Williams v. State, Department of Revenue

895 P.2d 99, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 52, 1995 WL 306841
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1995
DocketS-5722
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 895 P.2d 99 (Williams v. State, Department of Revenue) 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. State, Department of Revenue, 895 P.2d 99, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 52, 1995 WL 306841 (Ala. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Mary Ann (Andrade) Williams, whose claim for stress-related mental injuries was denied by the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board (Board), argues that AS 23.30.120(c) and AS 23.30.265(17) are uncon *100 stitutional. The superior court rejected that argument. We treat Williams’ appeal as a petition for review and affirm. 1

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Williams, who had held other state jobs since 1974, began working for the State of Alaska, Child Support Enforcement Division (CSED) in 1977. She was a clerk for CSED until 1979, when she was promoted to Child Support Enforcement Officer I. She became a supervisor with the title of Child Support Enforcement Officer II in 1980. Her general duties included preparing intrastate paternity orders and Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement Support Act cases, supervising a team of four people, reviewing ease files, distributing the work load to typists, taking telephone calls, preparing affidavits, calculating AFDC arrearages, and meeting walk-in clients.

She became the only paternity establishment officer when a paternity unit was added to CSED in 1987. Williams coordinated paternity establishment, set up blood testing throughout the state, arranged travel and accommodations for clients, and dealt with problem clients who were having blood drawn.

In April 1990 Williams was told that her team needed to file paternity complaints in all its cases by October 1, 1990, to comply with the Family Support Act of 1988. There were approximately 2,400 to 2,600 such cases. Williams testified she found it difficult and stressful to file the required complaints as requested and complete her other work. She also testified that the absence of clerical support staff, the inadequacy of the physical work environment, and the perceived lack of management support created stress for Williams.

Beginning in 1974, Williams sought treatment for gastrointestinal problems, chronic stress anxiety, chronic fatigue, depression, and other problems. During the following years, Williams saw a number of doctors and psychologists. She claimed she felt disoriented, unable to concentrate, very warm, not able to get enough air, panicked, and helpless. She had those feelings primarily while working, however, before quitting her employment in July 1990, she also began to feel that way when not working. She testified, “It had gotten to the point that I was having problems making everyday decisions. As far as putting things into priority order, I just felt overwhelmed. I just would become very anxious.”

Williams experienced stress in her personal life as well. In late 1986 her son was arrested for transporting cocaine. In the first half of 1987, her brother-in-law and mother died. Her son and daughter-in-law divorced in late 1986 and engaged in a painful child custody battle. Her daughter-in-law was awarded shared custody of Williams’ granddaughter, and moved out of state in 1988. Williams also experienced stress in her relationship with her husband.

In late March 1990 Williams committed to leave state service. She testified that she had decided retirement was “probably the only option that I had. Because I knew I was not going to be able ... to stay in the system that much longer.”

In April 1990 Williams requested removal from the general CSED work force (supervising and public contact) and asked to work on a special project part time until her October 1990 intended retirement date. She apparently worked on the special project, but *101 maintained her other work responsibilities, primarily attempting to bring all the cases into compliance with the Family Support Act by October 1990.

Williams retired under the state’s Retirement Incentive Program (RIP) on July 2, 1990. Three days later, she filed a report of occupational injury or illness with the Board, claiming that numerous stress-related physical and mental injuries arose from her employment.

The State controverted Williams’ claim, asserting she had not suffered a compensable injury or illness arising out of and in the course of her employment. Williams applied for adjustment of claim, claiming temporary total disability benefits from July 2, 1990, when she retired, permanent partial disability benefits, medical costs, transportation costs, vocational rehabilitation benefits, interest, attorney’s fees and litigation costs. Following hearing, the Board dismissed all of her claims.

Williams appealed to the superior court. Alaska R.App.P. 602. The court rejected Williams’ claim that AS 23.30.120(c) and AS 23.30.265(17) were unconstitutional and affirmed the Board’s denial of benefits for the mental injury claim. The court remanded Williams’ physical injury claim for reconsideration or factual findings by the Board.

Before this court Williams argues that the statutes are unconstitutional, and that it was error to affirm the denial of her stress-related mental injury claim.

III. Discussion

In 1988 the legislature enacted comprehensive changes to the existing Alaska Workers’ Compensation Act (Act). In part, those amendments altered the definition of “injury” with respect to mental injuries caused by work-related mental stress. AS 23.30.265(17). 2

The 1988 amendments also eliminated the presumption of compensability for stress-induced mental injury claims. AS 23.30.120. 3 Williams asks us to declare those amendments unconstitutional. She asserts that AS 23.30.120(c) deprives her of equal protection and substantive due process because it requires the Board to treat workers with mental injuries differently from workers with physical injuries. She also argues that AS 23.30.265(17) is unconstitutionally vague and ambiguous, violating procedural due process. 4

A. Substantive Due Process

Williams argues that when we addressed mental stress claims before the Act was amended in 1988, we rejected for mental *102 injury cases, a “greater than all employees must experience” stress rule. According to Williams, that rule is the same standard the legislature codified in AS 23.30.265(17). In support, Williams relies on Fox v. Alascom, Inc., 718 P.2d 977 (Alaska 1986) (Fox I), and Wade v. Anchorage School District, 741 P.2d 634 (Alaska 1987).

In Fox I, the injured employee suffered a mental disability due to non-traumatic gradual work-related stress. The Board required her to show that her stress was greater than the stress which all employees experienced. Fox I, 718 P.2d at 980. We stated:

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Bluebook (online)
895 P.2d 99, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 52, 1995 WL 306841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-department-of-revenue-alaska-1995.