Court Opinion

ID: 6940972
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:03:17.890835+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:07:41.606589
License: Public Domain

ROSSMAN, J.,
dissenting.
Because I would award employer attorney fees, I dissent.
OOSHD’s safety compliance officer (SCO) inspected employer’s work site after a fatal accident. The SCO documented suspected violations, summarized his findings and made recommendations. The SCO forwarded his papers to his supervisor for review. Two pages, including the summation and recommendations, were irretrievably discarded by the SCO’s supervisors before copies were sent to employer. The SCO was instructed to produce acceptable replacements. OOSHD subsequently issued a citation based on the recreated documentation. The Board’s referee held that the investigation of that violation was invalid due to OOSHD’s failure to provide investigative documents to employer.
The referee found that the equities weigh in favor of an award of attorney fees, a determination that has never been challenged. However, the referee declined to award attorney fees, on the ground that he lacked authority to do so in the absence of a specific statutory provision authorizing an award of fees.
*502The Board’s administrative rule, OAR 438-85-805 (12), essentially confers on the referee the same kind of equitable powers as possessed by the circuit court, this state’s court of general jurisdiction. It provides:
“It is the duty of the Referee to conduct a fair and impartial Hearing and avoid delay. The Referee has the authority to:
# # # i{i
“(12) Take any other action necessary for full and fair disposition of the case.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In my view, the rule, which permits the referee to “take any action” necessary for full and fair disposition of the case, would certainly permit the referee to make an award of attorney fees under the circumstances of this case. I recognize that such a determination is contingent on whether such power exists in the Board. As the majority has said, the Board’s authority to award attorney fees must come from the statutes, not administrative rules. It then concludes that there is no statute authorizing an award of fees in this case, and that the Board has no inherent power to award attorney fees. Accordingly, despite the broad reach of the administrative rule, the referee has no authority to award fees.
I look at it somewhat differently. Any time we have the opportunity to salvage a rule that directs the bureaucracy to be fair, I believe we should give that rule every reasonable chance to succeed. Although it is true that there is no statute expressly allowing the award of attorney fees in this kind of case, that does not end the inquiry.
The legislature has delegated to the Department of Insurance and Finance, and to the Workers’ Compensation Board specifically, broad authority to accomplish its purpose of enforcing and ensuring compliance with the Oregon Safe Employment Act. See ORS 654.003. Under ORS 654.025(5), the Board has authority to
“do and perform all things whether specifically designated in [the Oregon Safe Employment Act] or in addition thereto, which are necessary or convenient in the exercise of any power, authority or jurisdiction conferred.”
That delegation implicitly includes many of the equitable powers possessed by courts, and authorizes the Board to *503promulgate rules such as OAR 438-85-805, which is broad enough to encompass an award of attorney fees. I would hold that, included among the Board’s authority is the power to award attorney fees when such an award is necessary to ensure compliance with the Act or to make a full and fair disposition of the case. Here, an attorney fee is appropriate as a sanction against OOSHD for its failure to comply with the Act and the rules promulgated thereunder, and would be consistent with the express policy of the legislature. Compare ORCP 17. Because I conclude that the statutes authorize such an award of fees, I would reverse the Board and remand the case for reconsideration.