Wattenbarger v. Boise Cascade Corp.

717 P.2d 1175, 300 Or. 12
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1986
DocketTC 135,549 CA A32736 SC S32364
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 717 P.2d 1175 (Wattenbarger v. Boise Cascade Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wattenbarger v. Boise Cascade Corp., 717 P.2d 1175, 300 Or. 12 (Or. 1986).

Opinion

717 P.2d 1175 (1986)
300 Or. 12

In the matter of the Compensation of Charles WATTENBARGER, Claimant. Charles Wattenbarger, Petitioner On Review,
v.
BOISE CASCADE CORPORATION, Respondent On Review.

TC 135,549; CA A32736; SC S32364.

Supreme Court of Oregon.

Argued and Submitted April 3, 1986.
Decided April 22, 1986.

*1176 J. Michael Alexander, Salem, argued the cause for petitioner on review. With him on the petition was Burt, Swanson, Lathen, Alexander & McCann, Salem.

Allan Muir, Portland, argued the cause for respondent on review. With him on the response was Schwabe, Williamson, Wyatt, Moore & Roberts, Portland.

J. David Kryger, Albany, filed an amicus curiae brief for Oregon Trial Lawyers Ass'n. With him on the brief were Emmons, Kyle, Kropp, Kryger & Alexander, Albany, and Edward J. Harri, Salem.

LINDE, Justice.

Claimant prevailed on his employer's appeal of a referee's order to the Workers' Compensation Board and was awarded $800 as a "reasonable attorney fee."[1] Procedures for fixing attorney fees in workers' compensation cases are set out in ORS 656.388 as follows:

"(1) No claim for legal services or for any other services rendered before a referee or the board of the Court of Appeals or Supreme Court shall be valid unless approved by the referee or board, or if proceedings on appeal from the order of the board are had before any court, unless approved by such court. In cases in which a claimant finally prevails after remand from the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals or board, then the referee, board or appellate court shall approve or allow a reasonable attorney fee for services before every prior forum.
"(2) If an attorney and the referee or board or appellate court cannot agree upon the amount of the fee, each forthwith shall submit a written statement of the services rendered to the presiding judge of the circuit court in the county in which the claimant resides. The judge shall, in a summary manner, without the payment of filing, trial or court fees, determine the amount of such fee. This controversy shall be given precedence over other proceedings.
"(3) Any claim so approved shall, in the manner and to extent fixed by the referee, board or court, be a lien upon compensation.
"(4) The board shall, after consultation with the Board of Governors of the Oregon State Bar, establish a suggested schedule of fees for attorneys representing a worker under ORS 656.001 to 656.794."

Being dissatisfied with the award of attorney fees, claimant's appellate counsel first sought reconsideration by the Board and then submitted a written statement (captioned "petition for attorney's fees") to the Circuit Court for Marion County. The petition asserted that counsel spent 15 hours in preparing claimant's brief for the Board, that counsel's usual hourly rate was approximately $80, and that this rate should be multiplied by a "risk factor" because counsel's fee was contingent upon success. *1177 The petition suggested that a fee of $2,000 was warranted.

The employer responded that the referee and the Board correctly had followed the Board's rules on attorney fees, set out in OAR 438-47-000 through XXX-XX-XXX, and particularly OAR 438-47-010(2), which states that the amount of a reasonable attorney fee "shall be based on the efforts of the attorney and the results obtained." The employer maintained that the rule excludes a "contingency" factor unrelated to the efforts expended and the results obtained in the individual case. Multiplying the hourly rate by the number of hours worked, the circuit court increased claimant's attorney fee to $1,200 but rejected the request to multiply the usual hourly rate by a risk factor. The Court of Appeals, 76 Or. App. 125, 708 P.2d 375 (1985), affirmed the circuit court's order.

Apparently the Court of Appeals assumed that the Board's rule binds not only the Board but also the courts. The circuit court stated that it could not see any basis in law to allow the court to apply a contingency factor in determining the attorney fee in this case. The Court of Appeals stated:

"* * * ORS 656.388(4) delegates to the Board the power and duty to establish a suggested schedule of fees for attorneys representing workers in workers' compensation cases. The Board has established a schedule by rule. * * *"

To hold that the "suggested schedule of fees" binds the courts overstates the legislative delegation to the Board. A "suggested schedule" implies that the addressee is expected to exercise some judgment. It is not a term legislators would choose if they meant a Board rule to be legally binding on a court that is empowered, in the same section, to reexamine the fee.[2] Certainly the Board has authority to apply its criteria for attorney fees in proceedings before referees and the Board itself, but with respect to courts, the legislature has delegated to the Board only authority to suggest criteria. Although the fact that the legislature did so entitles the Board's rule to some consideration also in the courts, the fee that ORS 656.388(2) directs the circuit court to "determine" is the "reasonable attorney fee" referred to in subsection (1) and in ORS 656.382 and 656.386.

As already stated, the circuit court believed that in determining the attorney fee it could not give any consideration to the fact that the fee was contingent upon success. It found that an award at counsel's hourly rate for the full 15 hours spent on the appeal was a reasonable fee. The court might have reached the same conclusion in any event, but its oral remarks leave no doubt that it thought itself constrained by law to exclude any consideration of risk. We therefore conclude that the court should have another opportunity to consider the question without that constraint.

We do not imply that the award was erroneous and could not be reaffirmed on remand. Claimant argues for recognizing that the contingent nature of attorney fees in all workers' compensation claims justifies a "multiplier" in representing claimants generally, without regard to the difficulties and the probabilities of success in the individual case. A court may take such difficulties and probabilities into account in determining a reasonable fee, but we do not hold that the statute as a matter of law requires every employer who unsuccessfully resists a compensation claim to pay fees reflecting claimant's counsel's uncompensated work on another claimant's unsuccessful claim. The statute does not support a general "multiplier" for the statistical *1178

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
717 P.2d 1175, 300 Or. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wattenbarger-v-boise-cascade-corp-or-1986.