IN THE WORKERS' COMPENSATION
COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
1997 MTWCC 4
WCC No. 9608-7582
ANTONIO
J. ESTRADA
Petitioner
vs.
STATE
COMPENSATION INSURANCE FUND
Respondent/Insurer
for
OXYGEN
LTD.
Employer.
PARTIAL SUMMARY
JUDGMENT
Summary: Claimant
and insurer submitted on stipulated facts the issue whether claimant filed
a timely claim for compensation within section 39-71-601, MCA (1993).
Claimant, an Oregon resident employed by an Oregon corporation, was injured
in an automobile accident in Montana. He submitted a claim to his employer,
and for Oregon workers' compensation benefits, within a year following
the accident, but did not submit a claim to a Montana insurer until more
than one year following the accident. State Fund's motion to dismiss,
treated as a motion for summary judgment due to stipulated facts, argued
claimant had to submit the claim to a Montana insurer within one year.
Held: Section
39-71-601, MCA (1993) provides that within one year of an industrial accident
the claimant must submit a signed claim "to the employer, the insurer,
or the department." By using the word "or," the statute
permits the claimant to submit a timely claim to any of the entities listed.
Where the employer received a claim within one year, the insurer's argument
for dismissal because no claim was submitted to it within a year has no
merit.
Topics:
Constitutions, Statutes,
Regulations and Rules: Montana Code Annotated: Section 39-71-601, MCA
(1993). Claimant, an Oregon resident employed by an Oregon corporation,
was injured in an automobile accident in Montana. Insurer moved to dismiss
where claimant submitted a claim to his employer, and for Oregon workers'
compensation benefits, within a year following the accident, but did
not submit a claim to a Montana insurer until more than one year following
the accident. Motion denied because section 39-71-601, MCA (1993) provides
that within one year of an industrial accident the claimant must submit
a signed claim "to the employer, the insurer, or the department."
By using the word "or," the statute permits the claimant to
submit a timely claim to any of the entities listed.
Cases Discussed: Workers'
Compensation Court Cases: Haag v. MSGIA. Under Haag v. Montana
School Group Insurance Authority, 274 Mont. 109, 906 P.2d 693
(1995), the insurer's duty to accept or reject a claim within 30 days
arises upon the insurer's receipt of the claim. While section 39-71-601,
MCA (1993) allows a claimant to submit a timely claim "to the
employer, the insurer, or the department," the insurer does not
risk liability under Haag unless if fails to act on a claim it has
received.
Claims: Acceptance. Under Haag v. Montana School Group Insurance
Authority, 274 Mont. 109, 906 P.2d 693 (1995), the insurer's duty
to accept or reject a claim within 30 days arises upon the insurer's
receipt of the claim. While section 39-71-601, MCA (1993) allows a
claimant to submit a timely claim "to the employer, the insurer,
or the department," the insurer does not risk liability under
Haag unless if fails to act on a claim it has received.
Limitations
Periods: Claim Filing: Generally. Claimant, an Oregon resident employed
by an Oregon corporation, was injured in an automobile accident in Montana.
Insurer moved to dismiss where claimant submitted a claim to his employer,
and for Oregon workers' compensation benefits, within a year following
the accident, but did not submit a claim to a Montana insurer until
more than one year following the accident. Motion denied because section
39-71-601, MCA (1993) provides that within one year of an industrial
accident the claimant must submit a signed claim "to the employer,
the insurer, or the department." By using the word "or,"
the statute permits the claimant to submit a timely claim to any of
the entities listed.
The petitioner in this case,
Antonio J. Estrada (claimant), alleges that he suffered an industrial
accident in the course and scope of his employment with Oxygen Ltd.,
which is insured within the State of Montana by the State Compensation
Insurance Fund (State Fund). In its response the State Fund denies that
claimant suffered an industrial industry and affirmatively alleges (1)
that it does not insure Oxygen Ltd. and (2) that if claimant was injured
in an industrial accident it was not a Montana accident. (Response to
Petition for Hearing at 2.)
