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1997 MTWCC 48
COLLEEN CONNERY Petitioner vs. LIBERTY NORTHWEST INSURANCE CORPORATION Respondent/Insurer for WINTER SPORTS, INCORPORATED Employer.
DECISION AND JUDGMENT Summary: Employee injured at ski resort had a 7% impairment rating, entitling her to a permanent total disability award under section 39-71-703, MCA (1995). Insurer refused to pay the award, contending that it was entitled to an offset based on section 39-71-416, MCA (1995), which provides that where a claimant collects damages against a third-party tortfeasor, either by way of judgment or settlement, the workers' compensation insurer may reduce claimant's benefits by up to 30%. Held: The insurer is not entitled to the offset because section 39-71-416, MCA (1995) is unconstitutional. The statute violates the full redress provision of Article II, section 16 of the Montana Constitution. (Note: affirmed in Colleen Connery v. Liberty Northwest Insurance Corporation, 1998 MT 125.) Topics:
This is the second proceeding involving a dispute arising out of a serious leg injury that claimant, Colleen Connery (Connery), suffered in a skiing accident on December 10, 1995. At the time of the accident, Connery was employed as a ski instructor for Winter Sports, Inc. (Winter Sports) at its Big Mountain ski area in Whitefish, Montana. In the previous case, Colleen Connery v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp., WCC No. 9602-7507 (Connery I), this Court determined that claimant's injury occurred in the course and scope of her employment as a ski instructor and is therefore compensable. That decision was affirmed upon appeal to the Montana Supreme Court. Connery v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp., 929 P.2d 222, 53 St.Rep. 1324 (Mont. 1996). This present case concerns Connery's entitlement to an impairment award. The parties agree that claimant has a 7% impairment rating as a result of her industrial injury, which entitles her to a permanent partial disability award of $1,354.12. § 39-71-703, MCA (1995); Pretrial Order, Statement of Uncontested Facts No. 9. However, the respondent/insurer, Liberty Northwest Insurance Corporation (Liberty), claims an offset against that amount and has refused to pay it. The offset is based on section 39-71-416, MCA (1995), which provides that where a claimant collects damages against a third-party tortfeasor, either by way of judgment or settlement, the workers' compensation insurer may reduce the claimant's benefits by up to 30%. Connery settled her third-party claim against the skier who ran into her, and this settlement is the basis of the offset. Through her petition, Connery asserts that the statutory reduction is unconstitutional and that she is entitled to an impairment award. This Court agrees.
This case was originally scheduled for trial during the week of June 2, 1997, in Kalispell, Montana. However, by letter dated May 21, 1997, claimant's counsel advised the Court that Liberty had withdrawn its subrogation claim and that the only issue remaining to be resolved was Liberty's statutory entitlement to a 30% reduction of benefits. (Order Vacating Trial Date; Order Setting Briefing Schedule, May 23, 1997). Counsel agreed to present that issue to the Court upon the statement of uncontested facts. Thereafter, the parties filed a Pretrial Order wherein they set out an agreed statement of facts. The agreed facts are as follows:
30% reduction against 7% PPD claim calculated as follows:
(Pretrial Order at 1-3, emphasis added.) Since the parties agreed to present the issue to the Court upon the above statement of uncontested facts and on briefs, the Court deemed this matter submitted for decision with the filing of Petitioner's Reply Brief on July 14, 1997. Discussion This decision will be in narrative form since the issue presented is a legal one and the factual background is not in dispute. Claimant's injury is governed by the 1995 version of the Workers' Compensation Act. Buckman v. Montana Deaconess Hosp., 224 Mont. 318, 321, 730 P.2d 380, 382 (1986). The statute at issue is section 39-71-416, MCA, which was added to the Workers' Compensation Act by the 1995 legislature. This new statute provides:
Connery contends that Liberty is not entitled to the 30% reduction authorized by section 39-71-416, MCA, because the statute unconstitutionally deprives her of her right to full legal redress. Article II, Section 16, 1972 Montana Constitution. In the alternative, she argues that should this Court find section 39-71-416, MCA, constitutional, Liberty waived its right to the 30% reduction because it is liable for her claim. I will consider her arguments in reverse order. 1. Waiver. Connery's argument concerning waiver is two-fold. First, she argues that section 39-71-416, MCA, is inapplicable since Liberty denied liability for her claim. Second, she contends that Liberty's denial of her claim constituted a common-law waiver of any right it may have had under the section. I am not persuaded by either argument. Where the terms of a statute are clear, those terms must be applied as written. Boegli v. Glacier Mountain Cheese Co., 238 Mont. 426, 429, 777 P.2d 1303, 1305 (1989). A court cannot insert into a statute terms which the statute omits. Russette v. Chippewa Cree Hous. Auth., 265 Mont. 90, 93, 874 P.2d 1217, 1219 (1994). As written, section 39-71-416, MCA, does not make the insurer's acceptance of a claim a prerequisite to its right of offset. The statute broadly provides that where the injured worker obtains any third-party recovery, settlement, or award, the insurer may reduce benefits up to 30%. Connery's common-law waiver argument is also without merit. "Waiver is a voluntary and intentional relinquishment of a right." Molerway Freight Lines, Inc. v. Rite-Line Transp. Services, Inc., 273 Mont. 95, 102, 902 P.2d 9, 14 (1995). A waiver requires that the party clearly manifest its intention to relinquish a right. Id. In this case, there is no evidence that in denying Connery's claim for compensation Liberty intended to waive its right to the 30% offset should it be found liable for the claim. 2. Right to Full Legal Redress. Connery's constitutional challenge is more substantial and is meritorious. Her challenge is predicated on the right to full legal redress guaranteed by Article II, Section 16, of the Montana Constitution, which provides:
