Equity [Estoppel and Waiver]: Equitable Estoppel
MONTANA
SUPREME COURT DECISIONS |
Lako
v. ERD/UEF, 2004 MT 290 The Supreme Court affirmed the determination
by the WCC that the Uninsured Employers’ Fund (UEF) was not equitably
estopped from asserting time filing requirements against the claimant
where the claimant did not prove the first element of equitable estoppel--that
the UEF misrepresented or concealed a material fact. The UEF's 1984
statement that it was not paying benefits due to its determination of
insolvency was not a misrepresentation. |
Lako
v. ERD/UEF, 2004 MT 290 The doctrine of equitable estoppel
applies where an employer or insurer has taken some positive action
which either prevents a claimant from filing a timely claim or leads
him reasonably to believe he need not file such a claim. It is a flexible
principle which should be applied when an employer or insurer misleads
a claimant by foisting onto the claimant a misrepresentation of the
Workers’ Compensation Act. |
Wiard
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp.,
2003 MT 295 Insurer’s refusal to pay for claimant’s
medical visit, based on position that he suffered a new injury, did
not estop the insurer from later relying on the 60-month rule of section
39-71-704(1)(d), MCA (1991), in denying medical benefits. |
Selley
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. 2000 MT 76 Because insurer
was in a better position than claimant to determine whether a particular
physician had hospital admitting privileges, the Supreme Court found
the insurer should have known the doctor did not have admitting privileges
and should not have acquiesced in claimant's treatment by physician
without admitting privileges, satisfying elements of equitable estoppel
and preventing the insurer from refusing prospective compensation of
physician as treating physician even though he did not meet the criteria
of section 39-71-116(30), MCA (1993), regarding hospital privileges.
|
Selley
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. 2000 MT 76 As a general matter,
equitable estoppel arises when a party through its acts, conduct, or
acquiescence, has caused another party in good faith to change its position
for the worse. Six elements are necessary: (1) the existence of conduct,
acts, language or silence amounting to a representation or concealment
of material facts; (2) the party estopped must have knowledge of these
facts at the time of the representation or concealment, or the circumstances
must be such that knowledge is necessarily imputed to the party; (3)
the truth concerning these facts must be unknown to the other party
at the time it was acted upon; (4) the conduct must be done with the
intention of expectation that it will be acted upon by the other party,
or have occurred under circumstances showing it to be both natural and
probable that it will be acted upon; (5) the conduct must be relied
upon by the other party and lead that party to act; and (6) the other
party must in fact act upon the conduct in such a manner as to change
its position for the worse. Equitable estoppel must be established by
clear and convincing evidence. The doctrine of equitable estoppel is
designed to prevent one party from unconscionably taking advantage of
a wrong while asserting a strict legal right, and will be invoked where
"justice, honesty, and fair dealing" are promoted. |
Selley
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. 2000 MT 76 After approximately
two years of compensating claimant's physician as her treating physician,
insurer learned the doctor did not have admitting privileges at any
hospital and thus did not qualify as a treating physician under section
39-71-116(30), MCA (1993.) Reversing WCC, Supreme Court held insurer
was equitably estopped from refusing prospective compensation of physician
as treating physician. |
Smith
v. Old Republic Ins. Co., 1999 MT 88N
(unpublished, nonciteable opinion). In an unpublished, nonciteable
opinion, the Supreme Court affirmed the WCC's finding that the insurer
was not estopped from refusing to cover claimant's desired return to
an out-of-state physician he had previously visited for a consultation
on a new condition claimant was concerned he might have, thoracic outlet
syndrome, where no physician had diagnosed him with that condition and
his treating physician had recommended he consult with one of two local
experts in the condition. Claimant had been promptly informed the insurer
would not cover claimant's desired consultation. |
WORKERS'
COMPENSATION COURT DECISIONS |
