Chadwick v. Multi-State Electric, LLC , 159 Idaho 451 ( 2015 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 42473-2014
    SCOTT M. CHADWICK,                                )
    )          Boise, November 2015 Term
    Claimant-Appellant,                          )
    )          2015 Opinion No. 109
    v.                                                )
    )          Filed: November 25, 2015
    MULTI-STATE ELECTRIC, LLC,                        )
    Employer, and IDAHO STATE                         )          Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    INSURANCE FUND, Surety,                           )
    )
    Defendants-Respondents.                      )
    )
    Appeal from the Industrial Commission of the State of Idaho.
    The order of the Industrial Commission is affirmed.
    Scott M. Chadwick argued on behalf of himself.
    Neil D. McFeeley; Eberle, Berlin, Kading, Turnbow, & McKlveen, Chartered;
    Boise; argued for Respondents.
    EISMANN, Justice.
    This is an appeal from an order of the Industrial Commission holding that the claimant
    did not prove he was entitled to benefits under the Worker’s Compensation Law for an alleged
    back injury. We affirm the order of the Commission.
    I.
    Factual Background.
    On March 18, 2013, Scott M. Chadwick (“Claimant”) filed a complaint with the
    Industrial Commission seeking benefits under the Worker’s Compensation Law from his
    employer, Multi-State Electric, LLC (“Employer”), and its surety, Idaho State Insurance Fund
    (“Surety”). Claimant alleged that he had suffered back injuries as a result of an accident on May
    29, 2012, and an accident on July 26, 2012. He went to various medical providers complaining
    of back pain, and on October 8, 2012, he had an MRI of his low back. The MRI showed that he
    had osteoarthritic changes in his lumbar spine and at L4-L5 he had a right paracentral disc
    protrusion with mild reduction of spinal canal caliber and localized mass effect in the region of
    the right L5 nerve root.
    The matter was tried to a referee, but the Commission did not adopt the referee’s
    recommendations.      After considering the Claimant’s prehearing deposition, the testimony
    presented during the evidentiary hearing before the referee, and the exhibits, the Commission
    issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order. The Commission found that Claimant
    failed to prove that he suffered an injury from a workplace accident in the May event and that he
    failed to prove that the July event occurred. The Commission alternatively found that he had
    failed to provide timely notice to Employer of both claimed accidents, and that he failed to prove
    that Employer was not prejudiced by the failure to give timely notice. Therefore, he was denied
    benefits. Claimant then timely appealed.
    II.
    Did the Referee Err in Failing to Order the Defendants to Produce Discovery?
    Claimant’s claim was set for prehearing and hearing before a referee. Claimant contends
    that at the prehearing, he requested that the Defendants be ordered to produce certain discovery
    and that the referee erred in failing to address discovery in violation of Rule 8 of the
    Commission’s Judicial Rules of Practice and Procedure. The record reflects that on May 31,
    2013, the Defendants served responses to Claimant’s request for discovery. On September 20,
    2013, Claimant filed a document requesting a hearing as soon as possible to determine his
    eligibility for benefits. The referee ordered that he submit a request that complied with Rule 8 of
    the Commission’s Judicial Rules of Practice and Procedure. On December 6, 2013, Claimant
    filed a request for calendaring in which he stated that his claim was ready for hearing. His
    request listed the issues to be heard, which did not include any reference to an alleged failure to
    produce documents requested in discovery. On December 11, 2013, the referee issued an order
    setting his claim for a telephonic prehearing on December 20, 2013, and for a hearing on January
    31, 2014. The order listed the issues to be decided at the hearing. On December 24, 2013, after
    the prehearing, the referee issued an order amending the issues to be decided at the hearing.
    2
    Claimant contends that during the prehearing, he raised the issue of the Defendants’
    failure to produce all of the documents that he had requested, and the referee responded that it
    was not the appropriate time to address that issue. The record on appeal does not show what was
    discussed at the prehearing; it does not include any order regarding discovery issued by the
    referee; and it does not indicate that any issue regarding discovery was ever presented to or
    decided by the Commission. Because there is no indication that any issue regarding discovery
    was ever presented to the Commission, it is not preserved for appeal. Ball v. Daw Forest
    Products Co., 
    136 Idaho 155
    , 160, 
    30 P.3d 933
    , 938 (2001).
