Court Opinion

ID: 4350784
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-12-14 16:14:54.602477+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:35.773767
License: Public Domain

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 1       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 ALBERT SERRANO,

 3         Worker-Appellee,

 4 v.                                                   NO. A-1-CA-35837

 5 LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LAB,
 6 AND CCMSI (TPA),

 7         Employer/Insurer-Appellants.

 8 APPEAL FROM THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ADMINISTRATION
 9 Leonard J. Padilla, Workers’ Compensation Judge

10 LeeAnn Ortiz
11 Albuquerque, NM

12 for Appellee

13 Camp Law, LLC
14 Minerva Camp
15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellants

17                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

18 VIGIL, Judge.
 1   {1}   Los Alamos National Laboratories (Employer) appeals from the Workers’

 2 Compensation Judge’s (WJC) order partially denying Employer’s motion to

 3 reconsider the WCJ’s Supplemental Compensation Order granting Worker’s

 4 application for a finding of bad faith and/or unfair claims processing practices.

 5 Employer argues that the WCJ erred, for purposes of determining whether it

 6 engaged

 7 in unfair claims processing practice, in using Worker’s physical capacity of

 8 “Light” as defined in NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-26.4(C)(3) (2003) to decide

 9 whether Worker unreasonably rejected Employer’s return to work offer, as

10 opposed to using the actual return to work restrictions placed upon Worker by his

11 authorized health care provider. We affirm. Because this is a memorandum opinion

12 and the parties are familiar with the facts and procedural posture of the case, we set

13 forth only such facts and law as are necessary to decide the merits.

14 BACKGROUND

15   {2}   After a trial on the merits, the WCJ filed a Compensation Order in which it

16 found and concluded the following: Worker was in an accident and suffered a

17 compensable injury to his shoulder on October 17, 2012. “Worker reached

18 maximum medical improvement (MMI) on April 19, 2013.” “Worker is medically

19 restricted, after MMI, to activities which are at a Light duty level of exertion.” The

20 “terms HEAVY, MEDIUM, LIGHT, AND SED[E]NTARY have the meanings set

                                             2
 1 forth in Section 52-1-26.4.” “Worker’s pre-injury physical capacity was Heavy;

 2 Worker’s post-injury physical capacity is Light[.]” “Worker’s Impairment Rating

 3 plus modifiers (Age, Education, SVP, Training), multiplied by the residual

 4 physical capacity, provides Worker with a PPD [Permanent Partial Disability] rate

 5 of 68%.” As a result, the WCJ concluded, because Employer terminated Worker

 6 “due to a reduction in [work]force” and Worker had not voluntarily quit or

 7 volunteered for the reduction in workforce, “Worker is entitled to [modifier-based]

 8 PPD [in the amount] of 68% of his weekly compensation rate from April 18,

 9 2013[,] forward until the expiration of his benefit entitlement period, return to

10 work, or further Order of [the Workers’ Compensation Administration (WCA)].”

11 Employer filed a notice of appeal of the Compensation Order, which Employer

12 later withdrew and was subsequently dismissed.

13   {3}   Worker cross[-]appealed, which raised the issues of whether the WCJ “erred

14 in permitting any of      Dr. [Marjorie Eskay-]Auerbach’s opinions [regarding

15 Worker’s impairment rating] to be admitted into evidence” and “erred in

16 determining that Worker’s permanent impairment rating was 13%, rather than 18%

17 as determined by the authorized health care provider Dr. [Herbert V.] Rachelson.”

18 The cross-appeal was resolved in this Court’s memorandum opinion in Serrano v.

19 Los Alamos National Laboratories, No. A-1-CA-33922, mem op. (N.M. Ct. App.

20 Aug. 5, 2015) (non-precedential). We held that Dr. Auerbach’s opinions were

                                            3
 1 improperly admitted. Id. ¶¶ 4-8. We therefore reversed and remanded to the WCJ

 2 for further proceedings, stating that Worker was entitled on remand to apply for an

 3 order from the WCJ that his impairment rating is 18%. Id. ¶¶ 9-10. On remand, the

 4 WCJ filed an order denying Worker’s application for a determination that

 5 Worker’s impairment rating is 18%, concluding that based on Dr. Rachelson’s trial

 6 testimony, Worker’s impairment rating is 13%.

