Gloria Dowell, Widow of William Bruce Dowell v. Matthews Contracting ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                      RENDERED: AUGUST 26, 2021
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Supreme Court of Kentucky
    2020-SC-0170-WC
    GLORIA DOWELL, WIDOW OF                             APPELLANT
    WILLIAM BRUCE DOWELL
    ON APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                     NO. 2018-CA-1075
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    NO. WC-11-86079
    MATTHEWS CONTRACTING;                               APPELLEES
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY EX REL.
    DANIEL J. CAMERON, ATTORNEY
    GENERAL; HONORABLE JOHN B.
    COLEMAN, ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE;
    AND WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    AND
    2020-SC-0137-WC
    TERRY ADAMS                                         APPELLANT
    ON APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS
    V.                     NO. 2018-CA-0925
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    NO. WC-13-64729
    EXCEL MINING, LLC.; COMMONWEALTH                    APPELLEES
    OF KENTUCKY EX REL. DANIEL J.
    CAMERON, ATTORNEY GENERAL;
    HONORABLE CHRIS DAVIS,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; AND
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY CHIEF JUSTICE MINTON
    AFFIRMING
    We combined these two workers’ compensation appeals to address the
    issue common to both: whether the 2018 amendment to Kentucky Revised
    Statute (KRS) 342.730(4) violates the Contracts Clause of the federal and state
    constitutions. Terry Adams and Gloria Dowell contest the constitutionality of
    this statutory amendment that terminates workers’ compensation income
    benefits when the benefit-recipient reaches the age of 70 or four years from the
    date of injury or last injurious exposure, whichever event occurs last. For
    reasons explained below, we reject Adams’s and Dowell’s arguments and affirm
    the decision of the Court of Appeals upholding the statutory amendment.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Terry Adams
    In 2013, at age 63, Terry Adams suffered a work-related injury while
    working for Excel Mining. He filed for workers’ compensation benefits, and in
    February 2016, an ALJ awarded benefits for permanent total disability. At the
    time Adams’s claim was before the ALJ, the 1996 version of KRS 342.730(4)
    was the controlling law. Under that statute, Adams’s benefits would end when
    he became eligible for Social Security retirement benefits. Adams
    unsuccessfully argued before the ALJ that the statute was unconstitutional,
    and he appealed to the Workers’ Compensation Board.
    2
    The Board held Adams’s claim in abeyance until we decided Parker v.
    Webster County Coal, LLC,1 the case in which we ultimately invalidated the
    1996 version of KRS 342.730(4) as violative of federal and state constitutional
    equal protection and the state’s constitutional prohibition against special
    legislation.2 Following Parker, the Board decided Adams’s appeal and resorted
    to application of the 1994 version of KRS 342.730(4). Under that version,
    Adams’s benefits would be reduced by 10% at age 65 and then an additional
    10% every year until he reached age 70, at which point his benefits would
    remain stable.3 Adams appealed the Board’s decision to the Court of Appeals.
    In 2018, while Adams’s case was pending before the Court of Appeals,
    the General Assembly enacted the current version of KRS 342.730(4), which
    became effective July 14, 2018. The Court of Appeals held Adams’s appeal in
    abeyance until we decided Holcim v. Swinford4 in which we held that the
    General Assembly intended the 2018 version of the statute to apply
    retroactively to all claims that had not been then fully adjudicated, including
    claims on appeal.5 Following Holcim, the Court of Appeals applied the current
    version of KRS 342.730(4) to Adams’s award. In doing so, the Court of Appeals’
    panel held the amendment did not violate the Contracts Clause of the United
    1   
    529 S.W.3d 759
    , 767-69 (Ky. 2017).
    2   
    Id. at 767-69
    .
    3   1994 Kentucky Laws Ch. 181 (H.B. 928).
    4   
    581 S.W.3d 37
     (Ky. 2019).
    5   
    Id. at 44
    .