    III.
    Did the Commission Abuse Its Discretion in Failing to Hold a Hearing to Determine
    whether the Hearing Should Have Been before the Commission?
    In his request for hearing, Claimant stated, “It is necessary for the full Industrial
    Commission [sic] hear this claim.” The subsequent order setting the case for a prehearing and
    hearing was issued by the referee. The referee presided over the evidentiary hearing, but the
    Commission issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order based upon its own review
    of the evidence admitted during the hearing. Claimant contends that the Commission abused its
    discretion in failing to hold a conference with all parties present to consider whether the hearing
    should have been before the Commission, as it was permitted to do pursuant to Rule 8 of its
    Judicial Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    Rule 8 states that the Commission may hold a conference with all parties to discuss
    “[w]hether the case should be heard by the full Commission because it is a case of first
    impression, presents a situation to overturn or modify precedent, involves novel or complex
    facts, or otherwise merits hearing by the full Commission rather than by a Referee.” Jud. R. of
    Practice and Proc. 8(A)(8). Although in his request for hearing Claimant stated that the full
    Commission should hear his claim, he did not allege any facts that would bring it within the
    scope of Rule 8(A)(8). Therefore, because he failed to present that issue to the Commission in
    accordance with the requirements of Rule 8, he has failed to show that the Commission abused
    its discretion in failing to hold a conference to determine whether the Commission should preside
    over the hearing.
    3
    IV.
    Did the Commission Err in Holding that Claimant Was Not Entitled to Benefits?
    A. The May 2012 incident. In his complaint, Claimant alleged that he suffered an
    injury as a result of an industrial accident on May 29, 2012. On that day he sought treatment
    from a chiropractor, whose records show that Claimant reported that he suffered a work-related
    injury on May 26, 2012, when he jumped out of a truck and experienced low-back pain that
    radiated through his right side.   During Claimant’s deposition, he testified that he did not recall
    telling the chiropractor that he hurt himself at work. He stated: “When I say ‘jump,’ I don’t
    mean I’m jumping two feet off a cliff. It is just stepping, jumping out of the van. It is not like a
    hop, jump.” Claimant regularly obtained treatment from the chiropractor until early August
    2012, and throughout that treatment the chiropractor diagnosed Claimant as having a “Lumbar
    sprain/strain.” Finally, the chiropractor recommended that he see a physician.
    When he was interviewed by Surety’s investigator, Claimant explained that he thought
    his low-back problems were the result of cumulative insults to his back during the twenty years
    he had worked as an electrician. He testified in his deposition that as work began picking up
    during the spring of 2012, he began to experience low-back pain, which he associated with the
    general demands of his work.       He stated that only after reviewing his medical records in
    September 2012 did he remember the May incident.
    The Commission found that Claimant had proved that the May incident occurred, but he
    failed to prove that the event caused damage to the physical structure of his body. Alternatively,
    the Commission held that Claimant had failed to give Employer timely notice of the alleged
    accident.
    Idaho Code section 72-701 states, “No proceedings under this law shall be maintained
    unless a notice of the accident shall have been given to the employer as soon as practicable but
    not later than sixty (60) days after the happening thereof . . . .” Such notice must state “in
    ordinary language the time, place, nature and cause of the injury.”          I.C. § 72-702.    It is
    uncontroverted that Claimant did not give Employer written notice within sixty days of the May
    incident.
    However, Idaho Code section 72-704 provides that the failure to give timely written
    notice shall not bar a claim for benefits “if it is shown [(a)] that the employer, his agent or
    representative had knowledge of the injury . . . or [(b)] that the employer has not been prejudiced
    4
    by such delay or want of notice.” Oral notice may provide an employer with knowledge of the
    injury, but such oral notice must occur within the statutory time for giving written notice. Taylor
    v. Soran Rest., Inc., 
    131 Idaho 525
    , 527, 
    960 P.2d 1254
    , 1256 (1998). The Commission found
    that the Defendants did not have actual knowledge of the May event within the sixty-day period.