Nelson v. Montana Schools Group Ins. Auth. [05/28/14] 2014 MTWCC 15 Where Respondent advised Petitioner in writing that she would need to seek preauthorization under ARM 24.29.1517(5)(d) for all future treatment with her out-of-state surgeon because she had reached MMI, Petitioner cannot meet the first element of equitable estoppel when she failed to seek preauthorization, since there was no “conduct, acts, language, or silence amounting to a representation or concealment of material facts” by Respondent. |
Newlon v. Teck American Inc. (Formerly Cominco) [05/08/14] 2014 MTWCC 12 Where Petitioner set forth an argument for each element of equitable estoppel and Respondent did not dispute that Petitioner had satisfied the elements, the Court concluded that Petitioner had met the elements of equitable estoppel. |
Peters v. American Zurich Ins Co. [07/31/13] 2013 MTWCC 17 Where there was both an overpayment and an underpayment of benefits, it would hardly be equitable to require Respondent to increase Petitioner’s average weekly wage (AWW) by including his yearly bonus while not allowing it to recoup its overpayment. The Petitioner cannot satisfy the sixth element of equitable estoppel since he cannot demonstrate that he changed his position for the worse by spending the overpayment of benefits; the Respondent can recover its overpayment from the increase in Petitioner’s AWW or from the lump-sum of back benefits. |
Peters v. American Zurich Ins Co. [07/31/13] 2013 MTWCC 17 Where Respondent had a “quick and easy” way to discover that Petitioner’s son was receiving auxiliary SSDI benefits, and where the evidence demonstrates that Petitioner did not attempt to conceal this information but provided it as soon as Respondent asked about it, the Court concluded that knowledge of the benefits could be imputed to the insurer and therefore Petitioner had fulfilled the second element of equitable estoppel (the circumstances must be such that knowledge of the facts is necessarily imputed to the party estopped). |
Hartford Ins. Co. of the Midwest v. Montana State Fund, In re McKirdy [02/11/13] 2013 MTWCC 4 The Court concluded that Petitioner had established the fifth element of equitable estoppel, noting that Petitioner began paying the claimant’s benefits under § 39-71-407(5), MCA, in response to Respondent’s representation that the only issue of liability was to determine which insurer was liable. Petitioner changed its position for the worse when it relied on Respondent’s representation and Respondent later raised an affirmative defense under § 39-71-603(2), MCA. |
Hartford Ins. Co. of the Midwest v. Montana State Fund, In re McKirdy [02/11/13] 2013 MTWCC 4 The parties agree that when Petitioner began paying the claimant benefits under § 39-71-407(5), MCA, Respondent’s decision to mount a defense against liability under § 39-71-603(2), MCA, had not yet seen the light of day. Therefore, at that point in time, the only dispute was which insurer was liable for the claim. Had Petitioner not paid under § 39-71-407(5), MCA, it would have breached its duty. Under these circumstances, whether or not Respondent intended or expected Petitioner to act, it was both natural and probable for Petitioner to do so. Therefore, Petitioner established the fourth element of equitable estoppel. |
Hartford Ins. Co. of the Midwest v. Montana State Fund, In re McKirdy [02/11/13] 2013 MTWCC 4 After the Court found that Petitioner did not know Respondent intended to raise an affirmative defense under § 39-71-603(2), MCA, at the time Petitioner agreed to pay the claimant’s benefits under a reservation of rights, the Court concluded that Petitioner had met the third element of equitable estoppel. |
Hartford Ins. Co. of the Midwest v. Montana State Fund, In re McKirdy [08/01/12] 2012 MTWCC 28 The third element of equitable estoppel is not fulfilled unless the facts relate to the two involved parties; if an estoppel exists, it would be between the two parties to the dispute. |
Morse v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. [05/03/12] 2012 MTWCC 16 The Court determined that Petitioner had established the six elements of equitable estoppel and ordered Respondent estopped from denying Petitioner’s claim under the one-year claim filing limitation of § 39-71-601, MCA. In this instance, Petitioner trusted his employer’s representation that he had properly reported his industrial accidents and that he need not take further action to protect his claim; Petitioner’s employer knew that an injured worker would believe that following the employer’s reporting requirements would fulfill the injured worker’s responsibilities in properly reporting a potential claim; Petitioner was unaware that his employer had not filed a claim on his behalf after he followed his employer’s reporting procedure; Petitioner’s employer would reasonably expect Petitioner to act as if he had properly reported his industrial accidents because Petitioner followed his employer’s reporting procedure; Petitioner relied upon his employer’s reporting procedure and therefore did not file a claim with Respondent; and Petitioner’s reliance on his employer’s reporting procedure changed his position for the worse when Respondent later denied his claim as untimely. |