 7   {4}   On January 15, 2015, during the pendency of Worker’s cross-appeal,

 8 Employer made a return to work offer to Worker, pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section

 9 52-1-50.1 (1990), which Employer stated would remain open until January 26,

10 2015. The offer was for a position with Employer as a general foreman with wages

11 equal to $1,033.44 per week. The offer stated that the physical requirements of the

12 position “will not exceed lifting above [twenty-five] pounds and no above the

13 shoulder/overhead lifting.” “Please be advised[,]” the offer concluded, “refusal of

14 this offer will affect your workers’ compensation benefits.”

15   {5}   Worker did not respond to Employer’s return to work offer. When the offer

16 expired, Employer unilaterally reduced its payment of PPD benefits to Worker,

17 without obtaining an order from the WCJ, to an amount equivalent to Worker’s

18 impairment rating without modifiers. When Employer rejected Worker’s

19 subsequent request for payment of PPD with modifiers as the WCJ ordered in the

20 Compensation Order, Worker filed an application seeking “an award of bad

                                            4
 1 faith/unfair claims processing and a Supplemental Compensation Order enforcing

 2 the Compensation Order.”

 3   {6}   In his application for a finding of bad faith and/or unfair claims processing,

 4 Worker asserted that the compensation order states “Worker is entitled to PPD at

 5 the rate of 68% of his weekly compensation rate from April 18, 2013[,] forward

 6 until the expiration of his benefit entitlement period, return to work, or further

 7 [o]rder of [the WCA,]” but that Employer had paid only a reduced benefit since

 8 January 2015 on grounds that Worker unreasonably refused a job offer during the

 9 same period. Given that there had been no further order of the WCJ regarding

10 payment of PPD to Worker since the filing of the Compensation Order, Worker

11 asserted PPD had been underpaid to Worker since January 2015, and that

12 Employer was “not entitled to unilaterally determine whether or not Worker

13 unreasonably refused a job offer.” Worker therefore requested an order requiring

14 Employer to pay to him:

15         the PPD benefits owing since January 2015 at the total disability rate
16         of 68%, $468.49 per week, based on the Compensation Order.
17         Pursuant to NMSA 1978, [S]ection 52-1-28.1 [(1990)], Worker also
18         requests a benefit penalty of [25%] of the underlying indemnity
19         benefits due and owing as of this date, plus attorney’s fees to be paid
20         100% by Employer/Insurer and post-judgment interest at the judgment
21         rate awarded of 8.75% on any amount awarded.

                                              5
 1   {7}   Employer responded that Worker’s bad faith and/or unfair claims processing

 2 claim was without merit because it “extended a return to work offer to Worker

 3 within his permanent physical restrictions at his pre-injury wages[,]” which

 4 Worker denied. Employer argued that because “Worker refused post injury, post

 5 MMI employment with . . . Employer . . . [,] his entitlement to modifier benefits

 6 had expired” and Worker’s application should be denied.

 7   {8}   The WCJ filed a Supplemental Compensation Order granting Worker’s

 8 application for finding of bad faith and/or unfair claims processing practices, in

 9 which the WCJ found and concluded the following: Employer extended to Worker

10 a return to work offer to Worker on January 15, 2015, and that “Worker

11 received, . . . but did not respond to it.” Employer thereafter “reduced Worker’s

12 PPD benefits to an amount equivalent to Worker’s impairment rating” without

13 modifiers for failure to respond to the return to work offer. “Subsequent to

14 reaching MMI, Worker’s physical capacity was set at Light” as defined in Section

15 52-1-26.4, which means “the ability to lift up to twenty pounds occasionally or up

16 to ten pounds frequently.” Employer’s return to work offer states that the physical

17 requirements for the job “will not exceed lifting above [twenty-five] pounds” and

18 therefore “does not conform to Worker’s physical limitations.” “It is not

19 unreasonable for Worker to decline Employer’s job offer when said offer does not

20 conform to Worker’s physical limitations.” The WCJ concluded that although

                                            6
 1 Employer attempted to extend a bona fide return to work offer to Worker,

 2 Employer “did engage in unfair claims processing, as that terms is defined at

 3 11.4.1.7(W) [NMAC], when its actions (intentional or not) resulted in an

 4 unreasonable delay in the payment of benefits to Worker.” The WCJ therefore

 5 ordered:

 6         a.     Employer shall pay Worker modifier benefits due from the
 7         time said benefits were reduced to the present, plus interest at the rate
 8         of 8.75%, continuing until such time as the underlying benefits are
 9         fully paid to Worker;
10         b.     Employer shall reinstate Worker’s PPD benefits at the rate of
11         68% of his compensation rate in accord with the Compensation Order
12         of June 26, 2014; [and]
13         c.     Employer shall pay a penalty of 5.25% of the underlying
14         indemnity benefits due and owing at the date of this Order[.]