    Claimant contends that Employer had the required notice because, within sixty days after the
    May incident, Employer knew that Claimant had back pain for which he was seeking medical
    care. The Commission correctly held that Employer’s “knowledge that Claimant’s back hurt or
    that he received treatment for back pain is insufficient to meet the notice requirement.”
    The word injury as that term is used in the Worker’s Compensation Law means “a
    personal injury caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of any employment
    covered by the worker’s compensation law.” I.C. § 72-102(18)(a) (emphasis added). The word
    accident means “an unexpected, undesigned, and unlooked for mishap, or untoward event,
    connected with the industry in which it occurs, and which can be reasonably located as to time
    when and place where it occurred, causing an injury.” I.C. § 72-102(18)(b) (emphasis added).
    The words accident and injury are interrelated definitionally because an accident must cause an
    injury and an injury must be caused by an accident. Konvalinka v. Bonneville Cnty., 
    140 Idaho 477
    , 480, 
    95 P.3d 628
    , 631 (2004). “The terms are not synonymous, however.” 
    Id.
    Knowledge of the injury requires notice that the physical condition was caused by an
    accident arising out of and in the course of the claimant’s employment. Thus, a claimant who
    complained of pain was not entitled to benefits where there was no evidence that the employer
    had actual knowledge of a work-related injury within the statutory time for giving notice.
    Taylor, 
    131 Idaho at 528
    , 
    960 P.2d at 1257
    . Similarly, in Page v. McCain Foods, Inc., 
    141 Idaho 342
    , 
    109 P.3d 1084
     (2005), we held that the oral notice given by a claimant to her employer was
    sufficient where it “provided the supervisor with knowledge of the injury and the source of the
    injury.” 
    Id. at 346
    , 
    109 P.3d at 1088
     (emphasis added). Likewise, in Murray-Donahue v.
    National Car Rental Licensee Ass’n, 
    127 Idaho 337
    , 
    900 P.2d 1348
     (1995), we held that an
    employee’s “vague statement to her supervisor that she was having back problems is insufficient
    to give the required notice of an accident and injury under I.C. § 72-701 and § 72-702,
    particularly in view of her prior history of back problems.” Id. at 339, 
    900 P.2d at 1350
    .
    Claimant contends that once Employer was aware that Claimant was seeking medical
    care for his back problems, Employer should have initiated an investigation to determine whether
    5
    such problems were caused by an accident arising out of and in the course of his employment.
    Claimant cites no authority for that assertion, and it is contrary to the requirements of Idaho law
    that the claimant must give the employer timely notice of the accident, I.C § 72-701, and that
    such notice must include the time, place, nature, and cause of the injury, I.C. § 72-702.
    The Commission found that within sixty days after the May 2012 incident, Claimant did
    not give Employer the required written notice of the alleged accident and the Defendants did not
    have knowledge of the alleged injury. Therefore, Claimant had the burden of proving that
    Employer was not prejudiced by such delay in giving notice. Jackson v. JST Mfg., 
    142 Idaho 836
    , 837, 
    136 P.3d 307
    , 308 (2006); I.C. § 72-704.
    The Commission found that “Claimant has set forth no affirmative proof establishing that
    Multi-State Electric was not prejudiced by either reporting delay.” The Commission stated that
    “there is inadequate evidence from which to determine that Employer would not have obtained
    more accurate and complete material information, had it been able to investigate sooner”; that
    “Claimant’s reporting delay may have hampered Employer’s ability to provide reasonable
    medical treatment . . . [, which] may have resulted in quicker, more complete healing of
    Claimant’s back condition”; and that “Claimant’s ability to work may have been compromised
    by other intervening causes during the delay.” The Commission concluded that “Claimant has
    failed to meet his burden of proving Employer was not prejudiced by his respective delays in
    reporting his industrial accidents.”
