Court Opinion

ID: 9756926
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-28 22:09:43.441029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:28:33.259880
License: Public Domain

ROBERTS, Justice.
Great Northern Paper Company appeals from a decision of the Appellate Division affirming the denial by the Workers’ Compensation Commission of its petition for reduction of benefits that alleged Betty J. Cote refused an offer of employment. 39 M.R.S.A. § 66-A(6) (1989). Great Northern contends that Cote’s failure of a drug test constituted a refusal to accept suitable work. We reject that contention and affirm the Appellate Division’s decision.
Prior to the summer of 1989, Cote had sustained two work-related injuries. In June 1989 Great Northern offered her temporary employment within her physical capacity for the summer vacation period. Despite Cote’s knowledge that the company required a drug screening test, she took the test and tested positive for cannabis. Great Northern thereafter petitioned for a reduction of benefits and a recovery of overpayments made after July 1, 1989, the date she could have returned to work.
Section. 66-A(6) provides in pertinent part:
If any injured employee refuses to accept an offer of reinstatement, the employer ... may file ... a petition for a reduction of benefits. If, after hearing, the commission finds that an employee refused to accept the offer and the position offered was suitable to his physical condition, it shall order the reduction of all benefits payable under section 54-B and 55-B.
The Commission ruled that Great Northern had failed to sustain its burden of proof, finding that Cote “wanted to return to work” and would have done so “but for her failure of the rehiring drug test.” See 39 M.R.S.A. § 66-A(7). Great Northern argued to the Appellate Division, and before us, that the failure of a reemployment drug test is a refusal of employment. The company contends that Cote’s situation is analogous to an employee’s failure to participate in an independent medical examination or refusal of medical treatment (section 65); an employee’s intentional injury to himself (section 61); an employee’s refusal to comply with an approved rehabilitation plan (section 87); and an employee’s criminal conduct (section 102-A). 39 M.R.S.A. §§ 61, 65, 87, 102-A. The company argues that Cote’s conduct, as in the aforementioned situations, constitutes deliberate action that frustrates the employer’s attempt *59to ameliorate the burden of workers’ compensation.
We previously rejected a similar argument in Cousins v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 599 A.2d 73 (Me.1991), where we decided that an employee’s discharge for willful misconduct did not preclude a restoration of compensation benefits. In Cousins we recognized that the Legislature has seen fit to penalize very limited forms of misconduct. Although the Legislature imposes a duty on the employer to reinstate an injured employee, it has not imposed a reciprocal duty upon the employee to maintain herself ready for reinstatement (physically able to pass a required preemployment test). As we said in Cousins, we deem it inappropriate for us to expand the narrow provisions of the act.
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
WATHEN, C.J., and GLASSMAN, CLIFFORD and RUDMAN, JJ., concurring.