    3
    States and Kentucky Constitutions. Even though its application substantially
    reduces Adams’s entitlement to benefits, the appellate panel found the General
    Assembly had a justifiable purpose for enacting the statute and the statute is
    reasonable. Adams’s appeal to this Court followed.
    B. William Dowell6
    Dowell sustained two work-related injuries while working for Matthews
    Contracting. In 2009, he injured his right shoulder, in 2011 he re-injured his
    right shoulder and knee. He filed for workers’ compensation benefits; and the
    ALJ awarded him permanent total disability benefits but made them subject to
    the limitations applicable under the 1994 version of KRS 342.730(4) in
    recognition of the fact that this Court in Parker invalidated the 1996 version of
    the statute. In the interim, the General Assembly enacted the current version
    of KRS 342.730(4).
    Both Dowell and Matthews Contracting appealed to the Board. Dowell
    argued that he was entitled to a lifetime of benefits because this Court had
    invalidated the 1996 version of the statute. Matthews Contracting argued
    Dowell’s claim should be remanded to the ALJ for application of the 2018
    6  Dowell separately contends that the Court of Appeals erred by failing to
    approve his motion to add the Attorney General as a party to his appeal in that court.
    The Court of Appeals correctly rejected the argument, as do we. Under Kentucky Civil
    Rule of Procedure (CR) 76.25(8), the Attorney General must be notified of appeals
    raising a constitutional challenge to statute. While not a named party to this appeal,
    the Attorney General clearly had timely notice of this appeal and the constitutional
    issues raised, having submitted a brief addressing the constitutionality of the
    amended statute. See Cates v. Kroger, 2020-SC-0275-WC which was rendered the
    same day as this opinion.
    4
    amendment. The Board affirmed the ALJ’s award of benefits under the 1994
    version of the statute because the 2018 amendment had not yet become
    effective. Matthews Contracting then appealed to the Court of Appeals.
    The Court of Appeals concluded that our holding in Holcim confirmed
    that the 2018 amendments to KRS 342.730(4) applied to Dowell’s claim. The
    Court of Appeals then remanded the case to the ALJ for a new determination of
    benefits. Dowell appealed to this Court arguing that the 2018 amendment to
    KRS 342.730 was unconstitutional because it is an ex post facto law that
    violates the Contracts Clause of the United States and Kentucky Constitutions.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. The Workers’ Compensation Act does not act as a contract between
    employees and the state or their employer.
    Adams and Dowell both argue that applying the current version of KRS
    342.730(4) to their claims violates the Contracts Clause of both the United
    States and Kentucky Constitution. Article 1, Section 10, Clause 2 of the
    United States Constitution reads:
    No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or
    Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin
    Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and
    silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of
    Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation
    of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.
    Similarly, Section 19 of the Kentucky Constitutions provides, “No ex post facto
    law, nor any law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall be enacted.”
    5
    We begin our analysis with the firm understanding that the challenged
    statute enjoys a “strong presumption of constitutionality.”7 This means a
    “violation of the Constitution must be clear, complete and unmistakable in
    order to find the law unconstitutional.”8
    In addressing whether the current version of KRS 342.730(4) impaired a
    contractual right of Adams, a panel of the Court of Appeals relied on our
    holding in Maze v. Board of Directors for Commonwealth Postsecondary
    Education Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund,9 which provides a roadmap for analyzing
    whether a statute violates the Contracts Clause.10 Following the Maze pattern,
    the Court of Appeals found the present statute constitutional because while it
    impaired Adams’s benefits, the state was justified in enacting the law.
    The appellate panel in Dowell’s appeal did not address the Contracts
    Clause issue but held the 2018 amendment applicable to Dowell’s claim based
    on our holding in Holcim. On appeal to this Court, Dowell raises Contracts
    Clause arguments regarding application of the amended statute to his
    7   Winn v. Ibold, Inc., 
    969 S.W.2d 695
    , 696 (Ky. 1998).
    8   Ky. Indus. Util. Customers, Inc. v. Ky. Utils. Co., 
    983 S.W.2d 493
    , 499 (Ky.