    “Because the Commission is the fact finder, its conclusions on the credibility and weight
    of the evidence will not be disturbed on appeal unless they are clearly erroneous. This Court
    does not weigh the evidence or consider whether it would have reached a different conclusion
    from the evidence presented.” Eacret v. Clearwater Forest Indus., 
    136 Idaho 733
    , 735, 
    40 P.3d 91
    , 93 (2002) (citation omitted). On appeal, Claimant does not present any argument showing
    that the Commission’s finding that he failed to prove lack of prejudice was clearly erroneous.
    Therefore, the Commission did not err in holding that Claimant failed to prove that he was
    entitled to benefits for the May incident.
    B. The July incident. Claimant alleged in his complaint that he suffered an industrial
    accident on July 26, 2012, while loading and unloading a trencher. He saw a physician on
    August 6, 2012. The physician’s note dated August 6, 2012, recites that the reason for the
    appointment was “back pain, low right side started last thur [August 2, 2012]”; that Claimant
    6
    “[h]as had chronic back pain for many years, manages it with ibuprofen and chiropractic”; and
    that he was “[h]aving severe pain in lower right back today, [and] does not recall recent injury or
    strain.” Claimant testified in his deposition that he told the physician “my back was hurting, and
    I don’t know how, specifically, I hurt myself. It is just that it is hurting right now, and I need
    some pain relief.” Claimant returned to the same medical provider on August 17, 2012, and was
    seen by a physician’s assistant. Regarding the history of the present illness, the progress note for
    that visit states that Claimant complained of “Old Injury ‘cumulative injury’ ” and that he denied
    an “Acute Injury.”
    On August 13, 2012, Claimant went to another chiropractor. In the history form that he
    completed, Claimant was asked whether the symptoms began suddenly or gradually, and he
    circled the option that the symptoms began gradually. The history form also states that he
    experienced the symptoms “on/off for year.” He later testified that after reviewing his medical
    records in September and October, it came together that he had hurt his back when moving a
    trencher on July 26, 2012.
    The Commission found that Claimant failed to prove that the July 2012 event occurred.
    Alternatively, the Commission also found that Claimant failed to give timely notice of the
    alleged accident and failed to prove that such lack of timely notice did not prejudice Employer.
    As a result, the Commission held that Claimant was not entitled to benefits under the Worker’s
    Compensation Law.
    “The burden of proof in an industrial accident case is on the claimant.” Johnson v.
    Bennett Lumber Co., 
    115 Idaho 241
    , 244, 
    766 P.2d 711
    , 714 (1988). “[C]ompensation for
    personal injury or death will be granted only if it be shown that an industrial accident has caused
    the affliction. [Claimant] had the burden of proving both elements, the accident and its causation
    of the injury.” Tipton v. Jansson, 
    91 Idaho 904
    , 907, 
    435 P.2d 244
    , 247 (1967). “To establish
    that a mishap or event occurred, an injured worker must do more than show an onset of pain
    while at work. Worker’s compensation is not meant or intended to be life or health insurance; it
    is purely accident and occupational disease insurance.” Konvalinka, 
    140 Idaho at 479
    , 
    95 P.3d at 630
    . “[A]ggravation of a pre-existing condition caused by repetitive motion does not become an
    accident simply because the claimant can locate the time period when the pre-existing condition
    became symptomatic.” 
    Id. at 480
    , 
    95 P.3d at 631
    .
    7
    The Commission found that in his recorded statement to the Surety, in his prehearing
    deposition, and at other times, “Claimant has clearly expressed the view that he does not, in fact,
    attribute his low-back condition to either or both of the alleged accidents. Rather, Claimant
    believes that his low-back condition is the result of cumulative insults to his low back, i.e. long
    term wear and tear related to his work as an electrician.” The Commission also found:
    On September 26, 2012, Claimant advised Surety, during its investigational
    interview, that he could recall no specific injurious event leading to his low back
    pain. Instead, he believed it was the result of a cumulative injury over time,
    during his employment with both Multi-State Electric and prior employers. He
    denied any specific accident, asserting that his pain began around the end of July
    2012 or the beginning of August.
