Beverly Mannes Vs. Fleetguard, Inc., And Travelers Insurance Company ( 2009 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 08–0057
    Filed July 10, 2009
    BEVERLY MANNES,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    FLEETGUARD, INC., and
    TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Appellants.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Winnebago County,
    James M. Drew, Judge.
    Employer challenges district court’s decision remanding workers’
    compensation case.   DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED;
    DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN
    PART, AND REMANDED.
    Richard G. Book of Huber, Book, Cortese, Hape, & Lanz, P.L.C.,
    West Des Moines, for appellants.
    Mark S. Soldat of Soldat & Parrish-Sams, P.L.C., West Des Moines,
    for appellee.
    2
    STREIT, Justice.
    Beverly Mannes filed two workers’ compensation claims against
    her employer, Fleetguard, Inc.          The deputy commissioner awarded her
    benefits for one injury but not the other because she was unable to
    demonstrate she was injured on the specific date alleged.                  On judicial
    review, the district court remanded the case to determine whether
    Mannes suffered an injury on a different date. On remand, the deputy
    commissioner determined Mannes suffered an injury (albeit on a slightly
    different date) and awarded her permanent partial disability benefits.
    The decision did not address temporary benefits, penalty benefits, costs,
    or the full responsibility rule.         On judicial review, the district court
    remanded the case to address these issues.                    Fleetguard appealed.
    Because temporary partial benefits cannot be awarded as a matter of law
    where there has been no reduction in income, the district court erred in
    remanding the case on that issue. However, remand is appropriate on
    the other issues since the commissioner did not rule on them.
    I. Background Facts and Prior Proceedings.
    Beverly Mannes began working for Fleetguard and its predecessor
    in 1972 as a product assembler and a forklift operator. During her thirty
    years of employment, Mannes sustained a multitude of injuries during
    the course of her employment, 1 but was not paid permanent disability for
    any of these conditions. In 1998, Mannes was diagnosed with multiple
    1
    Mannes hurt her back in 1975, was diagnosed with carpal tunnel in 1976,
    which resulted in surgery on her right hand, fractured her foot in 1978, developed
    bilateral knee pain in 1981, had surgery on her left hand for carpal tunnel in 1982,
    developed back pain in 1984, developed neck problems in 1987, which led to numbness
    in her right arm and fingers, developed a bunion in 1994 that resulted in surgery, was
    diagnosed with spondylolisthesis in 1997, experienced more problems related to her
    carpal tunnel in 1998, injured her hip in 1999, tore her left rotator cuff in 1999, which
    resulted in surgery, and experienced more problems related to her carpal tunnel in
    2000.
    3
    sclerosis.    In May 2000, Mannes began complaining about right wrist
    discomfort.     She saw a number of physicians, went to occupational
    therapy, and in 2001 was diagnosed with bilateral chronic degenerative
    changes and chronic overuse syndrome in the wrists consisting of low
    grade deQuervain’s tenosynovitis and CMC joint strain bilaterally. She
    was transferred to work in a slow department because of the restrictions
    related to her wrists. Two months later, Mannes began complaining of
    back, neck, and shoulder pain.        Physical therapy was unsuccessful in
    alleviating the pain.    In September 2001, she was diagnosed with
    degenerative cervical disc disease.
    In October 2001, Mannes filed petitions for workers’ compensation
    benefits for two injuries: an overuse injury to both arms alleged to have
    been suffered on May 16, 2000, and an overuse injury to her neck and
    shoulders alleged to have been suffered on September 1, 2001.            The
    deputy commissioner concluded Mannes sustained a twenty percent
    industrial disability, entitling her to temporary partial disability benefits
    from July 27, 2000 to January 4, 2001 and ten weeks of permanent
    partial disability with respect to the May 16, 2000 injury. Her claim for
    benefits relating to the September 1, 2001 injury was denied, because
    she did not prove that this date was the date she sustained an injury.
    She was taxed costs for this claim. Her claim for penalty benefits was
    also denied.     The workers’ compensation commissioner affirmed the
    decision.
    On judicial review, the district court remanded the case to
    determine whether or not Mannes suffered from a cumulative neck and
    back injury, and if so, when it manifested itself. The court of appeals
    affirmed the district court.     On remand, the deputy commissioner
    concluded Mannes sustained a cumulative injury to her neck and
    4
    shoulders which arose out of and in the course of employment on
    September 5, 2001.      The deputy commissioner determined Mannes
    suffered an industrial disability of ten percent to the body as a whole and
    was entitled to fifty weeks of permanent partial disability benefits. The
    issue of costs was not addressed. Mannes’s request for rehearing was
    denied.
