Williams v. Safeway Stores

525 P.2d 1087, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 322
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1974
Docket1992
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 525 P.2d 1087 (Williams v. Safeway Stores) 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
Williams v. Safeway Stores, 525 P.2d 1087, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 322 (Ala. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

Once again we are called upon to seek the meaning of the provisions of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act which establish a time-bar to the claims of injured laborers against employers and their insurers. 1 The parties here seek to wage *1088 semantic war over the single phrase in AS 23.30.130(a) 2 which provides that the one-year limitation upon reopening of cases before the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board commences upon the “last payment of compensation”. We find dis-positive a second issue, whether the board reserved jurisdiction over the permanent disability elements of Williams’ claim in its 1968 decision in this case.

Robert Williams was employed in the stockroom of a Safeway store in Anchorage. On January 2, 1964, he tripped over an obstruction in the stockroom and fell, injuring his back. Safeway, through its compensation carrier, voluntarily paid temporary total disability compensation and medical benefits for a short time. A dispute arose regarding further payments, and an order of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Board issued July 19, 1966 awarded temporary total disability and 15 percent permanent partial disability compensation. Williams moved to Florida, and, after suffering further difficulties with his back, petitioned the board to modify the 1966 award. During the pendency of that petition, the condition of Williams’ back so deteriorated that a spinal fusion operation was performed. At the time of the hearing on the petition to modify the 1966 order, Williams’ doctors were unable to rate his degree of permanent disability. The board issued an order on January 31, 1968 awarding Williams compensation for past and continuing temporary total disability. The carrier’s payments under the 1968 order reached the then-applicable limitation of $17,000 3 on all types of workmen’s compensation awards excepting permanent total disability while Williams was still totally disabled and unrated for permanent disability. Williams was informed of the reaching of the limit by the director of the Workmen’s Compensation Division of the Department of Labor.

Although Safeway’s insurer continued to provide full medical benefits to Williams, the last payment of compensation under the 1968 order was made on April 9, 1969.

On April 20, 1972, Williams filed a letter asking the board to “open” his case for consideration of permanent total disability compensation. Safeway controverted the claim, asserting that under AS 23.30.-130(a), the period during which Williams' award could be reopened or modified expired one year after the April 1969 payment. After a hearing, the board granted Williams’ claim for permanent total disability.

Safeway timely appealed the board’s order to the superior court on a number of grounds, including the limitation of AS 23.30.130(a) which provides that because of a change in conditions or a mistake of fact, the board may issue a new compensation order. The section requires that the application for modification be made “before one year after the date of last payment of compensation”. Safeway moved for summary judgment based upon the limitation of AS 23.30.130(a), and the judgment was granted without findings of fact or conclusions of law. Williams filed a timely appeal to this court.

This case has been complicated at all levels by an unfortunate confusion of the *1089 limitation of actions on initial claims 4 with that which applies to reopenings. 5 Only two issues are presented upon the facts: (1) whether providing medical benefits to an injured workman after the disability compensation limit of the relevant order or statute has been reached is a “payment of compensation” from which the one-year reopening period of AS 23-30.130(a) may be dated; and (2) whether the board’s 1968 decision in this case reserved jurisdiction to decide the issue of permanent disability so that the limitation period of AS 23.30.130(a) never applied to Williams. Our resolution of the second issue makes unnecessary a consideration of the first. 6

We begin our analysis of the board’s reservation of jurisdiction from the two points of agreement of the parties on this *1090 issue: first, that the board has the power to retain jurisdiction over a case, thus obviating further action on the part of the claimant to avoid the time limitation of AS 23.30.130(a); 7 and, second, that the board did not expressly reserve jurisdiction over Williams’ permanent disability claim in its 1968 order or find that it had done so in its 1972 order. 8 We must therefore determine whether the board impliedly reserved jurisdiction by the form of its 1968 order.

The general context of the 1968 proceeding has been explained; it is important, however, to review in greater detail the factors which animated the 1968 order. Williams’ 1967 petition to modify the 1966 award was filed prior to the spinal fusion. Safeway opposed that petition because the medical reports filed with it indicated no change in the 15 percent permanent partial disability rating. In November 1967, before the hearing on the modification petition, Williams underwent a spinal fusion, and additional medical reports were filed. The orthopedist who performed the fusion filed the following summary of Williams’ condition with the board:

[Williams], of course, has not fused solidly and, of course, has not reached his maximum return of function and therefore cannot be rated as to his disability. In all probability, the earliest time when such a rating would be practical (maximum return of function) would be about one year from the time of this operation.

Williams’ regular physician filed a similar but less detailed report with the board, concluding, “At this time I do not know the degree of permanent partial disability.” The board’s December 11, 1967 hearing on the reopening petition amounted to little more than argument by counsel regarding the medical reports. Neither Williams nor any of the physicians were called as witnesses. Thus, the only evidence before the board regarding Williams’ permanent disability was that of medical reports, both of which anticipated permanent disability but found it presently unratable.

The board accepted the truth of the medical reports. It stated in its conclusions of law that:

The Board concludes that there exists a change of conditions from Dr. Wor-sham’s 15 percent opinion in 1966 to his present opinion that a disability rating cannot be given until a later date. The Board finds it reasonable to believe that the additional operation and spinal fusion will change the disability rating it awarded previously to the applicant [emphasis added].
The board formally ordered:

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Bluebook (online)
525 P.2d 1087, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-safeway-stores-alaska-1974.