15   {9}   Employer filed a motion for reconsideration, pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(6)

16 NMRA, arguing that the WCJ erred in using Worker’s physical capacity of “Light”

17 as defined in Section 52-1-26.4 to determine whether Worker unreasonably

18 rejected Employer’s return to work offer as opposed to using the actual return to

19 work restrictions placed upon Worker by his authorized health care provider.

20 Employer further asserted that “[e]mployers have a duty to mirror return to work

21 offers of employment with the specifics of each individual’s actual return to work

22 restrictions determined by the authorized healthcare providers, not legal

23 compensation orders using rigid legislatively defined categories for computing

                                              7
 1 benefit entitlement. The two concepts are not the same.” Contending that the

 2 medical evidence supported a twenty-five pound return to work restriction,

 3 Employer requested modification of any and all compensation orders entered in the

 4 case that reflected a “Light” category for modifier purposes, pursuant to reflect

 5 Worker’s authorized health care provider’s actual return to work restrictions for

 6 Worker of twenty-five pounds occasionally, fifteen pounds frequently, and no

 7 overhead lifting.

 8   {10}   Worker responded, asserting that pursuant to the Compensation Order,

 9 which is the law of the case, Worker’s physical capacity is limited to “Light” duty

10 work—i.e., Worker is restricted to lifting up to twenty pounds occasionally and ten

11 pounds continuously. Because Employer’s return to work offer stated that the

12 physical requirements for the job would not exceed lifting above twenty-five

13 pounds, this physical requirement was beyond the judicially determined twenty

14 pound lifting restriction as a matter of law, and Employer’s motion for

15 reconsideration should be denied.

16   {11}   The WCJ filed an order denying in part Employer’s motion for

17 reconsideration. While reaffirming that Employer engaged in unfair claims

18 processing practice in causing an unreasonable delay in payment of benefits to

19 Worker, the WCJ reduced the award due to Worker. The WCJ ordered:

                                            8
 1          1.     Employer does not have to pay post-judgment interest for a
 2          period of twelve (12) weeks of the total post-judgment interest owed.
 3          2.     The penalty owed by Employer for unfair claims processing
 4          practice is 2.5%.
 5          3.     In all other respects, Employer’s Motion for Reconsideration is
 6          denied.

 7 In so concluding, the WCJ made the following findings and conclusions: Although

 8 “Employer’s offer requires Worker to lift up to [twenty-five] pounds occasionally,

 9 within the lifting restriction placed on Worker by” his authorized health care

10 provider, pursuant to the Compensation Order, which is the law of the case,

11 “Worker was placed in a Light category because a Medium category requires

12 Worker to lift [twenty-five] pounds frequently.” Testimony introduced by

13 Employer at the hearing on Worker’s application for a finding of bad faith and

14 unfair claims processing practices showed that “Employer’s return to work offer

15 could have accommodated any restriction placed on Worker because the offered

16 position was purely supervisory and required minimal lifting, if at all.”

17 “Employer’s assertion of minimal lifting requirements signifies that Employer

18 could have offered Worker return to work within the Light category where Worker

19 was placed by the Compensation Order[.]”

20   {12}   Further, the WCJ found that “[t]here was a lengthy delay from the time

21 Worker’s benefits were suspended[, after January 26, 2015,] until such time as this

22 matter was resolved” by the Supplemental Compensation Order on June 13, 2016.

                                              9
 1 The WCJ concluded that the delay in resolution of Employer’s return to work offer

 2 to Worker and suspension of Worker’s PPD modifier benefits resulted from the

 3 fact that the case was pending in the Court of Appeals. The WCJ specifically

 4 recognized that “Employer could have waited until this matter was resolved before

 5 suspending Worker’s PPD modifier benefits”; “Employer could then have sought a

 6 credit for benefits paid had they prevailed on the issue of suspension of benefits.”

