Court Opinion

ID: 5139156
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 15:33:13.659404+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:15.214813
License: Public Domain

2020 UT App 20

               THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

        WASATCH ELECTRIC DYNALECTRIC COMPANY AND
        AMERICAN CASUALTY COMPANY OF READING, PA,
                       Petitioners,
                            v.
         LABOR COMMISSION AND WENDELL BENWARD,
                      Respondents.

                            Opinion
                       No. 20190398-CA
                    Filed February 13, 2020

               Original Proceeding in this Court

          Brad J. Miller and Trent D. Holgate, Attorneys
                           for Petitioners
         Gary E. Atkin and K. Dawn Atkin, Attorneys for
                 Respondent Wendell Benward

    JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which
  JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and DIANA HAGEN concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1      Wendell Benward was electrocuted while maintaining
electrical power lines. He survived, but his injuries were so
severe that doctors found it necessary to amputate both of his
feet. Because of his injuries, Benward qualified for and received
workers’ compensation benefits. Despite his injuries, however,
Benward eventually was able to go back to work, albeit in a
different capacity. His former employer, Wasatch Electric
Dynalectric Company (Wasatch), does not think it should have
to pay Benward permanent total disability benefits for time
periods in which Benward was able to work. Under applicable
Utah law, Wasatch’s argument would be a winner with regard to
most injured workers, who ordinarily lose eligibility for
permanent total disability benefits if they are able to return to
               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

work. But Utah law carves out an exception for workers who
have lost limbs or eyes in a workplace accident, and considers
such workers permanently disabled and entitled to permanent
total disability benefits even if they are later able to return to
work. We therefore reject Wasatch’s arguments, and decline to
disturb the decision of the Labor Commission (the Commission),
which ordered Wasatch to continue to pay benefits to Benward
and refused to allow Wasatch to offset the wages it paid
Benward post-accident.

                        BACKGROUND 1

¶2     On July 23, 2012, Benward was working as part of a team
tasked with maintaining a set of electrical power lines.
According to Benward, the team was transporting a large pole
when Benward observed that the grounded pole was too close to
a live power line. Benward rushed over to help, but tripped and
twisted his ankle just before reaching them. As he regained his
footing, electricity suddenly arced between the pole and the
nearby power line. Somehow, the electricity jumped to
Benward’s left arm, and the current passed through his body
and exited through both of his feet, causing significant injury.

¶3     Benward was evacuated from the scene by helicopter and
taken to a hospital, where doctors determined that his injuries
required the amputation of both feet. The amputation was
performed that same day. In addition to the loss of his feet,
Benward also suffered second- and third-degree burns over
much of his upper body, as well as hearing loss, sleep apnea,

1. “We state the facts and all legitimate inferences drawn
therefrom in the light most favorable to the agency’s findings.”
ABCO Enters. v. Utah State Tax Comm'n, 2009 UT 36, ¶ 2 n.1, 211
P.3d 382 (quotation simplified).

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              Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

tinnitus, meniscus tears in both knees, and memory loss, among
other ailments.

¶4     After nearly a year, Benward recovered sufficiently to
return to work on a part-time basis, although not in the same
capacity. With some retraining, Benward was able to work as a
safety manager, and he performed those duties for Wasatch on a
part-time basis for a few months. Then, in January 2014,
Benward was able to increase his hours to full time, and
continued to work as a full-time safety manager until Wasatch
laid him off, for unrelated reasons, in January 2017. After being
laid off, Benward was eventually able to find similar
employment as a safety professional at an electrical engineering
company specializing in high-voltage power installation.
Although the work is inconsistent and the wages and benefits
are project-dependent, Benward now earns a weekly wage that
is even higher than the wage he earned at Wasatch.

¶5     In addition to the part-time and full-time salary Benward
has earned since the date of the accident, Wasatch (or its
insurance company) also paid Benward workers’ compensation
benefits. Beginning on the day following the accident, Wasatch
paid Benward temporary total disability benefits until Benward
was able to resume part-time work. While Benward was
working part-time, Wasatch paid Benward—in addition to his
part-time wages—temporary partial disability benefits. After
Benward resumed full-time employment, Wasatch paid
Benward permanent partial disability benefits, based on a forty-
nine percent whole person impairment rating, until it laid
Benward off in 2017. In total, Wasatch paid Benward $130,818.68
in various types of workers’ compensation benefits between the
date of his accident and the date he was laid off.