    On judicial review, the district court determined the agency’s
    decision failed to address the issue of temporary partial benefits, costs,
    penalty benefits, and the full responsibility rule related to the September
    5 injury and remanded the case to the agency.        Fleetguard appealed,
    asserting Mannes was not entitled to temporary partial benefits as a
    matter of law because there was no evidence in the record demonstrating
    a reduction in Mannes’s income. Fleetguard also contends remand was
    inappropriate because (1) Mannes did not preserve error with respect to
    taxation of costs, (2) Mannes was not entitled to penalty benefits as a
    matter of law, and (3) the commissioner’s ruling was consistent with the
    full responsibility rule. We transferred the case to the court of appeals,
    which affirmed the district court’s decision remanding on all issues.
    II. Scope of Review.
    We review the commissioner’s legal findings for correction of errors
    at law. Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c), (m) (2009). “Our task is to determine
    whether the district court, acting in its appellate capacity in these
    judicial review proceedings, applied the law correctly.” Noble v. Lamoni
    Prods., 
    512 N.W.2d 290
    , 292 (Iowa 1994).          We are bound by the
    commissioner’s findings of fact so long as those findings are supported
    by substantial evidence. Excel Corp. v. Smithart, 
    654 N.W.2d 891
    , 896
    (Iowa 2002); Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(f).
    5
    III. Merits.
    A. Temporary Partial Disability Benefits. Mannes made a claim
    for temporary partial benefits relating to the September 2001 injury for
    the period of October 11, 2001 to February 21, 2002. The commissioner
    only awarded temporary partial benefits for the May 16, 2000 injury.
    Mannes filed an application for rehearing on the issue of temporary
    partial benefits for the September 2001 injury, which was denied. On
    judicial review, the district court remanded because it was “unable to
    determine whether the deputy actually considered Mannes’s claim.”
    Fleetguard contends the district court erred in remanding the issue
    of whether Mannes is entitled to temporary partial benefits for the
    September 2001 injury because, as a matter of law, Mannes is not
    entitled to temporary partial benefits as there was no evidence in the
    record demonstrating a reduction in Mannes’s income during the period
    claimed (October 11, 2001 to February 21, 2002). We agree.
    An employee is entitled to receive temporary partial benefits when
    the employee is temporarily, partially disabled and accepts suitable work
    consistent with his or her disability.      
    Iowa Code § 85.33
    (3) (2001).
    Employers pay temporary partial benefits “because of the employee’s
    temporary partial reduction in earning ability as a result of the
    employee’s temporary partial disability.”    
    Id.
     § 85.33(2).   Subsection 4
    provides a means for calculating temporary partial benefits:
    The temporary partial benefit shall be sixty-six and two-
    thirds percent of the difference between the employee’s
    weekly earnings at the time of injury . . . and the employee’s
    actual gross weekly income from employment during the
    period of temporary partial disability.
    6
    Id. § 85.33(4).    The statute in itself suggests that temporary partial
    benefits can only be awarded if the employee experiences an actual
    reduction in wages. Id.
    Mannes asserts that temporary partial benefits should be based on
    earning capacity, not on an actual reduction in wages. Relying on the
    holding in Oscar Mayer Food Corp. v. Tasler, 
    483 N.W.2d 824
    , 831 (Iowa
    1992), Mannes contends that, in determining temporary partial benefits,
    a “showing of actual diminution in earnings will not always be necessary
    to demonstrate an injury-induced reduction in earning capacity.”      As
    “compensable disabilities will often be present despite the fact that the
    employee has not, as yet, suffered any actual diminution in earning
    capacity,” the agency uses earning capacity rather than actual earnings
    to determine industrial disability.       Oscar Mayer, 
    483 N.W.2d at 831
    .
    However, in Oscar Mayer, the court was concerned with establishing
    permanent industrial disability under Iowa Code section 85.34, not
    temporary benefits under section 85.33. Id.; see also St. Luke’s Hosp. v.
    Gray, 
    604 N.W.2d 646
    , 653 (Iowa 2000) (where employee had permanent
    partial industrial disability, not necessary to show actual reduction in
    employee’s earnings).
    Permanent benefits and temporary benefits are very different.
    Temporary benefits compensate the employee for lost wages until he or
    she is able to return to work, whereas permanent benefits compensate
    either a disability to a scheduled member or a loss in earning capacity
    (industrial disability).   Compare 
    Iowa Code § 85.33
    , with 
    id.
     § 85.34.
    Permanent partial industrial disability benefits “measure[] the extent to
    which the injury impairs the employee in the ability to earn wages.”
    Simbro v. Delong’s Sportswear, 
    332 N.W.2d 886
    , 887 (Iowa 1983).
    Conversely, temporary partial benefits are designed to reimburse the
    7
    employee while he or she was temporarily disabled and still working for
    the employer (albeit in a different position). 
    Iowa Code § 85.33
    ; see also
    Clark v. Vicorp Rests., Inc., 
    696 N.W.2d 596
    , 604–05 (Iowa 2005)
    (“Temporary total disability compensation benefits . . . are made to
    partially reimburse the employee for the loss of earnings while the
    employee is recuperating from the condition the employee has suffered.”).