 7 Rather, “Employer unilaterally decided to suspend Worker’s benefits after he did

 8 not affirmatively respond to Employer’s return to work offer.” The WCJ therefore

 9 reaffirmed that “[i]t is not unreasonable for Worker to reject a return to work offer

10 that is outside the Light category assigned to Worker, especially in light of

11 Employer’s position that Worker’s return to work offer could have included only

12 minimal lifting requirement” and that “Employer’s actions resulted in an

13 unreasonable delay in the payment of benefits to Worker.” Employer appeals the

14 WCJ’s partial denial of his motion for reconsideration.

15 DISCUSSION

16 I.       Standard of Review

17   {13}   Rule 1-060(B)(6), under which Employer’s motion for reconsideration was

18 brought, provides that “[o]n motion and on such terms as are just, the court may

19 relieve a party or the party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order, or

20 proceeding for . . . any . . . reason justifying relief from the operation of the

                                            10
 1 judgment[.]” We generally review the denial of Rule 1-060(B) motion for

 2 reconsideration for an abuse of discretion. L.D. Miller Constr., Inc. v.

 3 Kirschenbaum, 2017-NMCA-030, ¶ 17, 392 P.3d 194; see Lopez v. Sears, Roebuck

 4 & Co., 1981-NMCA-058, ¶¶ 3-7, 96 N.M. 143, 628 P.2d 1139 (construing the

 5 employer’s motion to vacate a default judgment against it as brought, pursuant to

 6 Rule 1-055 NMRA and Rule 1-060, and reviewing the motion for an abuse of

 7 discretion). A trial court abuses its discretion where it is “shown that the court’s

 8 ruling exceeds the bounds of all reason or that the judicial action taken is arbitrary,

 9 fanciful, or unreasonable.” Kirschenbaum, 2017-NMCA-030, ¶ 17 (internal

10 quotation marks and citation omitted).

11 II.      Analysis

12   {14}   Advancing the same argument raised in its response to Worker’s application

13 for finding of bad faith and/or unfair claims processing and in its motion for

14 reconsideration, Employer contends that the WCJ erred in using Worker’s physical

15 capacity of “Light” as defined in Section 52-1-26.4 to determine whether Worker

16 unreasonably rejected Employer’s return to work offer instead of using the actual

17 return to work restrictions placed upon Worker by his authorized health care

18 provider.

19   {15}   Worker responds that “[d]espite the fact that modifier-based PPD benefits

20 were originally awarded” in the Compensation Order (the appeal of which was

                                             11
 1 abandoned) and subsequently were reaffirmed in the Supplemental Compensation

 2 Order and order partially denying Employer’s motion for reconsideration,

 3 “Employer continues to refuse to pay modifier-based PPD benefits to Worker” in

 4 violation of the WCJ’s orders. Therefore, Worker contends, “Employer’s current

 5 appeal should be limited to a review of whether the penalties ordered [in the

 6 WCJ’s order partially denying Employer’s motion for reconsideration] for non-

 7 payment of modifier-based PPD was error.” And “[c]onsidering the purposeful

 8 disregard of the WCJ’s three prior orders and lengthy delay in payment of benefits

 9 owed, post-judgment interest and a 2.5% penalty on the PPD currently owed is

10 reasonable, justified and well within the WCJ’s discretion.” We agree.

11   {16}   We begin by recognizing that by abandoning its appeal of the Compensation

12 Order, Employer waived its right to challenge the scope and legal effect of the

13 order with regard to the WCJ’s award of modifier-based PPD to Worker, except as

14 expressly permitted by the Compensation Order. See Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n v.

15 Chiulli, 2018-NMCA-054, ¶ 12, 425 P.3d 739 (determining that by abandoning its

16 appeal of the district court’s dismissal of its foreclosure complaint with prejudice,

17 Fannie Mae “waived its right to challenge whether the sanction of dismissal with

18 prejudice was an appropriate sanction, its scope or legal effect”). In this regard, the

19 Compensation Order states that “Worker is entitled to [modifier-based] PPD at the

20 rate of 68% of his weekly compensation rate from April 18, 2013 forward until the

                                             12
 1 expiration of his benefit entitlement period, return to work, or further [o]rder of

 2 [the WCA].” (emphasis added). Giving this language its plain meaning and

 3 following the principle that a “judgment or final order of a court having

 4 jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, however erroneous, irregular, or