    1998).
    9   
    559 S.W.3d 354
     (Ky. 2018).
    
    Id. at 369
     (“(1) whether the legislation operates as a substantial impairment
    10
    of a contractual relationship; (2) if so, then the inquiry turns to whether there is a
    significant and legitimate public purpose behind the regulation, such as the
    remedying of a broad and general social or economic problem; and (3) if, as in this
    case, the government is a party to the contract, we examine ‘whether that impairment
    is nonetheless permissible as a legitimate exercise of the state’s sovereign powers,’ and
    we determine if the impairment is ‘upon reasonable conditions and of a character
    appropriate to the public purpose justifying its adoption.’”).
    6
    compensation claim. We agree with the panels in both appeals that the 2018
    amendment to KRS 342.730(4) applies to these claims.
    Importantly, we find that a complete Contracts Clause analysis is
    unnecessary because the Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA) does not
    constitute a contract between Kentucky workers and their employers or the
    state. Instead, the WCA is a statutory scheme that may be amended as the
    General Assembly chooses, provided it fits within our constitutional framework.
    The language in some of our prior precedent may be misleading, and we choose
    today to clarify that the WCA provides only statutory rights, not contractual
    ones.
    We have referred to the rights provided by the WCA as contractual in the
    past, but that was oversight.11 Instead, we find that the benefits an employee
    may receive following a work-related injury are not a result of a bargained-for
    exchange following an offer, acceptance, and consideration, but are the result
    of a statutory scheme intended to provide a form of insurance for Kentucky
    employees in case of injury. Because the WCA does not form a contract, there
    are no contractual rights that the amendment to KRS 342.730(4) could
    infringe; thus, the fundamental premise of a Contracts Clause analysis—the
    existence of a contract—is absent, and our analysis ends.
    11 See Krahwinkel v. Commonwealth Aluminum Corp., 
    183 S.W.3d 154
    , 157 (Ky.
    2005) (“Workers’ compensation coverage is a voluntary contract between employer and
    employee, the terms of which are defined by the provisions of the Act.”); M.J. Daly Co.
    v. Varney, 
    695 S.W.2d 400
    , 403 (Ky. 1995) (“In Kentucky, the Workers' Compensation
    Law is optional or elective in character, rather than compulsory, and the relationship
    is contractual in nature.”).
    7
    We join other jurisdictions today and hold that our workers’
    compensation laws do not create a contract.12 We find the current
    circumstances comparable to those in Gen. Motors Corp. v. Romein.13 In
    Romein, the United States Supreme Court addressed whether the retroactive
    application of a Michigan workers’ compensation statute violated the federal
    Contracts Clause. The statute required employers to reimburse injured
    employees for amounts that the employers had withheld from workers’
    compensation benefits based on a previous statute that permitted employers to
    offset workers’ compensation benefits with benefits received from another
    source.14 The employers sued and argued that the new statute impaired their
    contractual rights under a contract between them and their employees as
    created by the previous statute.15 The Supreme Court disagreed, and held that
    because the employer and employee did not assent to specific statutory
    provisions, there was no contract for the Contracts Clause to protect.16
    The same can be said of the circumstances before us. Instead of having
    each employee and employer enter into a contractual arrangement, the
    workers’ compensation system serves as a statutory system that entitles
    Kentucky workers to benefits if they are injured while working. Adams and
    12   Those states include West Virginia, Nevada, and Michigan.
    13   
    503 U.S. 181
    , 190 (1992).
    14   
    Id. at 184
    –86.
    15   
    Id. at 186
    .
    16   
    Id. at 188
    –190.
    8
    Dowell point to no contract or place within the statutory scheme where they
    are guaranteed certain benefits that were mutually assented to and bargained
    for.17 The rights of those subject to the workers’ compensation system are
    governed by statute and are granted to Kentuckians through statutory
    enactments.
