullis transformed disputed facts regarding the time bar into a nonjurisdictional category to make them reviewable by the any-competent-evidence standard. 11 If rested on competent evidence, findings of nonjurisdictional facts tendered in a compensation proceeding are conclusive and binding on appellate courts. 12

The Trial Tribunal's Power to Entertain A Claimant's Tolling 13 Pleas For Relief From The Statutory Time Bar

¶ 10 Because the § 48 time bar is nonjurisdictional, the limitation period can be tolled or waived. 14 Both parties here have mistakenly traonsmogrified the claimant's tolling plea by giving it a verbal label associated with an extra-statutory concept of equity. Although § 48 is a self-containing regime of limitations which cannot be extended *839 to alien concepts of equity or common law, 15 tolling has been recognized as a legitimate part of that statutory body of law. 16 The doctrine of tolling by employer's action, whether by conscious recognition of its liability 17 or by some affirmative act of concealment or misrepresentation of liability, 18 does not inject an extra-statutory concept into the corpus of compensation law. Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence of long standing attests to this caselaw development. In short, the Workers' Compensation Court has never been deprived of power to entertain a claimant's tolling quest to avoid the impact of a statutory time bar for filing a claim.

BOTH PARTIES ARE ENTITLED TO A FULL-SCALE -POST-REMAND HEARING UPON DISPUTED FACTS ON CLAIMANTS TOLLING PLEA

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 OK 39, 73 P.3d 836, 74 O.B.A.J. 1292, 2003 Okla. LEXIS 42, 2003 WL 1818140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-anchor-glass-container-corp-okla-2003.