Upton v. State Ex Rel. Department of Corrections

2000 OK 46, 9 P.3d 84, 71 O.B.A.J. 1744, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 46, 2000 WL 872963
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 20, 2000
Docket91,618
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 2000 OK 46 (Upton v. State Ex Rel. Department of Corrections) 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
Upton v. State Ex Rel. Department of Corrections, 2000 OK 46, 9 P.3d 84, 71 O.B.A.J. 1744, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 46, 2000 WL 872963 (Okla. 2000).

Opinion

LAVENDER, J.

T1 Today's cause presents a question of first impression, ie., whether the Oklahoma Department of Corrections [State or DOC] can terminate Upton [employee or ap-pellee] while he is receiving compensation (temporary total disability) for an on-the-job injury under the terms of the Workers Compensation Act, 85 0.9.1994 1 et seq.

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FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

12 The facts in the case are undisputed. Upton, a DOC employee, suffered an on-the-job injury on March 25, 1996 for which he was awarded temporary total disability 1 [TTD] under the terms of 85 0.S.1991 22. Due to the nature of his injury employee also received leave without pay from May 11, 1996 until September 8, 1997 under the provisions of the Oklahoma Personnel Act, specifically 74 0.8.1994 840-2.21(A). On the last mentioned date DOC terminated Upton for being absent from his work for more than one year. Although employee was receiving TTD when he was discharged, DOC contended his dismissal was justified under the authority of 74 0.8.1994 840-2.21(D). 2

*86 T3 Upton sought Merit Protection Commission [Commission] review of his termination. There he asserted his dismissal violated the terms of 85 0.9$.1994 5(B), 3 which proscribe absentecism-based discharge of an employee who is receiving TTD. The Commission upheld Upton's dismissal by order dated December 24, 1997. Employee appealed to the district court which reversed the Commission's order, holding that § 5(B) of the Workers Compensation Act [WCA] prohibited Upton's termination solely for absenteeism (in excess of one year) since he was receiving TTD. State next brought this appeal. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the district court's decision. Certiorari was sought and granted.

HI

STATE CANNOT TERMINATE EMPLOYEES WHILE THEY ARE RECEIVING TEMPORARY TOTAL DISABILITY UNDER PROVISIONS OF THE WORKERS COMPENSATION ACT

T4 Resolution of State's appeal requires the Court to construe the provisions of 85 0.9$.1994 5(B) and 74 0.S8.1994 840-2.21(D), which on first examination appear in conflict. Since today's cause implicates the meaning and intent of legislative enactments and there are no disputed facts, it poses only a question of law. Hence, the applicable standard of review is de novo. 4

15 The contested provision of the Oklahoma Personnel Act provides that State "may" 5 terminate an employee absent from work for more than one year. The statutory language does not mandate termination but rather permits it under guidelines 6 to be promulgated by the Office of Personnel Management [OPM]-the agency legislatively commissioned to implement the Act. When the Legislature crafted the provisions of § 840-2.21(D) in issue, neither enacted legislation nor Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence condemned an employer's discharge of an employee who was receiving TTD, so long as the discharge was not retaliatory. 7 In 1992 the Legislature amended the WCA [specifically 85 0.8.1994 5 8 ]. In so doing it altered established legal precedent and denied an employer the right to dismiss an employee while he/she is receiving TTD. It is the later expression of legislative will evidenced in the 1992 amendment of § 5 which creates the tension that lies at the heart of Upton's cause.

16 It is fundamental that statutory construction begins with ascertainment of legislative intent which is often manifested in the law's stated purpose. 9 The best evidence of legislative intent is the statutory language itself. 10 Only after legislative objectives are determined, are rules of construction-as delimited by Oklahoma's extant jurisprudence-applied to facilitate conformation of the statutes' language to the ascertained intent. When construing what appears to be contradictory statutory syntax, the Court is *87 required, where possible, to construe the relevant provisions together in order to give foree and effect to each. 11 Words are not always to be given their literal meaning but rather must be understood through the lens of legislative intent exemplified in the statute's avowed purpose. 12 Only when an irreconcilable conflict is found to exist between two statutes will the Court hold one of them to be repealed by implication. 13

I 7 The Legislature's intent in enacting the Oklahoma Personnel Act [Act], 74 0.8.1991 840-1.1 et seq., is evinced in the Act's purposes set forth in § 8$40-1.2. There it is declared:

"It is ... the general purpose of this act to establish for the state a system to recruit, select, develop and maintain an effective and responsive work force; ... to provide for adequate and reasonable protection and security for those who have entered and will enter into the service of the state..." 14

To accomplish the Act's delineated aims the legislature charged the OPM with responsibility for its "efficient and effective enforcement." 15

T8 The Workers Compensation Act-the other enactment in issue today-embodies multiple legislative objectives. At its broadest level the WCA is intended to spare Oklahoma employees-both public and private-the necessity of expensive and speculative trials for work-related injury and to protect employers from excessive judgments. 16 The purpose of 85 0.S8.1994 5 is to protect employees who seek the WCA's benefits. It has been held to proscribe retaliatory discharges, i.e., dismissals based in significant part upon the exercise of rights granted under the WCA. 17 The provision in § 22 for the payment of temporary total disability has been held to have as its objective compensation of the claimant/employee for loss of wages during the time of healing from an on-the-job injury. 18 Doubtless, the 1992 amendment of § 5 19 evinced legislative intent that a claimant was to be accorded protection from discharge based solely upon absenteeism while receiving TTD-ie., during the "healing" period.

T9 As further evidence of the legislative intent encompassed within the two acts at issue here, we reviewed the process by which the OPM met its charge to prepare rules (and amendments thereof) to satisfy the mandate of § 8$40-2.21(D). OPM proposed guidelines-implementing § 840-2.21(D)-in 1993. Amended Rule 530:10-15-10()}(2) & (8), Permanent Rules of the Office of Personnel Management, provides in pertinent part:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 OK 46, 9 P.3d 84, 71 O.B.A.J. 1744, 2000 Okla. LEXIS 46, 2000 WL 872963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upton-v-state-ex-rel-department-of-corrections-okla-2000.