Waste Management & Transportation Insurance v. Estridge

210 S.W.3d 869, 363 Ark. 42
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 23, 2005
Docket05-16
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 210 S.W.3d 869 (Waste Management & Transportation Insurance v. Estridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waste Management & Transportation Insurance v. Estridge, 210 S.W.3d 869, 363 Ark. 42 (Ark. 2005).

Opinions

Tom Glaze, Justice.

Waste Management has petitioned for review from the court of appeals’ denial of its motion for rule on the clerk to accept an untimely record. We granted Waste Management’s petition to consider the interpretation of Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-711 (Supp. 2003), a special statute that sets out how one appeals from an order rendered by the Workers’ Compensation Commission.

In its brief in support of its motion for rule on the clerk, Waste Management raises two arguments. First, Waste Management asserts that extraordinary circumstances relating to the misleading, affirmative actions and words of the clerk of the Commission, coupled with the Commission’s failure to follow either its own notification procedures or the notification procedures outlined by statute warrant allowing the record to be lodged. Second, Waste Management asks the court to consider whether payment of the Commission’s filing fee is mandatory to invoke the court’s jurisdiction, given the applicable statutes and rules governing workers’ compensation appeals. We deny the motion.

Under the Workers’ Compensation Act, a compensation order or award of the Commission shall become final unless a party to the dispute shall, within thirty days from receipt by him or her of the order or award, file notice of appeal to the court of appeals, which is designated as the forum for judicial review of those orders or awards. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-711 (b)(1) (Supp. 2003). The party initiates the appeal by filing the notice of appeal in the office of the Commission. § ll-9-711(b)(l)(A). Under its certificate, the Commission shall send to the court of appeals all pertinent documents and papers, together with a transcript of evidence and the findings and orders, which shall become the record on review by the court of appeals. Id. The Commission may assess an appeal processing fee not to exceed $15.00. § 11-9-711(b)(1)(C).1

In the present case, the Commission issued an opinion on July 12, 2004, affirming the Administrative Law Judge and awarding appellee Jack Estridge benefits. Waste Management sought to appeal the Commission’s decision after it received the opinion on July 15, 2004; this made the thirty-day deadline for filing its notice of appeal fall on August 16, 2004.2 However, Waste Management was then required to file its record on review within ninety days from the filing of its notice of appeal. The clerk of the court of appeals calculated that the time for filing the record was November 4, 2004, ninety days from the date Waste Management filed its notice of appeal on August 5, 2004. When the clerk refused to docket Waste Management’s appeal, which was tendered to the clerk’s office on November 8, 2004, Waste Management countered that its appeal was not commenced until Waste Management actually paid the $15.00 processing fee to the Commission on August 9, 2004. Under Waste Management’s interpretation, the ninety-day deadline for filing the record would have been November 8, 2004, and its tendering of the record would have been timely. Waste Management is in error.

In its first argument on appeal, Waste Management attempts to place the blame for the delay, if any, on the Commission. For example, on September 24, 2004, Waste Management telephoned the Commission’s clerk, who said that the record had been placed in line for completion, and Waste Management would receive written notification of the transcript’s completion. On October 14, 2004, however, the Commission’s clerk notified Estridge’s attorney, not Waste Management’s, that the record had been certified and was ready to be picked up. Although the letter notifying Estridge about the record reflected that a copy of the letter had been sent to Waste Management’s attorney, its attorney stated that she never received a copy. Waste Management’s attorney did not receive a call from the Commission until November 8, 2004, when, on the same date, she picked up the record from the Commission and attempted to lodge it with this court’s clerk’s office. When the clerk refused to lodge the record, Waste Management filed its motion for rule on the clerk.

Our court and the court of appeals have been confronted with the application for a motion for rule on the clerk in workers’ compensation cases before, and we have denied such motions when attorneys tendered records outside the ninety-day deadline. In fact, since 1981, the court of appeals has consistently held that records will be allowed to be filed out-of-time in civil cases only in the “most extraordinary circumstances.” See Davis v. C & M Tractor Co., 2 Ark. App. 150, 617 S.W.2d 382 (1981); see also Hilligas v. Potashnick Construction Co., 51 Ark. App. 207, 912 S.W.2d 945 (1995) (per curiam); Novak v. J.B. Hunt Transport, 48 Ark. App. 165, 892 S.W.2d 526 (1995) (court of appeals refused to allow a record from the Workers’ Compensation Commission to be filed because it was tendered one day past the filing deadline).

In Davis, supra, the court of appeals specifically and correctly held for the first time that, in appeals from the Workers’ Compensation Commission, records must be tendered within ninety days of the filing of the notice of appeal. The appellant in Davis filed his notice of appeal with the Commission in a timely manner, but the record from the Commission was tendered to the clerk of this court more than ninety days from the filing of the notice of appeal. The clerk’s office refused to accept the tendered record on the grounds that Ark. R. App. P. — Civ. 5 requires the record to be filed within ninety days from the filing of the notice of appeal. Appellant’s counsel filed a motion for rule on the clerk, contending that counsel was not notified by the Commission that the record was ready until after the ninety-day period to file had expired. Davis, 2 Ark. App. at 152.

The court of appeals traced the history of the statutes governing appeals from the Workers’ Compensation Commission, noting that in 1978, the General Assembly passed Acts 252 and 253, both of which provided for appeals from the Commission directly to the court of appeals. Id. at 153. The court then noted that Section 7 of Act 253 provided that an appeal from the Commission to the court of appeals may be taken “ [b]y filing in the office of the Commission, within thirty days from the date of the receipt of the order or award of the Commission, a notice of appeal, whereupon the Commission . . . shall send to the court. . . the record of the cause.” The Davis court then wrote as follows:

Our first question is whether the 90-day time period provided in the Rules of Appellate Procedure applies to the filing of a record on appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Commission. Act 252 of 1979 says those appeals shall be allowed as in other civil actions. It would seem, therefore, that the 90-day period in which to file the record that applies to other civil actions would apply to appeals from the Commission. But Act 253 provides, after [the] notice of appeal is filed, that the Commission shall “send to the court” the record on appeal, and does not set out any specific time limitation within which it should be filed.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.3d 869, 363 Ark. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waste-management-transportation-insurance-v-estridge-ark-2005.