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IN THE WORKERS' COMPENSATION COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 1997 MTWCC 8
THEDA BEA BOULDIN Petitioner vs. LIBERTY NORTHWEST INSURANCE CORPORATION Respondent/Insurer for BIG SKY CARVERS Employer. Summary: In occupational disease case, insurer argued that 1995 version of the OD Act applied because claimant’s last day of employment was March 14, 1996, although her occupational disease arose prior to the effective date of the 1995 OD Act. Insurer relied on statements in Supreme Court decisions where the issue was running of the statute of limitations in a permanent total disability case, not the issue here. Held: Where claimant’s right to compensation accrued at the time she filed her occupational disease claim, the law in effect at that time controls. This is consistent with the general rule in workers’ compensation cases that the law in effect at the time of injury controls the case. Topics:
During a conference with claimant, Ms. Theda Bea Bouldin, and Mr. Larry W. Jones, who represents Liberty Northwest Insurance Corporation (Liberty) in this matter, Mr. Jones raised an issue with regard to the law applicable to this case. Specifically, he contends that the Occupational Disease Act (ODA) as amended by the 1995 legislature is controlling even though claimant filed her claim prior to the effective date of the 1995 amendments. The amendments adversely impact the payment of claimant's medical expenses by incorporating the medical expense limitations found in the 1995 Workers' Compensation Act. § 39-72-704, MCA (1995). Those limitations are not present in the 1993 ODA. § 39-72-704, MCA (1993). The effective date of the 1995 amendments to the Montana ODA was July 1, 1995. 1995 Montana Laws, ch. 243, §29. In workers' compensation cases, the Montana Supreme Court has consistently held that the law in effect on the date of the worker's industrial injury governs his or her entitlement to benefits. Buckman v. Montana Deaconess Hospital, 224 Mont. 318, 321, 730 P.2d 380, 382 (1986). Liberty argues, however, that in the case of an occupational disease the governing date is the last day of employment. It says that claimant's last day of employment was March 14, 1996, thus the 1995 version of the ODA applies. (Respondent's Memorandum Re: Determination of Governing Occupational Disease Act at 1.) Liberty relies on Grenz v. Fire and Casualty of Connecticut, 924 P.2d 264 (Mont. 1996), which stated, "The Montana Occupational Disease Act (MODA) statutes in effect on an employee's last day of work govern the resolution of an occupational disease claim." Grenz cited Lockwood v. W.R. Grace & Co., 272 Mont. 202, 205, 900 P.2d 314, 316 (1995) as authority for the statement. In turn, Lockwood cited Gidley v. W.R. Grace & Co., 221 Mont. 36, 38, 717 P.2d 21, 22 (1986), for the identical proposition. In Gidley the husband of the claimant had retired from W.R. Grace in July 1977, was diagnosed with cancer in June 1981, and died in May 1992. Claimant, as her husband's beneficiary, filed an occupational disease claim in July 1982. One of the issues on appeal was which version of the ODA applied to the claim. The Supreme Court ultimately concluded, as it did in Lockwood and Grenz, that the law in effect on the last day of employment governed the claim. However, the Gidley decision provides the following analysis on the point:
221 Mont. at 38-39, 717 P.2d at 22 (emphasis added). In all three cases, the core issue involved the statute of limitations applicable to MODA claims. In Gidley and Lockwood the statute provided that a claim had to be filed within one year of when the "claimant knew or should have known that his total disability condition resulted from an occupational disease claim." § 39-72-403(1), MCA (1977-1983) (emphasis added). The statute at issue in Grenz provided for a two-year period from discovery, but was otherwise identical. § 39-72-403(1), MCA (1985). The applicable statutes in both Gidley and Lockwood also provided for an absolute limitation of three years from the date the claimant or the claimant's decedent ceased employment. Subsection (3) of section 39-72-403, MCA (1977-1983), provided:
Subsection (3) was repealed in 1985. 1985 Montana Laws, ch. 112, § 2. In each of the three cited cases the claimant or the claimant's decedent had ceased working prior to the filing of the claim for compensation. In that context the Supreme Court found that the occupational disease claim was governed by the law in effect on the last day of employment. The claimant in this case is not presently permanently totally disabled. She filed her claim while still working. While she may have ceased working for her original employer on March 14, 1996, documents in the Court file indicate that she continues to work, albeit at a different job for a different employer. Under this circumstance, the Court must heed the underlying rationale set forth in Gidley. Gidley requires that the rationale applicable to workers' compensation claims be applied in occupational disease cases. Under the WCA, the law in effect at the time of the accident or injury controls. The rule reflects the fact that the right to compensation accrues at the time of the industrial injury. In this case the claimant's right to compensation accrued at the time she filed her claim since she was suffering from an occupational disease at that time. Thus, the 1993 law applies to her claim. SO ORDERED. DATED in Helena, Montana, this
4th day of March, 1997. (SEAL) /s/ Mike
McCarter c: Ms. Theda Bea Bouldin -
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