    Temporary benefits are “ordinarily established by direct evidence of
    actual wage loss.” 4 Arthur Larson & Lex K. Larson, Larson’s Workers’
    Compensation Law § 80.03[2], at 80–5 (2009).
    As permanent benefits and temporary benefits compensate the
    injured employee for different things, we should not automatically apply
    standards governing the determination of permanent benefits to
    temporary benefits. There is no need to apply case law on permanent
    disability benefits from section 85.34 to define “temporary partial
    reduction in earning ability” under section 85.33. Section 85.33 clearly
    defines the purpose of temporary partial benefits and subsection (4) sets
    forth a formula for calculating temporary partial benefits, based on
    actual reduction of income. Thus, as a matter of law, temporary partial
    benefits cannot be awarded where there has been no reduction in
    income. The district court erred in remanding the case on that issue.
    B.   Costs.   In the first proceeding, the deputy commissioner
    determined Mannes had not suffered an injury on September 1, 2001
    and taxed the costs of that proceeding to Mannes.        On remand, the
    commissioner concluded Mannes suffered an injury (on September 5,
    2001) and was entitled to disability benefits. However, on remand, the
    issue of costs was not addressed. In the petition for rehearing, Mannes
    noted this deficiency. The petition was denied. On judicial review, the
    8
    district court determined the agency failed to address the costs issue and
    remanded the case.
    Fleetguard contends error was not preserved on this issue because
    the district court did not address the issue of costs during the first
    judicial review proceeding, and Mannes did not file a motion to enlarge
    the ruling.   See Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002)
    (“When a district court fails to rule on an issue properly raised by a
    party, the party who raised the issue must file a motion requesting a
    ruling in order to preserve error for appeal.”). We agree with the district
    court that, by remanding the case “for further action consistent with this
    ruling,” the district court did address the issue of re-taxation of costs.
    Therefore, error was preserved.      The district court did not err in
    remanding the case to determine the issue of costs.
    C. Penalty Benefits. Fleetguard argues the district court erred in
    remanding the issue of whether penalty benefits should be awarded
    because Mannes was not entitled to them as a matter of law.
    Under Iowa Code section 86.13, an employee is entitled to penalty
    benefits “[i]f a delay in commencement . . . of benefits occurs without
    reasonable or probable cause or excuse . . . .” Here, the district court
    remanded the case because the deputy commissioner did not rule on
    Mannes’s claim for penalty benefits.      It concluded “it would not be
    appropriate for this court to pass on the merits of the claim without first
    having a ruling from the commissioner.”       We agree.     The first time
    Mannes’s claim was before the agency, the commissioner determined
    Mannes did not prove an injury on September 1, 2001, and thus, this
    issue was not addressed.     On remand, the deputy commissioner also
    failed to rule on the issue, even though it was potentially applicable. In
    her application for rehearing, Mannes requested the commissioner
    9
    resolve the penalty issue.   Rehearing was denied.      We agree with the
    district court that remand is appropriate as the commissioner never
    ruled on the issue of penalty benefits.
    D. Full Responsibility Rule. Fleetguard also argues the district
    court erred in remanding the issue of whether the full responsibility rule
    was followed because the commissioner’s ruling was consistent with the
    full responsibility rule.
    Under the full responsibility rule, “ ‘[w]hen there are two successive
    work-related injuries, the employer liable for the second injury “is
    generally held liable for the entire disability resulting from the
    combination of the prior disability and the present injury.” ’ ” Smithart,
    
    654 N.W.2d at 897
     (quoting Second Injury Fund v. Nelson, 
    544 N.W.2d 258
    , 265 (Iowa 1995)). Thus, when a worker suffers a disability that is
    caused by two separate injuries, the worker will receive a greater total
    compensation than if the disability resulted from a single cumulative
    injury. 
    Id.
    In the first proceeding, the commissioner determined Mannes
    suffered a twenty percent industrial disability resulting from a May 2000
    injury. In the remand decision, the commissioner determined Mannes
    sustained a ten percent loss of earning capacity from the September
    2001 injury and concluded Mannes “suffered from a ten percent
    permanent partial industrial disability.”    In the remand decision, the
    commissioner made no mention of the full responsibility rule.
    On judicial review, Mannes asserted the commissioner should have
    applied the full responsibility rule in determining her disability.   As it
    was unclear whether the commissioner considered the full responsibility
    rule in determining Mannes’s disability, the district court remanded the
    case “for clarification on whether the full responsibility rule was followed
    10
    and, if not, a redetermination of industrial disability.”    We agree that
    remand is appropriate since the commissioner did not address whether
    the full responsibility rule was considered.
    IV. Conclusion.
    Because temporary partial benefits cannot be awarded as a matter
    of law where there has been no reduction in income, the court erred in
    remanding the case on that issue. However, remand is appropriate on
    the other issues since the commissioner did not rule on them.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT       AFFIRMED      IN   PART,    REVERSED     IN    PART,   AND
    REMANDED.