¶6     In March 2017, after being laid off, Benward filed a claim
for permanent total disability benefits stemming from the loss of
both of his feet. In this claim, Benward asserted that he was

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              Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

entitled to continuing permanent total disability benefits from
the date of his accident, and continuing for the rest of his
life, regardless of the fact that he was able to return to work
after the accident as a safety manager. In response, Wasatch
acknowledged that Benward met the criteria for permanent total
disability under Utah’s workers’ compensation statute, given the
amputation of both of his feet, and that he should receive
benefits for the time periods in which he was fully or partially
unable to work. However, Wasatch asserted that Benward was
not entitled to permanent total disability benefits once it was
demonstrated that he was again capable of gainful employment.

¶7     An administrative law judge (ALJ) ruled in favor of
Wasatch, determining that Benward’s injury created only a
“presumptive finding” that he was permanently and totally
disabled, and that this presumption was rebutted by the fact that
Benward had returned to work. The ALJ concluded that Wasatch
was not obligated to pay Benward permanent total disability
benefits during periods in which he was gainfully employed.

¶8     Benward appealed the decision to the Commission, which
reversed the ALJ’s legal determination, concluding that Benward
was entitled to permanent total disability benefits even after
returning to work, and stating as follows:

      The Commission recognizes that awarding
      permanent total disability compensation to Mr.
      Benward for a period during which he was
      working may seem counterintuitive; however,
      neither gainful employment nor the ability to work
      are part of the criteria under § 413(9) as they are
      under § 413(1). The unique criteria found in
      § 413(9) provide for a final award of permanent
      total disability compensation without regard for or
      consideration of the claimant’s interim work
      following the loss described in that subsection.

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               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

However, the Commission noted that Benward would not be
entitled to permanent total disability benefits during the time he
worked for Wasatch, if his wages had not really been earned but
had merely been “intended to be paid in lieu of disability
compensation.” The Commission remanded the case back to the
ALJ for a factual determination about whether the money paid to
Benward while he was employed by Wasatch post-accident was
“intended as a substitute for disability compensation or as
regular compensation for the work performed.”

¶9     On remand, the ALJ found that Benward “was paid
during the relevant time period for actual work for which [he]
earned the wages he was paid,” that his job “was not a make-
work job” and “was legitimate and not just to avoid permanent
total disability benefits,” and that Benward “gave a dollar’s
worth of labor for every dollar he was paid.” The Commission
affirmed the ALJ’s factual findings, and concluded that Wasatch
acquired an ongoing obligation to pay Benward permanent total
disability benefits starting on the date of his accident and
continuing for the remainder of Benward’s life, and that—
although Wasatch was entitled to an offset for the $130,818.68
that it had already paid Benward for other types of workers’
compensation benefits—Wasatch was not entitled to an offset for
what it had paid him in wages after the accident.

             ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶10 Wasatch now seeks judicial review of certain aspects of
the Commission’s order. Wasatch does not seek judicial review
of any factual findings made by the ALJ or the Commission, and
does not dispute the fact that it has a workers’ compensation
obligation to Benward for at least the time periods in which
Benward was unable to work due to his injuries. However, it
asserts that it has no obligation to pay permanent total disability
benefits to Benward during periods of time in which Benward
was or is gainfully employed, and that it should be entitled to

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               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

offset the wages it paid to Benward post-accident against its
workers’ compensation obligation to Benward. Thus, the issues
Wasatch raises in this case are legal in nature, and involve the
meaning and interpretation of Utah’s workers’ compensation
statutes. In this context, we review the Commission’s legal
determinations for correctness. See Esquivel v. Labor Comm’n, 2000
UT 66, ¶ 13, 7 P.3d 777 (stating that “[m]atters of statutory
construction are questions of law that are reviewed for
correctness” (quotation simplified)); see also Intermountain Slurry
Seal v. Labor Comm’n, 2002 UT App 164, ¶ 4, 48 P.3d 252 (stating
that, when reviewing the Commission’s resolution of a question
of law, we give “no deference” to the “agency’s determination,
because the appellate court has the power and duty to say what
the law is and to ensure that it is uniform throughout the
jurisdiction” (quotation simplified)).

                           ANALYSIS

¶11 For most injured workers—those who have not lost limbs
or eyes—permanent total disability benefits under Utah’s
workers’ compensation statutes are available only if the worker
proves, by a preponderance of the evidence, the existence of six
elements: (1) that he “sustained a significant impairment” as a
result of a work-related injury; (2) that he “is not gainfully
employed”; (3) that he has an impairment that limits his “ability
to do basic work activities” and (4) prevents him from
“performing the essential functions of the work” for which he
was qualified prior to his accident; (5) that he “cannot perform
other work reasonably available”; and (6) that “the industrial
accident or occupational disease is the direct cause of the
employee’s permanent total disability.” See Oliver v. Labor
Comm’n, 2017 UT 39, ¶ 15, 424 P.3d 22 (quoting Utah Code Ann.
§ 34A-2-413(1)). In this case, given that he is now able to work
full-time, and has been since at least 2014, Benward cannot meet
this test, and does not argue that he can.

