United Airlines, Inc. v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office

993 P.2d 1152, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 363, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 25, 2000 WL 52892
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 24, 2000
Docket98SC657
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 993 P.2d 1152 (United Airlines, Inc. v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Airlines, Inc. v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 993 P.2d 1152, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 363, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 25, 2000 WL 52892 (Colo. 2000).

Opinion

Chief Justice MULLARKEY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In Bowland v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 984 P.2d 660 (Colo.App.1998), the court of appeals ordered the Industrial Claim Appeals Office (ICAO) to require United Airlines, Inc. (United), to pay Howard Bowland (Bowland) a full award of permanent total disability benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act of Colorado (the Act), sections 8-40-101 to 8-47-209, 3 C.R.S. (1999). We granted certiorari to determine whether the court of appeals erred by holding that see-tions 8-42-104(2), 3 C.R.S. (1998), and 8-46-105(1), 3 C.R.S. (1999), do not require the administrative law judge (ALJ) to reduce Bowland’s disability award by the percentage of his permanent total disability attributable to a preexisting permanent partial industrial disability. 1 We now affirm the court of appeals’ decision.

This case requires us to refer extensively to four separate statutory provisions of the Act. For the sake of clarity, we refer to section 8-42-104, 3 C.R.S. (1998), as “the previous disability statute,” section 8-46-101, 3 C.R.S. (1999), as “the SIF statute,” section 8-46-104, 3 C.R.S. (1999), as “the SIF closure statute,” and section 8-46-105(1) 3 C.R.S. (1999), as “the insurance premium statute.” The previous disability and insurance premium statutes are appended to this opinion.

I.

Bowland worked as a baggage handler for United. On August 3, 1993, in the course of his employment, he sustained an injury to his back. He subsequently filed a workers’ compensation claim for an award of permanent total disability benefits.

Following a hearing to determine the nature and extent of Bowland’s injuries, the ALJ found that Bowland was permanently and totally disabled. The ALJ further determined that, at the time of his August 3, 1993 injury, Bowland suffered from a preexisting partial disability.

According to the ALJ’s findings, Bowland had sustained a series of occupational injuries between April 1988 and September 1990. Each of these injuries occurred in the course of his employment with United. After recovering from surgery to repair his cumulative injuries, Bowland returned to work for United and performed his regular duties. The ALJ determined that, at the time of the 1993 injury, the cumulative effects of Bowland’s occupational injuries had resulted in a nine percent permanent medical impairment.

*1154 Four months after his August 1993 back injury, Bowland reached maximum medical improvement and was placed on permanent physical restrictions that prevented his return to work for United. Bowland’s physician restricted him from bending, lifting, pushing, twisting, crawling, and working from heights. In December 1996, Bowland’s physician reported additional permanent restrictions on standing, walking, and sitting and noted that Bowland could work for no more than two hours per day.

Based on his findings and his interpretation of the Act’s previous disability .statute, the ALJ ordered United to pay Bowland an award amounting to 91% of the permanent total disability benefits for which he was eligible under the Act. Additionally, the ALJ concluded that Colorado’s Subsequent Injury Fund (SIF) was not liable for the remainder of Bowland’s permanent total disability benefits, because the SIF closure statute precludes SIF liability where the last injury contributing to a worker’s permanent total disability occurred on or after July 1, 1993. Consequently, the ALJ’s decision resulted in a nine-percent reduction of Bowland’s permanent total disability benefits.

Bowland appealed the ALJ’s order to the ICAO, seeking to hold United liable for 100% of his permanent total disability benefits. By final order dated September 19, 1997, however, the ICAO affirmed the ALJ’s order.

In a unanimous decision, the court of appeals reversed the ICAO’s order. See Bowland, 984 P.2d at 665. It reasoned that the General Assembly, in enacting the insurance premium statute, intended to place full liability for permanent total disability benefits on the last employer of an employee who, previously having sustained an industrial injury causing permanent partial disability, sustains a subsequent industrial injury resulting in permanent and total disability. See id. at 663-65. Accordingly, the court of appeals remanded the case for entry of an order requiring United to pay the balance of Bow-land’s permanent total disability benefits.

II.

To understand the present dispute between Bowland and United, we must examine the state of the law prior to the General Assembly’s closure of the SIF to injuries occurring on or after July 1, 1993. Indeed, United’s argument depends on its theory that, by closing the SIF to new injuries, the General Assembly intended a radical reduction in the amount of benefits available to a claimant whose preexisting industrial disability combines with a subsequent occupational injury to render him permanently and totally disabled. Accordingly, we provide a brief background of the SIF and apportionment in Colorado.

Among the issues the General Assembly addressed when it drafted the 1919 version of the Act was whether and to what extent the existence of a preexisting partial disability limits an employee’s benefit award in the event of a subsequent permanent total disability. Although the 1919 Act stated that a preexisting disability would not preclude compensation for a later injury, it did not provide a mechanism to limit an employer’s liability in cases where an employee suffered from a preexisting permanent partial disability at the time of his last injury. See ch. 210, sec. 48, 1919 Colo. Sess. Laws 700, 717 (enacting the predecessor to subsection (1) of the previous disability statute). Not until 1945, when the General Assembly first established the SIF, were employers able to avoid the full costs of permanent total disability benefits in a narrow class of qualifying cases. See ch. 164, sec. 1, § 355, 1945 Colo. Sess. Laws 447, 447-48.

In Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. v. Industrial Commission of Colorado, 151 Colo. 18, 379 P.2d 153 (1962), we held that section 81-8-2, 4 C.R.S. (1953), the predecessor to subsection (1) of the previous disability statute, established the “full responsibility rule” in cases where an employee sustained a permanent total disability. Whereas many states had adopted apportionment statutes in conjunction with comprehensive subsequent injury funds, Colorado had no such apportionment statute and only a very limited subsequent *1155 injury fund. 2 Thus, applying the full responsibility rule, we held that “[w]hen an employer hires an employee who, by reason of a pre-existing condition or by reason of a prior injury, is to some extent disabled, he takes the man with such handicap.” Id. at 26, 379 P.2d at 158.

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993 P.2d 1152, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 363, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 25, 2000 WL 52892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-airlines-inc-v-industrial-claim-appeals-office-colo-2000.