In Trankel v. State, 938 P.2d 614, 622, 54 St.Rep. 380, 386 (Mont. 1997), the Supreme Court stated that in prior decisions it has "without exception, held that it [Article II, Section 16] precludes limitations on claims by injured employees against persons other than the employee's employer or fellow employee." Connery argues that the 30% benefit reduction statute was adopted by the legislature to evade the full redress guarantee. This Court will not speculate as to the motives of the legislature in adopting the 30% offset. However, I am bound by the Montana Constitution and decisions of the Montana Supreme Court which interpret the Constitution. While recognizing the general rule that the party challenging the constitutionality of a statute must persuade this court beyond a reasonable doubt that the statute is indeed unconstitutional, Vainio v. Brookshire, 258 Mont. 273, 277, 852 P.2d 596, 599 (1993), after reading Article II, Section 16, and the Supreme Court decisions interpreting it, I am left with a conviction, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the 30% offset authorized by section 39-71-416(1), MCA, is at odds with the constitutional guarantee to full redress. Thus, I am compelled to find the provision unconstitutional. On its face, section 39-71-416(1), MCA (1995), ignores the worker's right to full legal redress. If the injured worker gets anything, however short of full legal redress, the insurer is entitled to reduce by 30% the benefits otherwise payable to the injured worker. (The reduction is limited to 30% of the recovery if that amount is less than 30% of benefits.) The net effect of the section is to transfer dollars recovered from the third-party tortfeasor back to the insurer. That transfer is plainly contrary to the full redress provision. Liberty strenuously argues that the 30% reduction does not affect claimant's third- party recovery and that the section merely deals with claimant's entitlement to benefits. The argument is disingenuous. But for her third-party recovery, Connery would be entitled to full workers' compensation benefits without reduction. It is the third-party recovery that triggers the insurer's right to reduce her benefits. The effect of the statute is more pernicious than any subrogation provision since the reduction is automatic and arbitrary. I therefore conclude that section 39-71-416, MCA (1995), is void and of no effect. Liberty is liable to Connery for the full amount of benefits otherwise due her under the Montana Workers' Compensation Act without reduction on account of section 39-71-416, MCA (1995). The parties have stipulated that claimant has a 7% impairment rating; therefore, the insurer shall pay claimant the full amount of the impairment award in the amount of $1,354.12 (7% x 350 weeks = 24.5 weeks x $55.27 per week). 3. Attorney Fees and Costs. Connery also seeks attorney fees and costs. Costs are automatically awarded as a result of her prevailing on the merits. Her request for attorney fees, however, is more troublesome. Section 39-71-612, MCA (1995), governs the request for attorney fees. An award of attorney fees under that section requires not only that Connery obtain judgment for an amount greater than offered or paid by the insurer but that she also prove that Liberty's actions were unreasonable.(1) She has satisfied the first requirement. It is the second requirement that troubles the Court and on this point Connery has provided the Court with no argument, indeed, her briefs do not address her request for attorney fees at all. In refusing payment of the impairment award, Liberty relied upon a statute duly enacted by the Legislature of Montana. That statute is presumed constitutional, State v. Martel, 273 Mont. 143, 902 P.2d 14, 17 (1995), and Liberty was entitled to rely on that presumption in asserting its rights under the statute. There may well be a point where a statute is so plainly unconstitutional that reasonable insurers should know it is unconstitutional, and in that instance imposition of attorney fees may be appropriate,(2) but Connery has not pursued her attorney fee claim in her briefs and the Court deems her failure to do so as a concession that such point was not reached in this case. The request for attorney fees is therefore denied.
1. This Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to section 39-71-2905, MCA. 2. Section 39-71-416, MCA (1995), is unconstitutional and void. 3. Respondent is not entitled to a 30% reduction of the benefits otherwise payable to claimant. 4. Claimant is entitled to a 7% impairment award in the amount of $1,354.12 (7% x 350 weeks = 24.5 weeks x $55.27 per week), which amount shall be paid by respondent to claimant in a lump sum. 5. Claimant is entitled to costs but not to attorney fees. 6. This JUDGMENT is certified as final for purposes of appeal pursuant to ARM 24.5.348. 7. Any party to this dispute may have 20 days in which to request a rehearing from this Decision and Judgment. DATED in Helena, Montana, this 4th day of September, 1997. (SEAL) \s\ Mike
McCarter c: Mr. David W. Lauridsen 1. Section 39-71-612, MCA (1995), provides:
2. The Court might, for example, assess the reasonableness of the insurer's position by employing criteria similar to those used in determining whether a governmental official is entitled to qualified immunity. The qualified immunity doctrine employs an objective standard to determine whether the official should have known that his or her conduct violated the constitution. The doctrine was recently discussed in Boreen v. Christensen, 930 P.2d 67, 70 (Mont. 1996), wherein the Supreme Court outlined the basic elements for qualified immunity, as follows:
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