Whittenberg v. Graves Oil & Butane Co.

827 P.2d 838, 113 N.M. 450
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1991
Docket12171
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 827 P.2d 838 (Whittenberg v. Graves Oil & Butane Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittenberg v. Graves Oil & Butane Co., 827 P.2d 838, 113 N.M. 450 (N.M. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

HARTZ, Judge.

Mollie Whittenberg (Claimant) appeals from an order dismissing her claim for medical expenses and disability benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act. The workers’ compensation judge (WCJ) found that Claimant was not an employee covered by the Act at the time of her injury and that her claim for disability benefits was barred by the statute of limitations. Claimant contends that the WCJ erred in (1) concluding that Claimant’s claim for disability benefits was barred by the statute of limitations; (2) failing to find that the statute of limitations was tolled by the representations of an employee of the New Mexico Workers’ Compensation Division (WCD); (3) determining that Claimant was an independent contractor and not an employee at the time of her injury; (4) failing to find that Graves Oil and Butane Company, Inc., (Company) and Mountain States Mutual Casualty Company (Insurer) were estopped from denying Claimant’s status as an employee; (5) concluding that the pre-1987 workers’ compensation law applies to this case; (6) failing to find that Claimant was covered by workers’ compensation insurance; and (7) failing to award Claimant witness costs. We affirm the denial of disability benefits because the award of such benefits was barred by the statute of limitations and the statute-of-limitations defense was not precluded by estoppel. As for Claimant’s medical benefits, we remand for further findings regarding whether Claimant was an employee or independent contractor at the time of the injury.

FACTS

Claimant, a certified public accountant, was hired by Theron Graves (Graves), Company’s president, as a bookkeeper in January 1981. She indicated to Graves that she did not want anything withheld from her paychecks and they therefore agreed that she would be paid as “contract labor.” Claimant’s first assignment was to investigate the financial position of a truck stop owned by Graves and leased to Company. She completed this assignment by March or April of 1981 and then worked on other tasks for Company.

Claimant performed duties with respect to payroll, inventory, financial statements, deposits, and credit card processing. It appears that initially Graves supervised Claimant, but he eventually left the supervision to Company employees. Claimant worked on Company premises and used Company equipment, although she provided her own typewriter, typewriter stand, and calculator. She received the same Christmas bonuses and departmental raises as Company employees, and took her turn on the Company switchboard with Company employees. Some testimony indicated, however, that she did not work the same hours as other employees, and apparently she was paid in a unique manner. Contract laborers for Company submitted invoices for their time and were paid out of the general account. Company employees were paid out of a separate payroll account. Claimant, in contrast, was paid a monthly salary out of the general account, but she never submitted invoices for her time. No state or federal tax deductions were taken out of Claimant’s pay.

On May 13,1981, Claimant fell and broke her hip while in the course and scope of her employment. Claimant was unable to return to work until that July. Insurer paid all the medical expenses and temporary total disability benefits incurred during her absence. Claimant was still on crutches when she returned to work. By October 1981, however, she had abandoned the crutches. The following February she was declared to be totally asymptomatic.

In 1984 Claimant changed the label for her relationship with Company from “contract labor” to “employee” in order to take advantage of group health insurance and profit-sharing plans. Although the change caused payroll deductions to be taken out of her salary, her responsibilities and working relationship with Company remained the same.

In late 1986 Claimant began to experience pain in the same hip she had injured in 1981. She consulted her physician on April 6, 1987. The physician advised her that she had developed aseptic necrosis and that she eventually would require reconstructive surgery. (Her doctor had told her at the time of her initial surgery in 1981 that she should “probably expect” to develop aseptic necrosis in the future.) Claimant then contacted the WCD and received a letter from a WCD employee indicating that Insurer would accept the claim. Claimant thereafter underwent surgery, with Insurer paying all the medical bills.

Claimant returned to work in September 1987, two days after her hip replacement surgery. She was unable to work as quickly or as efficiently as before and required assistance from co-workers to perform her task. Her condition gradually deteriorated. On November 10, 1988, Claimant was fired by Company for reasons unrelated to her condition. She has been unable to work since March 18, 1989. She has been hospitalized three times for complications related to her hip surgery. Insurer has not paid the medical bills.

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

Claimant filed her claim under the Workers’ Compensation Act against Company and Insurer on April 7, 1989. The WCJ ruled that the claim was not timely, thereby barring the award of disability benefits. This ruling was based on the WCJ’s conclusion “[tjhat the statute of limitations started to run on July 18, 1981 or, at the latest, during the months of October/November 1986, as to a claim for weekly compensation benefits.”

We affirm the WCJ’s ruling on the ground that the statute-of-limitations period began on July 18, 1981, and had expired by the time the claim was filed. We address Claimant’s contentions on appeal that the limitations period did not begin on July 18,1981; that even if it began at that time, it was tolled for the great bulk of the time from that date until the claim was filed; and that even if the limitations period had otherwise expired, Company and Insurer were estopped from raising a statute-of-limitations defense.

Claimant agrees that the limitations period began when she knew or should have known that she was suffering a disability. See Martinez v. Darby Constr. Co., 109 N.M. 146, 782 P.2d 904 (1989); Smith v. Dowell Corp., 102 N.M. 102, 692 P.2d 27 (1984). The WCJ found that when Claimant returned to work on July 18, 1981, she “was restricted from performing her work in the usual manner because of the use of crutches for 4 to 6 months after her return” and “knew or should have known of her impairment and disability at the time she returned to work in July, 1981.” On appeal, Claimant contends that there is no evidence to support the finding that she knew or should have known of a disability in 1981.

We disagree. Claimant testified that after she returned to work on crutches she “couldn’t do a lot of things I did before.” Although her office before had been upstairs, it was moved downstairs to accommodate her. During the time that she worked downstairs, somebody else had to do her work that involved going upstairs. 1

She also testified that when she returned to work after the accident she could no longer drive to the bank to make deposits, as she had before the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
827 P.2d 838, 113 N.M. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittenberg-v-graves-oil-butane-co-nmctapp-1991.