As an additional affirmative
defense, stated as a motion to dismiss, the State Fund alleges that
claimant failed to submit a claim for compensation within the one-year
period prescribed by section 39-71-601, MCA (1993). (Id.) The
parties have agreed to submit this issue to the Court on an Agreed Statement
of Facts and Issue filed on October 17, 1996. Counsel have briefed the
issue and the matter is now ready for decision.
Issue presented:
The sole issue presently before the Court is whether the claimant filed
a timely claim for compensation complying with section 39-71-601, MCA
(1993).
AGREED FACTS
For purposes of the present
proceeding, the parties agree that the following facts are true:
1. On August 24, 1993,
Antonio Estrada, an Oregon resident, was employed as a tree planter
for Oxygen, Ltd., an Oregon corporation owned by Oregon resident Steve
O. Sorrenson.
2. On August 24, 1993,
Mr. Estrada was in a vehicle which was involved in an automobile accident
in Montana and alleges injuries as a result thereof. Mr. Sorrenson
owned the vehicle and a claim was submitted to Mr. Sorrenson's automobile
insurance carrier for Mr. Estrada's injuries. (Exhibits 1 and 2.)
3. On August 11, 1994,
Mr. Estrada's attorney, Arthur Stevens, submitted a claim for Oregon
workers' compensation benefits to both the employer and the employer's
Oregon workers' compensation insurer, SAIF Corp. (Exhibit No. 3.)
4. On August 12, 1994,
the employer wrote to Mr. Stevens and explained why he didn't file
a workers' compensation claim on Mr. Estrada. (Exhibit No. 4.)
5. By letter dated August
23, 1994, the SAIF Corp. notified Mr. Estrada and his attorney that
his claim was not a viable claim under Oregon workers' compensation
law and suggested that he file a claim with the State of Montana.
(Exhibit No. 5.)
6. On August 25, 1994,
Mr. Sorrenson signed both a completed Oregon workers' compensation
claim form and a completed Montana employer's first report and submitted
those to the appropriate state agencies. (Exhibits Nos. 6 and 7.)
7. On August 31, 1994,
the State Fund received the employer's first report of injury from
Mr. Sorrenson. (Exhibit No. 7.)
8. By letter dated September
2, 1994, the State Fund requested that Mr. Estrada complete a written
claim for compensation. (Exhibit No. 8.)
9. By letter dated September
9, 1994, the State Fund advised Mr. Estrada that it was denying his
yet unsubmitted claim for compensation on the grounds that it had
not been filed within 12 months of the date of the accident. (Exhibit
No. 9)
10. On September
19, 1994, the State Fund received a completed Claim for Compensation
signed by Mr. Estrada on September 13, 1994. (Exhibit No. 10.)
(Agreed Statement of Facts
and Issue.)
In addition to the specific
facts listed above, the parties have submitted Exhibits 1 through 10
for the Court's consideration. One of the exhibits is the Oregon claim
submitted to SAIF, a copy of which was also submitted directly to Oxygen,
Ltd. (Ex. 3.)
DISCUSSION
In light of the parties
stipulation of facts, the State Fund's motion to dismiss will be treated
as a motion for summary judgment. ARM 24.5.329(4). Summary judgment
is appropriate where there are no material issues of fact and one of
the parties is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. ARM 24.5.329(2).
The facts concerning notice
are undisputed. While claimant submitted a claim for compensation to
his employer and his employer's Oregon insurer within one year
of his accident, he did not submit a claim directly to the employer's
Montana insurer within the one year. According to the State
Fund, "It is axiomatic that in order to meet the one year requirement
of § 39-71-601, MCA, one must make a claim for Montana workers'
compensation benefits." (Brief of State Compensation Insurance Fund
at 2; italics added, underlining in original.) Thus, it argues, his
claim was untimely and his petition must be dismissed.
