Wien Air Alaska v. Arant

592 P.2d 352
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1979
Docket3620, 3717
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 352 (Wien Air Alaska v. Arant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wien Air Alaska v. Arant, 592 P.2d 352 (Ala. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BOOCHEVER, C. J., and RABI-NO WITZ, CONNOR, BURKE and MATTHEWS, JJ.

BOOCHEVER, Chief Justice.

This case involves a claim by the wife and two children of a deceased worker for an increase in death benefit payments. We affirm the determination of the Workmen’s Compensation Board and the Superior Court’s decision that claimants are entitled to an increase. We hold that the formula set forth in AS 23.30.145(a) governs the attorney fee award for the Board proceeding and remand to the Board for a new determination of attorney’s fees. We instruct the Superior Court to redetermine reasonable attorney’s fees for the appeal, taking into account the Board’s fee award.

The facts are little in dispute. William Arant was employed as a pilot by Wien Air Alaska at an average weekly wage of about 11,000.0o. 1 On August 30,1975, he died in a-work-related plane crash. His wife, Joyce Arant, and his two dependent children (hereinafter the Arants) started receiving workers’ compensation payments of $198.40 a week eleven days after the accident. 2

On February 13, 1976, the Workmen’s Compensation Board received application for adjustment of claim from the Arants, requesting an increase in compensation payments to $357.59 per week. Wien denied that such an increase was due. After a hearing, the Board, applying the table of maximum benefits in AS 23.30.175(a), ruled *354 that Wien should increase payments to $357.59 and awarded the then-successful Arant claimants $500.00 partial reimbursement for claimed attorney’s fees. 3

Wien appealed the Board’s decision to the Superior Court, urging that the increasing máximums in AS 23.30.175 did not apply to death benefits both as a matter of statutory construction and constitutional compulsion; Wien claimed impairment of contract and denial of due process and equal protection. 4 Alaska Air Carriers, as amicus curiae, argued against the increase on statutory grounds only. The Arants cross-appealed the award of attorney’s fees, arguing that the statutory minimum fee schedule in AS 23.30.145(a) applied' because the employer had controverted the claim.

The Superior Court, relying on decisions interpreting the federal Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, ruled that Alaska’s statute, consistent with the constitution, provided for the increase in payments from $198.40 to $357.59. The court referred the $500.00 award of attorney’s fees back to the Board “to conduct a hearing to establish reasonable attorney’s fees” for the legal proceedings before it. Pursuant to Appellate Rule 29, the claimants made a motion for attorney’s fees and costs for the appeal, and the court awarded $750.00 for attorney’s fees and $33.37 for costs.

Wien timely noticed appeal and, before this court, renews only the statutory and the contract clause arguments. The Ar-ants’ cross-appeal argues the inadequacy of both the $500.00 award of attorney’s fees for the Board proceeding and the $750.00 award for the appeal to the Superior Court.

I. THE INCREASE IN COMPENSATION PAYMENTS

A description of the- structure of Alaska’s workers’ compensation statute is essential in order to understand the Arants’ claim for an increase in compensation payments. Alaska has a two-step process for calculating compensation payments. One, the statute specifies a per cent of the deceased or injured employee’s average weekly wage 5 to which claimants are entitled. Two, the statute specifies a maximum limitation on the weekly award. If the result of the step one calculation, the dollar amount which represents the per cent of the worker’s wage, is greater than the maximum limitation, the claimant receives only the maximum limitation.

AS 23.30.215 lays out the basic structure for death benefits. AS 23.30.215(a) indicates the percentage of the deceased employee’s wages which specified claimants receive; the statute in effect in 1975, when Arant was killed, provided for an award of 85 per cent of the deceased employee’s average weekly wages to a widow and two children. 6 AS 23.30.215(b) tells how to cal *355 culate the maximum limitation. At the time of Arant’s death in 1975, the statutory language provided:

In computing death benefits the average weekly wage of the deceased shall be subject to the same weekly maximum limitation in the aggregate as temporary total disability compensation, but the total weekly compensation may not be less than $45 for a widow or widower nor less than $15 weekly to a child or $30 for children. 7

The maximum limitation on temporary total disability payments is found in AS 23.-30.175, which provided at the time of Ar-ant’s death:

Rates of compensation, (a) The weekly rate of compensation for disability or death may not exceed the percentage of the state average weekly wage as determined by the table contained in this subsection and may not be less than $65 a week. If the employee’s average weekly wages, as computed under § 220 of this chapter, are less than $65 a week, he shall receive as compensation for his disability his average weekly wages.
On The Rate Shall Be
July 1,1975 80 per cent of the state’s average weekly wage
January 1,1976 100 per cent of the state’s average weekly wage
January 1,1979 166.6 per cent of the state’s average weekly wage
January 1,1981 200 per cent of the state’s average weekly wage. 8

AS 23.30.175 thus determines the maximum limitation on death and disability payments 9 by reference to increasing percentages of the state’s average weekly wage. The statute has specified this method of calculation since 1975. Before 1975, the maximum limitation was a flat dollar amount. 10 This recent structural change in *356 the maximum limitation on death benefits is the heart of this controversy.

Wien admits its obligation to pay weekly payments of $198.40. This figure results from the calculation of the first figure in the AS 23.30.175(a) maximum rate table, 80 per cent of Alaska’s average weekly wage. Wien contends that the 80 per cent figure is the maximum limitation for claims arising from July 1, 1975, to January 1, 1976.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Louie v. BP Exploration (Alaska), Inc.
327 P.3d 204 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2014)
Trudell v. Hibbert
299 P.3d 1279 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2013)
LEWIS-WALUNGA v. Municipality of Anchorage
249 P.3d 1063 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
Hageland Aviation Services, Inc. v. Harms
210 P.3d 444 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2009)
Harnish Group, Inc. v. Moore
160 P.3d 146 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)
Ranney v. Whitewater Engineering
122 P.3d 214 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
State, Department of Revenue v. Cowgill
115 P.3d 522 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Public Safety Employees Ass'n
93 P.3d 409 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2004)
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. DeShong
77 P.3d 1227 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2003)
Gossman v. Greatland Directional Drilling, Inc.
973 P.2d 93 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1999)
Municipality of Anchorage v. Gentile
922 P.2d 248 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1996)
Underwater Construction, Inc. v. Shirley
884 P.2d 150 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1994)
Cameron v. Beard
864 P.2d 538 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1993)
Forest v. Safeway Stores, Inc.
830 P.2d 778 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1992)
Croft v. Pan Alaska Trucking, Inc.
820 P.2d 1064 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1991)
Brown v. State
816 P.2d 1368 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1991)
Olson v. AIC/Martin J.V.
818 P.2d 669 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1991)
Childs v. Tulin
799 P.2d 1338 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wien-air-alaska-v-arant-alaska-1979.