McLaughlin v. Northwestern Corp. [07/07/11] 2011 MTWCC 17 An attorney’s opinion regarding the legal ramifications of settlement agreement language is an opinion and not a fact and therefore cannot be considered a material fact for fulfillment of the first element of equitable estoppel. |
Young v. Montana State Fund [01/08/08] 2008 MTWCC 2 Petitioner set forth an undisputed account of how he spent a PPD award which Respondent mistakenly paid Petitioner. Respondent demanded the return of the funds, and when they were not forthcoming, reduced Petitioner’s benefit payments to recoup them. Petitioner argued that Respondent was equitably estopped from recouping, asserting that the six elements of equitable estoppel were met. The Court concluded that while all six elements were met as to some items in Petitioner’s accounting, other items, such as $3,500 which Petitioner placed in savings and payments made on monthly debts which Petitioner would have owed regardless of any award, did not satisfy the sixth element: that Petitioner must have acted upon Respondent’s conduct so as to change his position for the worse, or to so act that he would suffer a loss if he were compelled to surrender the funds. |
Auchenbach
v. UEF [03/29/06] 2006 MTWCC 13 The Court found the elements
of equitable estoppel satisfied where the UEF had a statutory duty to
notify the mediation unit of its acceptance or rejection of a mediation
recommendation within twenty-five days under § 39-71-520(2), MCA,
failed to notify the mediation unit of its acceptance or rejection,
let the sixty-day statute of limitation for filing a petition with the
Court under § 39-71-2411(6), MCA, run on a pro sé claimant,
and moved to dismiss based on the claimant’s failure to file her
claim within sixty days of the mailing of the mediator’s recommendation. |
MP
Livestock Trust/Perry Polzing Trucking [02/04/05] 2005 MTWCC 6
The elements of equitable estoppel are satisfied and the Department
of Labor and Industry (DLI) is estopped from seeking a penalty against
an uninsured Montana employer utilizing employees furnished by a professional
employer organization (PEO) where: (1) the DLI concealed a material
fact (lapse of insurance) from the Montana employer; (2) the DLI had
knowledge of the material fact (lapse of insurance) during the entire
penalty period (the time of concealment); (3) the lack of insurance
was unknown to the Montana employer; (4) the facts and circumstances
known to the DLI at the time of the concealment were such that there
was a natural and probable consequence that the Montana employer would
act as if insurance were in effect by continuing to utilize the furnished
employees without procuring its own insurance and by continuing to reimburse
the PEO for insurance premiums it was supposedly paying; (5) in fact
the Montana employer did act in such a manner; and (6) the Montana employer
changed its position for the worse since its actions resulted in its
reimbursing the PEO for premiums not incurred and exposed it to the
very civil penalty the DLI seeks to impose. |
MP
Livestock Trust/Perry Polzing Trucking [02/04/05] 2005 MTWCC 6
Equitable estoppel requires proof of six elements: (1) the existence
of conduct, acts, language, or silence amounting to a representation
or concealment of material facts; (2) the party estopped must have knowledge
of these facts at the time of the representation or concealment, or
the circumstances must be such that knowledge is necessarily imputed
to that party; (3) the truth concerning these facts must be unknown
to the other party at the time it was acted upon; (4) the conduct must
be done with the intention or expectation that it will be acted upon
by the other party, or have occurred under circumstances showing it
to be both natural and probable that it will be acted upon; (5) the
conduct must be relied upon by the other party and lead that party to
act; and (6) the other party must in fact act upon the conduct in such
a manner as to change its position for the worse. |
Fuss
v. Ins. Co. of NA and Valor [4/8/04] 2004 MTWCC 34 The
claimant is not estopped from invoking a prior and final decision of
