Unisea, Inc. v. De Lopez

435 P.3d 961
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2019
DocketSupreme Court S-16851/S-16861
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 435 P.3d 961 (Unisea, Inc. v. De Lopez) 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
Unisea, Inc. v. De Lopez, 435 P.3d 961 (Ala. 2019).

Opinion

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The primary issue in this workers' compensation appeal is the answer to this question: When must an employer pay compensation related to permanent partial impairment ratings if doctors in different medical specialities provide different dates of medical stability and separate impairment ratings for injuries to different body systems arising out of one work-related accident?

An employer asked medical specialists to evaluate a worker with injuries to different body systems arising out of one work-related accident. The doctors gave two separate opinions, almost a year apart, about final medical stability and relevant permanent impairment ratings in their separate specialities. The employer paid no compensation based on the impairment ratings until almost three months after the second impairment rating. The worker asked the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board to order a penalty for late payment of impairment-related compensation benefits, but the Board agreed with the employer that no impairment-related compensation was payable until the employer obtained a combined impairment rating. The Alaska Workers' Compensation Appeals Commission reversed the Board's decision, concluding that initial impairment-related compensation was payable upon notice of the first impairment rating and further impairment-related compensation was payable upon notice of the second impairment rating.

The employer appeals. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the Commission's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Claimant's Injury

In June 2013 Sofia Morales de Lopez, age 54, was employed by Unisea, Inc. as a fish sorter at a Dutch Harbor processing plant. While working she fell about 15 feet from a platform onto a concrete floor and suffered several fractures. After stabilizing in Unalaska, she was medicated to Anchorage; she received medical treatment there for a few weeks before returning home to California, where she was in a rehabilitation facility for several months. In addition to her orthopedic problems, she developed depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Morales's treating psychiatrist later diagnosed her with PTSD; Unisea's psychiatrist *964 thought she did not meet the full criteria for PTSD.

B. Relevant Statutory Sections And Related Workers' Compensation

Because this appeal raises issues related to workers' compensation benefits paid under several interrelated statutory sections, we describe the statutory framework here to provide a better understanding of this case's factual development.

1. Temporary total disability compensation

Temporary total disability (TTD) compensation is payable while a worker temporarily is totally disabled by a work-related injury; disability is defined as "incapacity because of injury to earn the wages which the employee was receiving at the time of injury." 1 A worker's TTD eligibility ends at the date of medical stability. 2 Medical stability is statutorily defined as

the date after which further objectively measurable improvement from the effects of the compensable injury is not reasonably expected to result from additional medical care or treatment, notwithstanding the possible need for additional medical care or the possibility of improvement or deterioration resulting from the passage of time. [ 3 ]
2. Reemployment benefits

An injured worker also may be eligible for reemployment benefits, as set out in AS 23.30.041, if a work-related injury results in certain permanent impairments preventing return to the worker's prior employment. 4 The reemployment process is intended to provide the injured worker training for alternative remunerative employment. 5 If the injured worker is unable to return to the worker's prior employment for 90 consecutive days, the Reemployment Benefits Administrator 6 is required to evaluate whether the worker is eligible for reemployment benefits. 7 Eligibility requires a doctor's prediction that the injured worker will have "permanent physical capacities that are less than the physical demands" of the worker's job at the time of injury (as described in a specific U.S. Department of Labor reference book) or any other job the worker had in the ten years preceding the injury. 8 An injured worker initially found eligible for reemployment benefits may later be found ineligible if, "at the time of medical stability, no permanent impairment is identified or expected." 9

In 2005 the legislature created a new and alternative job dislocation benefit for injured workers who qualify for reemployment benefits but who do not want to engage in the reemployment process. 10 The job dislocation benefit is a fixed amount based on the worker's permanent partial impairment (PPI) rating; the maximum job dislocation benefit is $13,500. 11 Reemployment benefits, in contrast, *965 include formulation of and payment for an approved reemployment plan 12 along with stipend benefits to the injured worker if other specified benefits, including PPI compensation, end during the plan's implementation. 13 An injured worker found eligible for reemployment benefits must select one of the two options - the job dislocation benefit or the reemployment benefits - within 30 days of the eligibility notification. 14

3. PPI compensation

Alaska Statute 23.30.190 authorizes PPI compensation; subsection (a) provides:

In case of impairment partial in character but permanent in quality, and not resulting in permanent total disability, the compensation is $177,000 multiplied by the employee's percentage of permanent impairment of the whole person. The percentage of permanent impairment of the whole person is the percentage of impairment to the particular body part, system, or function converted to the percentage of impairment to the whole person as provided under (b) of this section. The compensation is payable in a single lump sum, except as otherwise provided in AS 23.30.041, but the compensation may not be discounted for any present value considerations.

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Bluebook (online)
435 P.3d 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unisea-inc-v-de-lopez-alaska-2019.