Travelers Cas. Insurance v. Karns

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedAugust 24, 2018
Docket117128
StatusPublished

This text of Travelers Cas. Insurance v. Karns (Travelers Cas. Insurance v. Karns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Cas. Insurance v. Karns, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

No. 117,128

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

TRAVELERS CASUALTY INSURANCE, Appellant,

v.

LARRY G. KARNS, Director, KANSAS DIVISION OF WORKERS COMPENSATION, and ONEBEACON AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellees.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. Under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-556(e), the director of workers compensation does not have the authority to make findings of fact and conclusions of law or to enter orders of reimbursement based on such findings and conclusions. The Workers Compensation Board must decide substantive disputes over reimbursement of benefits with sufficient particularity that the director can then certify the amount to be reimbursed and the party to make the reimbursement. The director's certification is a ministerial function devoid of discretionary decision-making.

2. Agency actions taken by the director of workers compensation are subject to review under the Kansas Judicial Review Act.

Appeal from Shawnee District Court; FRANKLIN R. THEIS, judge. Opinion filed August 24, 2018. Reversed and remanded to the Workers Compensation Board with directions.

William L. Townsley III, and Lyndon W. Vix, of Fleeson, Gooing, Coulson & Kitch, L.L.C., of Wichita, for appellant.

1 Glenn Griffeth, of Kansas Department of Labor, for appellee Larry G. Karns.

Kip A. Kubin, of Bottaro, Kubin & Yocum, P.C., of Leawood, for appellee OneBeacon American Insurance Company.

Before ATCHESON, P.J., PIERRON and STANDRIDGE, JJ.

ATCHESON, J.: Regular participants in government bureaucracies sometimes adopt informalities that commonly reduce the friction those processes would generate if they functioned strictly as designed. The expedients mostly work unless they run up against an eccentric situation or until someone calls attention to the actual design. We appear to face some combination of those circumstances in assessing how the Kansas Workers Compensation Act realigns financial responsibility among insurance companies when one insurer has paid benefits to an injured worker that should have been paid by another insurer. The workers compensation director and the Shawnee County District Court unsatisfactorily attempted to sort out that kind of reimbursement dispute between Travelers Casualty Insurance and OneBeacon American Insurance Company. Given the procedural posture of the case, we reverse the district court and remand to the Workers Compensation Board with directions to apply the statutory procedures as designed to address OneBeacon's claim for reimbursement.

In short, we do not resolve the claim. We hand it off to the Board for resolution— where it should have been considered in the first place. In doing so, we find Workers Compensation Director Larry G. Karns overstepped his statutory authority by making findings of fact and conclusions of law and issuing an order directing Travelers to reimburse OneBeacon. The Board is statutorily charged with making those findings and conclusions, and the director then simply carries out the Board's substantive determination by certifying who is to reimburse whom and the precise amount of the payment. 2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF REIMBURSEMENT DISPUTE

The who-owes-what issue we have before us arises out of multiple workers compensation claims a legal secretary filed for repetitive use injuries that spanned years, two employers, and several insurance carriers providing coverage to those employers. The details of the underlying injury claims are largely irrelevant to our disposition of the remaining legal dispute. Nobody now contests the benefits the legal secretary received.

OneBeacon paid almost $152,000 in preliminary medical benefits to the legal secretary after March 1, 2005. This court affirmed the Board's decision the legal secretary suffered two compensable workers compensation accidents but remanded for a determination whether those accidents constituted distinct injuries or a single injury and, in turn, a calculation of the appropriate benefits. Barker v. Grace, Unruh & Pratt, No. 108,223, 2013 WL 5187413 (Kan. App. 2013) (unpublished opinion). The Board ruled the legal secretary suffered two injuries and awarded her a maximum disability benefit of $100,000 on each. The Board, however, did not address who was responsible for paying the preliminary medical benefits in light of the legally distinct accidents and injuries.

A worker's successive repetitive use claims present particular challenges in determining benefits because the physiological disability develops over time and may recur despite treatment. So there may be disputes about whether the worker suffered multiple accidents or recurrent disabilities attributable to a continuing accident and the date of the accident or accidents. The Workers Compensation Act relies on certain statutory rules to guide those determinations in repetitive use claims. Here, the finding that the legal secretary suffered distinct accidents potentially affected which of the insurance carriers bore responsibility for the disputed medical benefits and in what amounts. And, in some cases, that may require one carrier to reimburse another carrier for benefits it had paid during the adjudication of the workers compensation claim.

3 As we explain, K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-556(e) requires the Board to make any reimbursement determination in the first instance with sufficient particularity that the workers compensation director can then "certify" the amounts to be reimbursed to the responsible parties. But that's not what happened here. We do not presume to make a substantive determination on reimbursement in this appeal, much as the parties might want us to. Rather, the Board should do so. This case, therefore, needs to be returned to the Board for that limited purpose. We do, however, endeavor to outline what the parties did procedurally in this case and then examine what they should have done. Our exercise lays out what the governing statutes require in these situations and, thus, the procedure that should be followed.

Here, after the Board's ruling on remand, OneBeacon wrote a letter to Director Karns explaining that based on the distinct accidents, it should not have been responsible for the preliminary medical benefits and that it was entitled to reimbursement. OneBeacon identified the Workers Compensation Fund as the likely source for the reimbursement. Karns invited additional written submissions from the insurance carriers and the Fund. Travelers argued to Karns and has repeated on appeal that the Fund is responsible for any reimbursement due OneBeacon and relies on K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44- 534a(b) as supporting statutory authority. The Fund effectively intervened at Karns' request and submitted that Travelers was on the hook for the preliminary medical benefits under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-556(e). As we have said, for purposes of this appeal, we put to one side the substantive arguments on reimbursement, since the Board should have first crack at evaluating them. The Board has not had that opportunity, since those arguments were initially presented to Karns after he received OneBeacon's letter.[1]

[1]OneBeacon and Travelers have not questioned the Fund's right to be heard on the reimbursement issue. The Fund is to be "impleaded" whenever it may be liable for payment under the Workers Compensation Act. K.S.A.

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Travelers Cas. Insurance v. Karns, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-cas-insurance-v-karns-kanctapp-2018.