    Claimant points to his letter to Surety dated November 6, 2012, in which he wrote: “I
    now know the details of my work related accident and how it happend [sic],” but only after he
    had previously given his statement. He wrote about helping lift the tongue of the trailer holding
    the trencher onto the vehicle hitch and unloading the trencher from the trailer, but did not report
    any sudden onset of pain in doing so. Claimant offered into evidence his account of texts he sent
    to Employer, including one on August 15, 2012, in which he wrote, regarding his medical
    condition, that he “didn’t have accident but work related.” He also submitted copies of various
    e-mails he sent, and in one dated October 17, 2012, he stated that “i [sic] didnt [sic] have an
    accident at work, but its [sic] work related.”
    Claimant also points to a medical report dated July 30, 2013, (over one year after the
    alleged incident) which recites:
    He states that he began to have back pain and right radicular leg pain in May of
    2012. He denies any specific injury, but states that he does wear a tool belt and
    he was doing a significant amount of bending and twisting at that time. He began
    to have severe radicular symptoms in July of 2012, while using a trencher at
    work.
    The medical report also stated that there was a dispute as to whether it was a worker’s
    compensation injury. The Commission noted that the physician also stated in the chart note that
    “lifting a trencher could have caused Claimant’s L4-5 disc herniation.”               However, the
    Commission stated that the opinion “states a possibility, but it is insufficient to establish, to a
    reasonable medical probability, that lifting a trencher to attach it to a truck hitch on July 26, 2012
    caused this injury.” “A claimant has the burden of proving a probable, not merely a possible,
    8
    causal connection between the employment and the injury or disease.” Beardsley v. Idaho Forest
    Indus., 
    127 Idaho 404
    , 406, 
    901 P.2d 511
    , 513 (1995).
    The Commission held that Claimant failed to prove that the July incident occurred. It
    found that he “reviewed his medical records and attempted to ascertain what he was doing at or
    about the time the care was rendered, not because he attaches any significance to the incidents,
    but because he perceived a need to identify a particular incident.” “Because the Commission is
    the finder of fact, its conclusions on the credibility and weight of the evidence will not be
    disturbed on appeal unless they are clearly erroneous.” Henry v. Dep’t of Correction, 
    154 Idaho 143
    , 145, 
    295 P.3d 528
    , 530 (2013). “This Court does not re-weigh the evidence or consider
    whether it would have reached a different conclusion from the evidence presented.” Clark v.
    Shari’s Mgmt. Corp., 
    155 Idaho 576
    , 579, 
    314 P.3d 631
    , 634 (2013). Claimant has failed to
    show that the Commission’s finding that he failed to prove an injury caused by an industrial
    accident as a result of the alleged July incident is not clearly erroneous.
    Claimant contends that the Commission failed to liberally construe the facts in his favor.
    “The terms of Idaho’s workers’ compensation statute are liberally construed in favor of the
    employee. However, conflicting facts need not be construed liberally in favor of the worker.”
    Mazzone v. Texas Roadhouse, Inc., 
    154 Idaho 750
    , 755, 
    302 P.3d 718
    , 723 (2013) (citation
    omitted).
    V.
    Did the Commission Err in Misreading or Failing to Give Sufficient Weight to Medical
    Records?
    Claimant contends that the Commission misinterpreted the patient history he completed
    for his August 13, 2012, chiropractor visit. In response to the question, “When did the symptom
    begin?” Claimant contends that he wrote, “A week ago,” and that the Commission misread the A
    as being a 4, thereby erroneously concluding that the symptoms began “well before July 26.”
    Claimant filed a motion for reconsideration raising that issue along with others, and the
    Commission denied the motion, writing: “Having considered Claimant’s motion, and having
    reviewed the record on reconsideration, we find that the substantial and competent evidence in
    the record supports the decision as it stands.”        Claimant has not shown how the alleged
    misinterpretation of his handwriting was material.