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                  Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

¶12 Instead, Benward points to subsection (9) of that same
statutory provision, and asserts that there exists a second and
alternative path to proving permanent total disability, one that
exists only for workers who sustained a catastrophic injury
involving the loss of limbs or eyes, and one that does not
consider whether the worker can return to work. That provision
reads, in its entirety, as follows:

      (a) The loss or permanent and complete loss of the
          use of the following constitutes total and
          permanent disability that is compensated
          according to this section:
          (i)     both hands;
          (ii)    both arms;
          (iii)   both feet;
          (iv)    both legs;
          (v)     both eyes; or
          (vi)    any combination of two body members
                  described in this Subsection 9(a).
      (b) A finding of permanent total              disability
          pursuant to Subsection 9(a) is final.

Utah Code Ann. § 34A-2-413(9) (LexisNexis 2019). 2

¶13 We have interpreted this statutory subsection once before,
in Intermountain Slurry Seal v. Labor Commission, 2002 UT App
164, 48 P.3d 252. In that case, we noted that Utah’s workers’
compensation statute sets forth “two avenues” that are
“available for an employee to demonstrate the existence of a
permanent, totally disabling condition.” Id. ¶ 7. Under the first
avenue, set forth in section 34A-2-413(1) of the Utah Code, the

2. Because the relevant sections of the statute have not changed
since the date of the administrative proceeding in question, we
cite the current version of the Utah Code for convenience.

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               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

injured worker must meet the six-part test discussed above. Id.
The second avenue, set forth in subsection (9) of that same
statute, is available only to workers who have lost two limbs or
eyes, and under that avenue the worker does not have to make
the six-part showing detailed in subsection (1). Instead, “if an
employee suffers one of the combination of injuries articulated in
subsection [(9)],[ 3] there is a conclusive presumption that the
employee is permanently and totally disabled.” Id. ¶ 9. Indeed,
we stated that “[o]ur reading of the plain language of subsection
[(9)] evidences a clear intent to separate the injuries enumerated
under subsection [(9)] from other injuries that may also result in
an award of permanent total disability benefits.” See id. ¶ 11; see
also id. ¶ 14 (stating that “the legislature carefully [chose] to
immunize subsection [(9)] claims from the rigorous requirements
applied to all other [workers’ compensation] claims”). We noted
that workers attempting to use the subsection (9) avenue in
proving that they suffered a permanent total disability “need
show nothing more than the existence of an injury listed within
subsection [(9)] and that the injury was the result of an industrial
accident,” and that such an employee “is not required to
establish that he is totally disabled as all other claimants are
required to do pursuant to” subsection (1). Id. ¶ 11.

¶14 Moreover, we emphasized that a subsection (9) claimant’s
entitlement to permanent total disability benefits is final, and not

3. In Intermountain Slurry Seal v. Labor Commission, 2002 UT App
164, 48 P.3d 252, we refer to “subsection (10)” as the relevant
subsection. Since our opinion in Intermountain Slurry Seal, the
legislature removed one of the earlier-listed statutory
subsections, rendering the former subsection (10) now
subsection (9), and when quoting Intermountain Slurry Seal, we
use the current subsection number. The relevant statutory
language, although now numbered differently, remains
substantively unchanged.

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               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

“subject to the same rehabilitation provisions as a disability
finding under subsection (1).” Id. ¶ 10. “Once a subsection [(9)]
claimant has established a qualifying injury, there is a conclusive
presumption that the claimant/employee is permanently totally
disabled and no further findings are required.” Id. ¶ 12. We
concluded by stating that “the plain language of the statute
clearly establishes that total permanent disability benefits
awarded pursuant to subsection [(9)] are not subject to, nor
controlled by, the claimant/employee’s limitations or
employability.” Id. 4

¶15 Wasatch makes no effort to distinguish Intermountain
Slurry Seal, or to argue that it is inapplicable, and does not ask us

