Wahpepah v. Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma

1997 OK 63, 939 P.2d 1151, 1997 WL 222422
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 21, 1997
Docket88350
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1997 OK 63 (Wahpepah v. Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma) 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
Wahpepah v. Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma, 1997 OK 63, 939 P.2d 1151, 1997 WL 222422 (Okla. 1997).

Opinion

OPALA, Justice.

¶ 1 The dispositive question we are asked to decide today is whether an insurer who has accepted workers’ compensation policy premiums computed on the claimant’s salary may deny the insured’s status as a covered employer. We answer in the negative.

¶2 Auchee Wahpepah (Wahpepah or claimant) sought benefits for injuries sustained in an automobile accident while she was employed by the Kiekapoo Tribe of Oklahoma (Tribe). Tribe had secured a workers’ compensation policy from the State Insurance Fund (Fund). Fund’s answer to Wah-pepah’s claim denies that the accident arose out of and in the course of her employment, but admits that (a) Tribe stood insured for compensation, (b) claimant was an employee of Tribe and (c) she was “covered by the Workers’ Compensation Act." After a hearing the trial tribunal ruled that it has “no jurisdiction over a sovereign nation” and dismissed the claim “with prejudice against the respondent [Tribe] and [the] State Insurance Fund.”

¶ 3 We hold that because Fund is statutorily estopped 1 to deny Tribe’s covered-employer status, it may not escape liability for payment of benefits after (1) issuing a workers’ compensation policy and (2) accepting premiums computed upon Wahpepah’s salary.

I.

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

¶ 4 Wahpepah, who had been Tribe’s community health director for one month, sustained multiple injuries to her body in an automobile accident on May 2,1995. Wahpe-pah brought a claim on May 1,1996. Tribe’s answer (Form 2) lists the State Insurance Fund as its risk carrier and notes that Wah-pepah had not “clocked in and reportedly [was] running an errand for her father in their own personal vehicle.” Fund’s answer (Form 10) admits its capacity as Tribe’s insurer and that Wahpepah was employed by Tribe and “covered” for statutory protection, but denies the injury is employment-related. In its answer Fund does not object to the trial tribunal’s, jurisdiction.

¶ 5 At the hearing on October 8, 1996 the trial judge determined the Workers’ Compensation Court has no jurisdiction over Tribe because of the latter’s sovereign status. Claimant sought corrective relief. In support of the trial judge’s order, Tribe and Fund assert that (a) Tribe did not unequivocally waive its sovereign immunity for workers’ compensation liability, (b) neither could Tribe be considered an “employer” within the meaning of 85 O.S. § 3(3) 2 nor (c) could Wahpepah be deemed an insured’s employee. 3 Fund and Tribe also urge that jurisdic *1153 tion over this claim lies in a tribal court. Wahpepah’s chief argument on review is that by the provisions of 85 O.S. §§ 65.2 and 65.3, collectively known as the “estoppel act,” 4 Fund is estopped to deny the trial tribunal’s cognizance over her claim. We agree.

¶ 6 II-

QUESTIONS CONCERNING AN EMPLOYER’S STATUS FOR COVERAGE UNDER WORKERS’ COMPENSATION LAW STAND ELIMINATED BY THE INTERPOSITION OF STATUTORY ESTOPPEL; AN INSURER WHO COLLECTS PREMIUMS UNDER AN ISSUED COMPENSATION POLICY(COMPUTED ON CLAIMANT’S WAGES) IS ESTOPPED TO DENY THE INSURED’S STATUS AS A COVERED EMPLOYER

¶ 7 Tribe’s status as a covered employer of the injured worker within the meaning of Oklahoma’s compensation law is not implicated in the consideration of the case before us. Nor is at issue here Tribe’s claimed sovereign immunity from suit. Rather, our focus must be on the rights of the injured claimant against Tribe’s insurer. These rights are statutory rather than purely contractual. 5 Every employer’s compensation policy is treated as a guarantee that the insured entity’s injured employee is protected by the provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act. Once the existence of insurance covering the claimant is established, jurisdictional requirements for the prosecution of a proceeding before the trial tribunal are deemed met. 6 Controversies between the employer and the insurer do not divest the trial tribunal of its power to entertain a worker’s claim. 7

¶ 8 A compensation claimant who, like Wahpepah, relies upon estoppel must show the presence of three elements: (1) an injury that occurred during the time her employer maintained a compensation liability policy, (2) the insured employer’s payment of premiums based on the claimant’s salary and (3) claimant’s accidental injury occurred in and arose out of her employment with the insured employer. 8 This proof brings a claim under the *1154 protection of the estoppel act. 9

¶ 9 The rationale of the estoppel act is that an insurer who accepts premiums under a compensation policy may not evade liability for benefits that are legally due. 10 By long-settled case law, the estoppel act bars the insurer from interposing any challenge to the employer’s status as an entity covered by the compensation law. 11

¶ 10 Although § 65.2 (of the estop-pel act) appears to require an affected employee to be engaged in a hazardous occupation, 12 proof of the hazardous nature of the employment has been declared “wholly immaterial” when the claim is based upon statutory estoppel. 13 What triggers estoppel’s application is the employer’s payment of insurance premiums computed on claimant’s wages. 14 Once that proof is adduced, a compensation insurance policy is conclusively presumed to be for the benefit of the insured’s employee regardless of the type of business in which the employer is engaged or the nature of the employee’s work, whether hazardous or otherwise. 15 By the act of insuring the employee under the policy, the employer and the insurer decide what is to be deemed covered employment. 16 Even though the language of the estoppel statute appears to bar only the insurer-initiated contests over the “hazardous” nature of the insured’s business, the intended purpose of the critical word quoted from that enactment has been uniformly construed to extend the es-toppel act’s ambit to all disputes spawned by the insurer’s denial of its insured’s status as an employer affected by workers’ compensation liability. 17

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Bluebook (online)
1997 OK 63, 939 P.2d 1151, 1997 WL 222422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wahpepah-v-kickapoo-tribe-of-oklahoma-okla-1997.