    As of 1972, this statutory scheme requires employers to enroll.18
    Therefore, as in Romein, an employer does not bargain with each employee to
    avoid a lawsuit if the employee is injured while working and guarantee certain
    payment if injured. Instead, the employer is required by law to ensure an
    employee is protected in case of injury by enlisting in the workers’
    compensation system. Once an employer is enrolled, its employees may opt in
    or out of the system. But that is quite different from an employer “bargaining”
    with employees to forego lawsuit should they be injured. Because employers
    have no choice but to enroll, it cannot be said they have “assented” to specific
    provisions within the statutory scheme, such as the amendment at issue here.
    Further, unlike in Maze where the plaintiff could ask a court for relief under
    her contractual rights, here the plaintiffs have filed a claim in an
    administrative tribunal—not asking for relief under an employment contract—
    but for benefits granted to them by statute and through their enrollment in the
    workers’ compensation system.
    17 Maze, 559 S.W.3d at 363 (“Our review requires the interpretation of various
    KAPT statutory provisions contained in KRS Chapter 164A and contractual provisions
    contained in the Master Agreement.”).
    18   Davis v. Turner, 
    519 S.W.2d 820
    , 822 (Ky. 1975).
    9
    The workers’ compensation system is controlled by the state and is
    governed by legislative enactments. It is not a contract on between employers
    and their employees. Changes to the relevant statutes, therefore, do not create
    a Contracts Clause issue. While changes to statutes may result in other
    constitutional issues, such as a violation of due process or constitute special
    legislation, a Contracts Clause issue is impossible in this matter because there
    is simply no contract or contractual right for the statutory amendment to
    impair.19
    Additionally, this Court recently held in Kentucky Employees Retirement
    System v. Seven Counties Services., Inc.20 that a contract should only be found
    in a statute if there is a “clear indication that the legislature intended that
    result.”21 We refer to this as the unmistakability doctrine.22 So for Adams’s
    and Dowell’s argument to succeed they must show that the legislature
    expressly intended to make a contract on behalf of Kentucky employers that
    binds the state and employees in the workers’ compensation system before we
    can assess whether the 2018 amendment to KRS 342.730(4) infringes on an
    employee’s contractual rights. But we conclude that they have failed to point
    to language that would suggest that legislature clearly intended a contract.
    19 Additionally, this statute has been recently challenged on many
    constitutional grounds and this Court has found it valid on the issues raised.
    20   
    580 S.W.3d 530
    , 542 (Ky. 2019).
    21   
    Id. 22
       
    Id. 10
    In fact, applying the unmistakability doctrine as applied here further
    leads us to conclude the legislature did not intend for the WCA to serve as a
    contract. If we were to interpret the WCA to provide contractual rights, the
    legislature’s hands would be tied in many instances, unable to modify statutes
    or enact new laws without infringing existing contractual rights. This would
    not only affect its ability to control the workers’ compensation system but
    would limit its ability to change many areas of state funding. The more logical
    conclusion is that the legislature did not intend for the WCA to provide
    contractual rights. We find, then, that the workers’ compensation system does
    not serve as a contract between employees and employers for certain benefits.
    But instead is a state-created and governed system that provides protection for
    both Kentucky employers, as required by law, and for those employees who
    wish to enroll.
    B. Dowell and Adams have no vested right to a certain duration of
    benefits.
    Dowell and Adams argue that applying the new version of KRS
    342.730(4) is unconstitutional because they have a vested right to the benefits
    assigned to them by the ALJ and Workers’ Compensation Board. We have also
    briefly addressed this argument in a companion opinion, also rendered today,
    Cates v. Kroger.23 We will address it here to clarify that litigants like Adams
    and Dowell do not have a vested right to certain benefits. While they have a
    vested right to some benefits by statute, they do not have a vested right to
    23   Cates v. Kroger, 2020-SC-0275-WC.
    11
    “certain” benefits until their claim for benefits has been determined by final
    order.