On its face, section 39-71-601,
MCA (1993), provides that within one year of an industrial accident
the claimant must submit a signed claim "to the employer, the insurer,
or the department." (Emphasis added.)
39-71-601.
Statute of limitation on presentment of claim -- waiver. (1)
In case of personal injury or death, all claims must be forever barred
unless signed by the claimant or the claimant's representative and presented
in writing to the employer, the insurer, or
the department, as the case may be, within 12 months from the date of
the happening of the accident, either by the claimant or someone legally
authorized to act on the claimant's behalf. [Emphasis and italics added.]
In listing the entities to
which a claim must be submitted, section 39-71-601, MCA, uses the word
"or." Unless the context requires otherwise, the word must be interpreted
and applied in its ordinary, disjunctive sense. State ex rel. Goings
v. City of Great Falls, 112 Mont. 51, 56, 112 P.2d 1071 (1941);
Shields v. Shields, 115 Mont. 146, 155, 139 P.2d 528 (1943).
There is nothing in the section, or in any other provision of the Workers'
Compensation Act, which requires a claimant to submit a claim to the
insurer and the Court cannot insert such an additional requirement.
§ 1-2-101, MCA; Russette v. Chippewa Cree Housing Authority,
265 Mont. 90, 93, 874 P.2d 1217, 1219 (1994). Therefore, claimant's
submission of a signed claim to his employer on August 11, 1994, satisfied
section 39-71-601, MCA.
Supreme Court decisions
applying section 39-71-601, MCA, support my conclusion. Relying on Scott
v. Utility Line Contractors, 226 Mont. 154, 157, 734 P.2d 206,
208 (1987), the Supreme Court in Weigand v. Anderson-Meyer Drilling
Co., 232 Mont. 390, 394, 758 P.2d 260, 262 (1988), stated that
the purpose of section 39-71-601, MCA, is to provide the employer
with notice of the industrial accident so the employer can
investigate the claim and if necessary prepare a defense. In Scott
the Court found that a written Employer's First Report prepared with
the claimant's assistance within one year of the accident satisfied
section 39-71-601, MCA (1981). In Weigand the employer prepared
the Employers' First Report, also with claimant's assistance, within
a year of the accident. However, the insurer argued that a claim form
specifically published for claimants to fill out (Form 54) is the exclusive
method by which a claim may be submitted. The Court rejected the argument
and again held that the Employer's First Report satisfied section 39-71-601,
MCA (1981).
In Scott the Employer's
First Report set out the claimant's name, social security number, address,
date of birth, wages, accident information, the identity of witnesses,
and treatment information, among other things. In the present case the
claim form signed by claimant and forwarded to Oxygen, Ltd. set forth
the claimant's name, address, phone number, date of birth, and social
security number; the date of the accident; a description of the accident;
the parts of the body affected by the accident; the name of the hospital
at which he was treated; the names of the treating physician; the name,
address and phone number of the employer; and the name of the witnesses
to the accident. This information was adequate to permit the employer
to investigate the claim and prepare any defenses, and the State Fund
does not argue otherwise.
The State Fund's fear that
its ability to timely reject a claim pursuant to section 39-71-606,
MCA, will be jeopardized unless the Court requires the claimant to file
his claim in Montana within a year is unfounded. That fear is based
on Haag v. Montana School Group Insurance Authority, 274 Mont.
109, 906 P.2d 693 (1995), which held that the failure of an insurer
to reject a claim within 30 days amounts to an automatic acceptance
of the claim. However, the duty to accept or reject a claim arises upon
the insurer's receipt of the claim. § 39-71-606, MCA.
Based on the foregoing discussion,
the State Fund's motion is denied and partial summary
judgment is hereby entered finding that the claimant submitted a timely
and adequate claim under section 39-71-601, MCA (1993).
SO ORDERED.
DATED in Helena, Montana,
this 14th day of January, 1997.
(SEAL)
/s/ Mike
McCarter
JUDGE
c: Ms. Laurie Wallace
Mr. Thomas E. Martello
Submitted: November 4, 1996
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