    9
    One week before the August 13 medical visit, Claimant saw a medical provider for back
    pain, and the chart note states that he had chronic pain for years and did not recall a recent injury
    or strain.1 Four days after the August 13 medical visit, he saw a medical provider for back pain
    that he said started on August 2, 2012, and the chart note states that Claimant had an old,
    cumulative injury that was exacerbated by repetitive work. 2 Ten days after the August 13
    medical visit, he again saw a medical provider for low-back pain, and the chart note stated that
    he suffered low-back pain on May 29, 2012, caused by lifting and bending at work. 3 Thus, the
    Commission’s conclusion that Claimant’s symptoms began well before July 26, 2012, was
    supported by other medical records.
    Claimant argues that “[t]here are no medical records in evidence refuting the work related
    nature of Claimant’s injuries,” and therefore the Commission’s findings are not supported by the
    evidence. It was not enough for Claimant to show that his back pain was work related. He had
    to “prove to a reasonable degree of medical probability that the injury for which benefits are
    claimed is causally related to an accident occurring in the course of employment.” Stevens-
    McAtee v. Potlatch Corp., 
    145 Idaho 325
    , 332, 
    179 P.3d 288
    , 295 (2008). The injury must have
    been “caused by an accident, which results in violence to the physical structure of the body,” I.C.
    § 72-102(18)(c), and the accident must have been an “unexpected, undesigned, and unlooked for
    mishap, or untoward event, connected with the industry in which it occurs, and which can be
    1
    The August 6, 2012, chart note states that the reason for the appointment was: “[B]ack pain, low right side started
    last thur. [August 2, 2012] has been seeing a chiro for low back since June. [P]ain got getting [sic] worse today.”
    The history of present illness states: “46 year old male presents with c/o Low Back Pain Acute low back pain for
    several days. Has had chronic back pain for many years, manages it with ibuprofen and chiropractor. Having
    severe pain in lower right back today, does not recall recent injury or strain.” The history also stated that he
    complained of “past symptoms” and “Chronic Pain” and denied “Leg Pain.”
    2
    The August 17, 2012, chart note states that the reason for the appointment was, “R lower back pain radiating down
    leg.” The history of present illness stated that Claimant complained of “Low Back Pain,” “Old Injury ‘cumulative
    injury,’ ” and “burning/shooting pain right leg,” and that he “Denies: Acute Injury.” It also stated that he complains
    of “injury related to work exacerbated by, onset was at work, repetitive motion, labor.”
    3
    The August 23, 2012, chart note states that the reason for the appointment was, “DOI 5-29-2012 crawls into
    spaces, lifting, rt leg constant pain, cramping, walks at an angle.” In the history of the present illness, the chart note
    states:
    [I]njury occurred at work DOI: 5/29/12 suffererd [sic] injury to the low back while on the
    job. No falls or trauma, but feels that repetitive lifting and bending activities while on the job is
    the cause of his back pain. . . . He reports that he has seen chiropractors from time to time in the
    past, but denies prior serious back injuries of significance.
    10
    reasonably located as to time when and place where it occurred,” I.C. § 72-102(18)(b). In
    Konvalinka, the claimant’s pain was work related in that her work aggravated her pre-existing
    medical condition, but the aggravation of her condition did not constitute an accident. 
    140 Idaho at 479
    , 
    95 P.3d at 630
    . “The law in Idaho clearly states that an employee who suffers from a pre-
    existing condition must establish that his or her disease was aggravated by an accident before
    they are entitled to recover.” McGee v. J.D. Lumber, 
    135 Idaho 328
    , 335, 
    17 P.3d 272
    , 279
    (2000). In Tupper v. State Farm Insurance, 
    131 Idaho 724
    , 
    963 P.2d 1161
     (1998), we upheld the
    denial of benefits because while the claimant’s “doctor opined that the underlying pain and
    exacerbation of pain were work related, the doctor did not provide any medical evidence
    connecting the aggravation of Tupper’s condition to an unexpected, undesigned and unlooked for
    mishap or untoward event, reasonably identifiable as to the time when and the place where it
    occurred.” 
