Tinker v. Veco, Inc.

913 P.2d 488, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 26, 1996 WL 141653
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1996
DocketS-6809
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 913 P.2d 488 (Tinker v. Veco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinker v. Veco, Inc., 913 P.2d 488, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 26, 1996 WL 141653 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Chief Justice.

William G. Tinker appeals a decision of the superior court affirming the denial of his compensation claims by the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (the Board). The Board denied one claim for failure to give timely notice, a second claim for failure to establish a prima facie case for compensation, and a third claim for failure to establish all elements of the claim by a preponderance of evidence, once the presumption of com-pensability had been rebutted. We affirm the decisions of the Board and the superior court as to the second and third claims, but reverse their decisions on the first claim. We hold that Tinker’s failure to give notice should have been excused. We remand the case for further proceedings on this claim.

I. Background

William G. Tinker has suffered from diabetes since the mid-1970s. People who suffer from diabetes are particularly vulnerable to a range of foot problems, collectively referred to as “diabetic foot.” Diabetes may sometimes interact with an unrelated foot injury to produce severe complications. Diabetes-related foot conditions can progress to the point that amputation becomes necessary.

Tinker began working for Veco, Inc. (Veco) in 1985 as an equipment manager on the North Slope. He claimed he suffered frostbite to his right foot in February 1986, while on the job moving equipment at the Kuparuk field. Shortly thereafter he discovered a blister on his right big toe. Tinker did not fill out a written report of the frostbite incident, although he did inform Veco project manager Grover Moreland and construction superintendent Marvin King about the incident.

The blistered toe on the right foot soon became infected. By the time it began to heal, the big toe on his left foot started getting red and sore; the toe on that foot required surgery later in 1986. 1 In 1987 Tinker had surgery for a “hammer toe” on his right foot. Both feet later became red and swollen. They were operated on in December 1988. Tinker returned to work in January 1989, at which time he filled out a report of occupational injury for the 1986 frostbite incident. This report was the first he filled out regarding any injuries to his feet. Tinker had further foot problems and surgery through 1989 and 1990.

Tinker claimed he injured his left ankle and foot on the job in December 1990, when he slipped on ice while stepping off a truck. Upon examination, Tinker was diagnosed as having Charcot osteoarthropathy in his left foot, a diabetes-related condition in which the bones of the foot become demineralized and weakened, bréale down, and assume an abnormal position. He underwent further foot surgery in April 1991, in which bone was removed from both of his feet.

In May 1991 Tinker returned for the last time to his work on the North Slope, but he had to be evacuated to Anchorage when he became ill in early June. He attributes this illness to food poisoning from a meal at the *491 company mess hall. Swelling in his left foot then led to further surgery later in June.

In November 1991, Tinker’s left leg had to be surgically amputated below the knee.

Proceedings before the Board had been initiated by the time Tinker’s leg was amputated. In September 1991 Tinker filed an application for adjustment of claim against Veco and its insurance carrier, the Eagle Pacific Insurance Company (Eagle Pacific), after they controverted claims he made for compensation stemming from the 1990 foot injury and the 1991 food poisoning. Eagle Pacific claimed that any problems with Tinker’s feet stemmed from his diabetes, not from the fall or any food poisoning. In April 1992, several months after the amputation, Eagle Pacific filed a petition requesting that Pacific Marine Insurance Company (PacMar), Veco’s insurance carrier at the time of Tinker’s 1986 frostbite injury, be joined as a party to the claim; it argued that the 1986 incident was the original injury that “allegedly caused his current condition.” Because PacMar was insolvent, the Alaska Insurance Guaranty Association (AIGA) appeared as a party instead.

Tinker argued before the Board that the amputation was a compensable result of the 1986 frostbite injury to his right toe, the 1990 ankle injury, and the 1991 food poisoning. 2 The Board rejected the frostbite claim, finding that notice of the injury was not properly given under AS 23.30.100(b), and that this failure to provide proper notice was not excusable under AS 23.30.100(d)(1). It rejected the ankle injury claim, finding that Tinker had failed to present any evidence connecting the ankle injury with the later need for surgery and amputation, thus failing to raise the presumption of compensability. Regarding the food poisoning claim, the Board found that Tinker had produced enough evidence to raise the presumption of compensability, but that Veco had provided substantial evidence rebutting this presumption. The Board then found that Tinker had failed to prove all elements of this claim by a preponderance of the evidence, as he had to do once the presumption was rebutted. Thus, the Board rejected all of Tinker’s claims for compensation. The superior court sitting as an intermediate appellate court affirmed the Board’s decision, and Tinker now appeals.

II. Tinker’s Failure to Give Timely Notice of his 1986 Frostbite Injury was Excusable

AS 23.30.100(a) requires that notice of an injury be given to the Board and the employer within thirty days of the injury; AS 23.30.100(b) requires that such notice be in writing. 3 Tinker did not give written notice of the frostbite injury until January 1989, almost three years after the injury was sustained. Thus, the Board correctly found that he had failed to give timely notice of this injury.

The Board then proceeded to determine whether this failure was excusable under AS 23.30.100(d)(1). 4 Two requirements must be met before this excuse can be applied; first, knowledge of the injury by the employer, in-charge agent, or carrier, and *492 second, a lack of prejudice to the employer or carrier. The Board found that King and Moreland were agents in charge of Veco’s business at the time and place of the frostbite injury. It concluded that their knowledge of the frostbite satisfied the first requirement under section 100(d)(1). It then found, however, that the second requirement had not been met because the employer had been prejudiced by the failure to give timely written notice of the injury.

Tinker challenges the Board’s finding of prejudice, claiming that there was insufficient evidence to support this finding. This court reviews findings of the Board under the substantial evidence standard and will not vacate findings of the Board that are supported by such evidence. Alaska State Hous. Auth. v. Sullivan, 518 P.2d 759, 760 (Alaska 1974). However, the ultimate question of whether the quantum of evidence is itself substantial is a legal question, for which the court will independently review the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
913 P.2d 488, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 26, 1996 WL 141653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinker-v-veco-inc-alaska-1996.