4. More than seventeen years have passed since our decision in
Intermountain Slurry Seal, and in that time span, while the
legislature has made certain changes to section 34A-2-413 of the
Utah Code, it has not substantively changed the language of
subsection (9), nor has it made any other changes that would
indicate a legislative belief that our opinion in Intermountain
Slurry Seal was inconsistent with legislative intent. Because we
presume that the legislature is aware of judicial interpretations
of statutes, we in turn may presume that the legislature’s choice,
over the course of nearly two decades, not to amend the statute
to supersede Intermountain Slurry Seal indicates an acceptance of
our interpretation. See Rutherford v. Talisker Canyons Fin. Co., 2019
UT 27, ¶ 62, 445 P.3d 474 (noting the significance of the fact that,
“in the years since Clover was decided, the legislature has not
amended the [relevant statute] to overrule the holding of
Clover”); United States Smelting, Refining & Mining Co. v. Nielsen,
430 P.2d 162, 167 (Utah 1967) (Ellett, J., dissenting) (noting that a
previous holding was twenty-seven years old, and that “the
Legislature by not changing this statute would have given its
tacit approval to the interpretation placed thereon” by the
previous holding).

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                Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

to reexamine the holding we rendered in that case. 5 Instead,
Wasatch makes generalized arguments that Benward’s
interpretation of the statute leads to an “absurd result” that
“exceeds the bounds of reasonableness and rationality” and
would result in a “windfall” to Benward. But we are bound by
Intermountain Slurry Seal, and—absent a disavowal or overruling
of that case, something Wasatch does not seek here—we must
follow the holding and rationale of our prior cases. 6 See State v.
Legg, 2018 UT 12, ¶ 9, 417 P.3d 592 (stating that, “[u]nder the
doctrine of horizontal stare decisis, the first decision by a court on
a particular question of law governs later decisions by the same
court,” that “one panel on the court of appeals owes great
deference to the precedent established by a different panel on
the court of appeals,” and clarifying that “[t]he doctrine of
horizontal stare decisis applies as between different panels of the
court of appeals” (quotation simplified)); see also In re adoption of
B.N.A., 2018 UT App 224, ¶ 22, 438 P.3d 10 (stating that “one
panel of this court is bound to follow the previous decisions of

5. Wasatch cited Intermountain Slurry Seal only once in its
opening brief, in the context of making a passing reference to the
ALJ’s and the Labor Commission’s rulings. And, after Benward
relied heavily upon Intermountain Slurry Seal in his brief,
Wasatch chose not to file a reply brief.

6. We note, as an aside, that we find the statutory interpretation
analysis in Intermountain Slurry Seal to be not only binding, but
also persuasive. See 7 Arthur Larson & Lex K. Larson, Larson’s
Workers’ Compensation Law § 83.08 (2014) (stating that “[s]pecial
statutory provisions may supersede the general principles
controlling the relation between medical and wage loss factors in
determining total disability,” and that “[t]he commonest
example of this type of statute is the familiar provision that
certain combinations of losses of members shall be presumed to
constitute total disability”).

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               Wasatch Electric v. Labor Commission

another panel of this court, unless we make a specific decision to
overrule or disavow the earlier precedent”).

¶16 In this case, there is no dispute that Benward meets the
requirements of subsection (9) for demonstrating permanent
total disability. The parties to this case have stipulated that
Benward’s workplace accident arose out of the course and scope
of his employment with Wasatch, and that, as a result of that
accident, he sustained the loss of both of his feet. And under
subsection (9), Benward need show nothing more. See Utah Code
Ann. § 34A-2-413(9)(a); see also Intermountain Slurry Seal, 2002 UT
App 164, ¶ 11 (stating that a subsection (9) claimant “need show
nothing more than the existence of an injury listed within
subsection [(9)] and that the injury was the result of an industrial
accident”). He has proven that he was permanently and totally
disabled, and under subsection (9), that status is “final” and does
not change even if Benward is at some point able to return to the
workforce. See Utah Code Ann. § 34A-2-413(9)(b); see also
Intermountain Slurry Seal, 2002 UT App 164, ¶ 12 (stating that
“[o]nce a subsection [(9)] claimant has established a qualifying
injury, there is a conclusive presumption” of permanent total
disability that is not “controlled by” future “employability”).

                         CONCLUSION

¶17 The plain language of the relevant statutory subsection, as
interpreted by this court in Intermountain Slurry Seal, compels the
conclusion that Benward is entitled to permanent total disability
benefits, even if he is now capable of working. To the extent
Wasatch finds that conclusion absurd or unreasonable, Wasatch
would be better served to direct its complaints to the Utah
Legislature. Because we are obligated to apply both the statute
as written as well as our own prior case law, we decline to
disturb the decision of the Labor Commission.

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