 5 informal such judgment or order may be, is valid until reversed or set aside[,]” we

 6 conclude that Employer was bound by the Compensation Order to pay Worker

 7 modifier-based PPD until the expiration of the benefit entitlement period, return to

 8 work by the Worker, or until otherwise ordered by the WCJ. See Acequia Del

 9 Llano v. Acequia De Las Joyas Del Llano Frio, 1919-NMSC-001, ¶ 9, 25 N.M.

10 134, 179 P. 235; Chiulli, 2018-NMCA-054, ¶ 14 (stating that the plain meaning of

11 the language used in an order is the primary indicator of the court’s intent and that

12 where the language of an order is clear and unambiguous, “it must stand and be

13 enforced as it speaks” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). It follows

14 that notwithstanding Worker’s failure to respond to Employer’s January 2015

15 return to work offer, Employer was required to continue to pay him modifier-based

16 PPD benefits until the expiration of his benefit entitlement period, return to work,

17 or further order of the WCJ.

18   {17}   Further, we conclude that the WCJ did not abuse its discretion in reducing

19 the penalty awarded to Worker based on its finding that Employer engaged in

20 unfair claim processing practices suspending its payments of modifier-based PPD

                                            13
 1 benefits to Worker without an order from the WCJ. See Section 52-1-28.1(A)

 2 (“Claims may be filed under the Workers’ Compensation Act alleging unfair

 3 claims-processing practices . . . by an employer, insurer or claim-processing

 4 representative relating to any aspect of the Workers’ Compensation Act.”);

 5 11.4.1.7(W) NMAC (stating that “[u]nfair claims processing” is defined as “any

 6 practice, whether intentional or not, which unreasonably delays or prolongs the

 7 payment of benefits at a rate not consistent with the act”). As we have already

 8 stated, the WCJ made the following findings and conclusions in its order partially

 9 denying Employer’s motion for reconsideration: Pursuant to the Compensation

10 Order, Worker’s residual physical capacity is “Light” as defined at Section 52-1-

11 26.4(C)(3). The physical requirement for the position stated in the January 2015

12 return to work offer exceeds the limitations of an individual with a residual

13 physical capacity of Light. It was therefore “not unreasonable for Worker to reject

14 a return to work offer that is outside the Light category assigned to Worker,

15 especially in light of Employer’s position that Worker’s return to work could have

16 included only minimal lifting requirement.” However, based upon Worker’s failure

17 to respond to Employer’s return to work offer, “Employer unilaterally decided to

18 suspend Worker’s benefits.” “There was a lengthy delay from the time Worker’s

19 benefits were suspended until such time as this matter was resolved” by the

20 Supplemental Compensation Order. Employer could have waited until the

                                           14
 1 Worker’s cross-appeal and the issue of the propriety of Worker’s continued

 2 entitlement to receive modifier-based PPD was resolved before suspending

 3 Worker’s modifier-based PPD benefits. “Employer could then have sought a credit

 4 for benefits paid had they prevailed on the issue of suspension of benefits.”

 5   {18}   On the basis of these findings and conclusions, the WCJ reasonably

 6 concluded that “Employer’s actions resulted in an unreasonable delay in the

 7 payment of benefits to Worker[,]” and therefore unfair claims processing practice.

 8 However, considering the medical evidence tendered by Employer showing that its

 9 return to work offer to Worker, which would have required him to “lift up to

10 [twenty-five] pounds occasionally,” was “within the lifting restriction placed on

11 Worker” by his authorized health care provider, the WCJ also reasonably reduced

12 the penalty awarded to Worker for Employer’s unfair claims processing practice.

13 Accordingly, we determine that the WCJ did not abuse its discretion in reducing

14 the penalty awarded to Worker from 5.25% to 2.5% of the underlying benefits due

15 and owing at the date of the Supplemental Compensation Order and also in

16 relieving Employer from twelve weeks of the total-post judgment interest owed,

17 pursuant to the Supplemental Compensation Order.

18 CONCLUSION

19   {19}   The order of the WCJ partially denying Employer’s motion for

20 reconsideration is affirmed.

                                            15
1   {20}   IT IS SO ORDERED.

                               _________________________________
2                              MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge

3 WE CONCUR:

4 _____________________________
5 M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge

6 ___________________________
7 HENRY M. BOHNHOFF, Judge

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