the Department of Labor and Industry holding he suffers from an occupational
disease where the evidence establishes that he did not deliberately
and intentionally misrepresent facts and the insurer has failed to present
evidence that the additional facts changed the opinions of the occupational
physician upon which the decision was based. |
Spurlock
v. State Fund [7/15/03] 2003 MTWCC 49 A certificate of insurance
which certifies there is workers' compensation insurance coverage for
a business operated by a sole proprietor but which also warns the reader
that certain employees may opt out does not estop the insurer from denying
coverage to a sole proprietor who has expressly opted not to have coverage
for himself or herself. There is no estoppel since there is no misrepresentation
of fact. |
Geiger
v. UEF/David Deckert, d/b/a David Deckert Trucking [8/22/01] 2001 MTWCC
46
Equitable estoppel applies when an employer has taken some positive
action which either prevents a claimant from a timely claim or leads
the claimant to reasonably believe he or she need not file such a claim.
One of the six requirements is conduct amounting to a representation
or a concealment of material facts. Where trial court was convinced
claimant understood pre-injury that any workers' compensation insurance
was his responsibility, putative employer and UEF were not equitably
estopped from denying claim. (Affirmed in Geiger
v. UEF/Deckert 2002 MT 332.) |
Bustell
v. Ins. Co. Of PA [5/15/02] 2002 MTWCC 26 Where an insurer files
a first report on behalf of a catastrophically injured claimant, does
so based solely on information provided by its insureds, and notifies
the claimant that her remedies are in Montana, and where the claimant
in reliance of the insurer's representations hires a Montana lawyer
and pursues her claim in Montana, and also accepts third-party monies
which may jeopardize her ability to pursue her claim in the state the
insurer later contends is the proper forum, the insurer is estopped
from asserting that the claim should have been pursued in another state. |
Hiett v. MSGIA [9/6/01] 2001 MTWCC 52 Insurer was not equitably estopped from discontinuing prospective coverage of prescriptions to which claimant was not entitled under section 39-71-704, MCA (1995), where she did not prove detriment. See Hiett v. Missoula County Public Schools, 2003 MT 213. |
Wiard
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. [7/20/01] 2001 MTWCC 31A
Failure of insurer or adjuster to tell claimant that failure to use
medical benefits for 60 months would result in termination of medical
benefits was not a representation. There was no duty by the insurer
to advise claimant of the 60-month limitation and no reliance on such
omission. The 60- month limitation does not preclude claimant from seeking
medical care during that time. The only purpose of requiring notice
of requirement would be to allow a claimant to seek unnecessary care
merely to toll the period, which would be tantamount to fraud. |
Wiard
v. Liberty NW [6/08/01] 2001 MTWCC 31 Rejection of a single
medical bill by the insurer does not amount to a misrepresentation of
a 1991 law which provides for termination of liability for medical benefits
if claimant fails to use medical benefits for 60 or more months. There
was no representation at all with respect to the 60 month rule. |
Davis
v. State Fund [6/9/00] 2000 MTWCC 34Insurer denied claim on
ground that owner-operator, who was himself covered under WC policy,
failed to notify insurer of injury within 30 days, as required by 39-71-603(2),
MCA (1997). Where insurer had for several years undertaken to provide
policy-holders notice of important statutory changes and coverage requirements,
but did not provide notice that a covered "owner" must inform
insurer, not just employer, within 30 days of injury, insurer was equitably
estopped from asserting limitations period. |
Selley
v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp. [11/16/98] 1998 MTWCC 82 . The
insurer was not equitably estopped from refusing future payment to claimant's
physician, whom it learned did not have hospital admitting privileges
and thus did not qualify as a treating physician, where the insurer
did not make any representation or concealment of fact and was not shown
to have had knowledge that the doctor did not meet statutory criteria
for a treating physician. [Note: the WCC was
reversed on this point; see Selley
v. Liberty Northwest, 2000 MT
76 .] |
Smith
v. Old Republic Ins. Co. [3/4/98] 1998 MTWCC 20, affirmed
in Smith v. Old Republic Insurance
Company, 1999 MT 88N (unpublished, nonciteable opinion).