    Id. at 728
    , 
    963 P.2d at 1165
    . Being work related is not synonymous with being
    caused by an accident, which was apparently Claimant’s understanding when he texted and e-
    mailed that he did not have an accident but his condition was work related.
    Finally, Claimant contends that the Commission erred in failing to realize that his
    treatment for the May incident ended June 26, 2012, and that his treatment for the July incident
    began on July 30, 2012. On August 23, 2012, Claimant sought treatment from a medical
    provider, and the chart note reflects under the heading of “History of Present Illness, Work
    Comp Injury” the statement that “injury occurred at work DOI: 5/29/12 suffererd [sic] injury to
    the low back while on the job.” Thus, on August 23, 2012, Claimant was attributing his back
    pain to the May 29, 2012, incident, not to a subsequent July 2012 incident. Claimant has failed
    to show that the Commission erred in evaluating the evidence.
    VI.
    Are the Defendants Entitled to an Award of Attorney Fees?
    The Defendants seek an award of attorney fees pursuant to Idaho Appellate Rule 11.2,
    which provides that an attorney’s or party’s signature on a document constitutes a certification
    that: (a) “to the best of the signer’s knowledge, information, and belief after reasonable inquiry
    it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith argument for the
    extension, modification, or reversal of existing law” and (b) “it is not interposed for any
    improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the
    cost of litigation.” I.A.R. 11.2. If either certification is inaccurate, this Court can impose an
    11
    appropriate sanction, which may include requiring the signer to pay the opposing party a
    reasonable attorney’s fee. 
    Id.
    In Giles v. Eagle Farms, Inc., 
    157 Idaho 650
    , 
    339 P.3d 535
     (2014), we held that a party
    seeking an award of attorney fees under the rule must identify the document that was signed in
    violation of the rule. Id. at 659, 339 P.3d at 544. In their brief, the Defendants did not identify
    the document signed by Claimant in violation of Rule 11.2. Therefore, we decline to award
    sanctions.
    VII.
    Conclusion.
    We affirm the order of the Industrial Commission, and we award Respondents costs, but
    not attorney fees, on appeal.
    Justices BURDICK, HORTON, and Justice Pro Tem KIDWELL CONCUR.
    J. JONES, Chief Justice, specially concurring.
    I concur in the Court’s opinion, but write to express continuing concern regarding
    questionable procedural practices employed by the Idaho Industrial Commission. As I pointed
    out in Kelly v. Blue Ribbon Linen Supply, Inc., 
    2015 WL 6657377
    , *5 (Nov. 2, 2015), the
    Commission has recently tended to wholly discard the findings of fact, conclusions of law and
    recommendation made by a referee and adopt its own. The Commission did so in this case,
    choosing not to adopt a single finding of fact made by the Referee. Nor did the Commission
    include the Referee’s recommended decision in the record on appeal.4
    The problem with this type of practice is that the Court does not have a complete picture
    of the case when it arrives for determination on appeal. When a worker’s compensation case
    comes before this Court, we “will not disturb the Commission’s factual findings if they are
    supported by substantial and competent evidence.” Knowlton v. Wood River Med. Ctr., 
    151 Idaho 135
    , 140, 
    254 P.3d 36
    , 41 (2011). This recognizes that the Commission is the trier of fact,
    hears the live testimony of witnesses, and is in a position to make credibility determinations.
    4
    When asked at oral argument before the Court whether they would agree to augment the Referee’s decision into
    the record, counsel for both parties agreed and the decision was subsequently provided for the Court’s record.
    12
    “Determining the credibility of witnesses and evidence is a matter within the province of the
    Commission.” 
    Id. at 144
    , 
    254 P.3d at 45
    . This Court has divided credibility into two categories—
    observational and substantive. 
    Id.
     “Observational credibility goes to the demeanor of [a witness]
    on the witness stand and it requires that the Commission actually be present for the hearing in
    order to judge it.” 
    Id.
     Substantive credibility does not require the Commission’s actual presence
    but may be judged from “numerous inaccuracies and conflicting facts.” 
    Id.
     Thus, if the
    Commission is not present to hear live testimony or if it does not adopt credibility determinations
    made by the referee who conducted the hearing, its conclusions regarding observational
    credibility are unsupported.
    This record discloses at least two rather obvious instances where the Commission, which
    was not present to hear testimony, made findings based at least in part on observational
    credibility, casting doubt on their reliability. In her proposed findings, the Referee found that
    “Claimant’s testimony regarding a May 29, 2012, industrial accident lacks credibility and is
    unpersuasive.” This finding was based, in part, on testimony presented at the hearing before the
    Referee. The Commission did not adopt or incorporate this or any other finding made by the
    Referee into its decision. Yet, the Commission made its own finding, based in part on
    Chadwick’s testimony, that an alleged accident may well have occurred—“we believe that Dr.
    Rosenlund’s records, coupled with Claimant’s testimony, do tend to establish that an event did
    occur, whether on May 26th, May 29th or some other date in late May, we cannot determine.”
    Since the Commission neither heard Chadwick’s testimony nor adopted the Referee’s credibility
    determination based on his testimony, it is not entirely clear how the Commission could make a
    credibility determination based on such testimony. It should be noted that this issue was not
    critical to the ultimate outcome of the case.
    On another peripheral issue, the Referee found that “Claimant most likely intentionally
    omitted reporting the May 2012 injury to the claims investigator.” Referencing this finding, the
    Referee later stated, “[a]s discussed, above, Claimant was most likely intentionally withholding
    information regarding his May 2012 injury.” The Commission neither adopted the Referee’s first
    finding nor made any comparable finding of its own and, therefore, had no basis for making the
    second one. Nevertheless, the Commission said, “[a]s discussed, above, Claimant was most
    likely intentionally withholding information regarding his May 2012 injury.” Oops!
    13
    These instances of shoddy fact-finding do not inspire a great deal of confidence in the
    Commission’s fact-finding abilities. If the Commission persists in snatching cases away from its
    referees, it should more carefully review the record and, where observational credibility clearly
    comes into play, either make findings consistent with those made by the referee, who was
    present to hear the testimony, or indicate why the referee’s determination of observational
    credibility is incorrect.
    A further problem with the Commission’s practice of disregarding a referee’s proposed
    decision is that the Commission does not indicate why it deems the referee’s decision unworthy
    to the extent that not even one finding of fact is approved or adopted. A party to a worker’s
    compensation dispute, just like a litigant in any other type of administrative proceeding, has a
    right to a reasoned decision and, where the findings of the Commission depart from those of the
    referee, there should be an explanation. Although the Commission has its own procedural rules
    and is not bound by the Idaho Administrative Procedure Act (IDAPA), there is no reason why
    the Commission should not observe accepted practice for IDAPA proceedings where the
    administrative agency is utilizing the services of a hearing officer. In Pearl v. Idaho State Bd. of
    Medicine, 
    137 Idaho 107
    , 112, 
    44 P.3d 1162
    , 1167 (2002) the Court stated:
    Where the agency’s findings disagree with those of the hearing panel, this
    Court will scrutinize the agency’s findings more critically. Woodfield v. Board of
    Professional Discipline, 
    127 Idaho 738
    , 746, 
    905 P.2d 1047
    , 1053 (Ct. App.
    1995). As the Court of Appeals noted in Woodfield, there is authority for courts to
    impose on the agency an obligation of reasoned decision making that includes a
    duty to explain why the agency differed from the administrative law judge.
    Woodfield, 127 Idaho at 746, 747 n. 3, 905 P.2d at 1053 n.3.
    Thus, a worker’s compensation litigant is entitled to a reasoned decision, which includes an
    explanation for the Commission’s departure from findings made by a referee. Here, the
    Commission offered no reasons for its decision to jettison the Referee’s proposed findings.
    Even though they arrived there by slightly different routes, both the Commission and the
    Referee reached the same conclusion—that Chadwick’s complaint should be dismissed with
    prejudice. The two errant findings made by the Commission in this case were not critical to the
    outcome. The Court’s opinion does not rely upon the faulty fact-finding and, therefore, I concur
    in the decision.
    14