Although insurer paid for claimant's prior out-of-state consultations
with a particular physician, it was not estopped from refusing to cover
claimant's desired return to the physician for a consultation on thoracic
outlet syndrome where no physician had diagnosed him with that condition
and his treating physician had recommended he consult with one of two
local experts in the condition. Claimant had been promptly informed
the insurer would not cover claimant's desired consultation. |
St.
Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co. v. Subsequent Injury Fund [2/19/98] 1998
MTWCC 10 On appeal from the DOL, the WCC agreed that the notice
provisions of section 39-71-906, MCA (1989) could not be tolled and
that the Subsequent Injury Fund (SIF) was not estopped from relying
on those provisions. Although a worker had been certified with the SIF,
he lied to his employer about the existence of prior injuries and neither
the employer nor the insurer knew he was certified with the SIF, thus
no notice was given to the SIF about his employment. Nevertheless, the
plain terms of section 39-71-906, MCA, require the employer to advise
the Department within 60 days after the first day of employment or "before
an injury. . . " that an employee is certified under the SIF. There
is no provision for tolling the limitation. The elements of estoppel
are not satisfied where the party against whom the insurer wishes to
apply the elements of estoppel, the SIF, made no representations whatsoever.
Even if the estoppel doctrine could be applied to the SIF through the
employer and claimant, the insurer failed to prove the reliance and
injury elements where it never asked claimant if he was certified and
the insurer would not have reduced insurance premiums based on the employee's
certification. |
Lockhart v. New Hampshire Ins. Co. [12/11/97] 1997 MTWCC 67 Although section 39-71-712, MCA (1995) limits temporary partial disability benefits to 26 weeks, insurer was estopped from relying on 26 week limit where it had denied claim and caused claimant to delay surgery, meaning he could not undergo surgery and return to temporary total disability status before using up 26 weeks. |
Baumgartner
v. Liberty NW [4/14/97] 1997 MTWCC 19 Estoppel is an affirmative
defense that must be plead by the insurer. Where the defense was not
plead and does not appear in the pretrial order, the insurer cannot
raise it at trial to argue claimant cannot recover for an occupational
disease where it accepted liability for his condition as an injury.
Moreover, the estoppel defense is meritless where claimant did not mislead
the insurer into accepting liability for his condition as an injury.
|
Filcher
v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. [4/15/96] 1996 MTCC 30 Insurer
estopped from recouping social security offset where claimant relied
on income without offset and where insurer, which did not take offset
earlier based on erroneous information from the federal Railroad Retirement
Board that claimant's federal benefits were retirement benefits, had
ample information to put it on notice to investigate whether claimant's
benefits were in fact disability benefits allowing an offset. |
Maggs v. State Compensation Ins. Fund [05/16/95] 1995 MTWCC 36 Under section 39-71-601(2), MCA (1989), the Department of Labor and Industry is the exclusive forum for presentment of claimant’s argument that the insurer is estopped from relying on the one-year statute of limitations for claim filing. While the Workers’ Compensation Court may judicially review the Department’s determination, it lacks jurisdiction to conduct a de novo hearing into claimant’s argument that the insurer is estopped where his supervisor allegedly threatened him with termination if he filed a workers’ compensation claim. |