    A benefits-recipient’s right to compensation becomes fixed and vests on
    the date of the injury.24 The right to receive benefits is a substantive issue and
    the injury date is controlling under substantive law.25 We have long held “that
    where a suit has been instituted under a statute giving a cause of action and a
    right to maintain such action, and once the action has been prosecuted to final
    judgment, and the rights of the parties fixed, such rights then become vested in
    the judgment, and thereafter a legislature can pass no law which impairs the
    validity of the vested right thus obtained.”26 So, Dowell and Adams have a
    vested, substantive right to litigate their benefits, a right that cannot be taken
    away by statutes that have since come into existence since filing their claim.27
    But in contrast, their right to a certain duration or amount of benefits has not
    vested and will not do so until they receive a final decision of their claims. So,
    the 2018 amendment to KRS 342.730(4) “[does] not create new or take
    24   Schmidt v. South Cent. Bell, 
    340 S.W.3d 591
    , 594 (Ky. App. 2011).
    25Louisville
    Shopping Ctr. Inc. v. City of St. Matthews, 
    635 S.W.2d 307
    , 313 (Ky.
    1982) (“A right, in order to be vested (in the constitutional sense) must be more than a
    mere expectation of future benefits or an interest founded upon an anticipated
    continuance of existing general laws.”) (citing16B Am. Jur. 2d Constitutional Laws §
    669 (2021)).
    26 City of Paris v. Kentucky Utils. Co., 133 S.W.2d.559, 561 (Ky. 1939).
    Id. (“The Legislature may not, under the guise of an act affecting remedies
    27
    annul, set aside or impair final judgments obtained before the passage of the Act. A
    judgment is a vested right of property that the Legislature cannot, by a retroactive law,
    either destroy or diminish its value in any respect.”) (internal citations omitted).
    12
    away vested rights” of plaintiffs like Adams and Dowell, and its retroactive
    application is constitutional.
    Because Adams’s and Dowell’s benefits have not been completely
    litigated, their potential awards must conform with the changes in the
    applicable law effective during the litigation process. And in Holcim we found
    that the legislature intended the law to apply to all claims currently pending.28
    So the 2018 amendment applies to Dowell and Adams even though the only
    issue left to litigate is the effect of the 2018 amendment on the duration of their
    benefits. While we agree with Adams that the 2018 amendment impairs his
    benefits award, Adams had no vested right in the outcome of his claim before
    the ALJ or the Board. As we stated in Martin v. Warrior Coal, LLC,29 the
    legislature intended for the 2018 amendment of KRS 342.730(4) to apply to all
    pending appeals, and Adams’s appeal was pending when the Court of Appeals
    ruled. In fact, the case is still not fully litigated.
    Likewise, Dowell’s benefits claim was decided after we had invalidated
    the 1996 amendment and the ALJ and the Board resurrected the 1994 version
    of the statute as applicable to Dowell’s claim. By the time Dowell’s appeal
    reached the Court of Appeals, the 2018 amendment had become effective, and
    28 Holcim, 581 S.W.3d at 42 (“This statute was amended in Section 13 of 2018
    Ky. Acts ch. 40 . . . . Subsection (3) of Section 20 of that Act reads, ‘Subsection (4) of
    Section 13 of this Act shall apply prospectively and retroactively to all claims: (a) For
    which the date of injury or date of last exposure occurred on or after December 12,
    1996; and (b) That have not been fully and finally adjudicated, or are in the appellate
    process, or for which time to file an appeal has not lapsed, as of the effective date of
    this Act.’”).
    29   617 S.W.3d. 391, 397-98 (Ky. 2021).
    13
    we had determined the statute applied retroactively. So Dowell’s benefits were
    not final then and are not now. Because Dowell’s award is still being litigated,
    we find the 2018 amendment to KRS 342.730(3) controls.
    As we stated in Cates v. Kroger, “we reiterate our holding in Holcim that
    the legislature intended for the new amendment to apply to all pending appeals
    with injury dates occurring after December 1996.”30 We are bound by the text
    of the statute and unless it conflicts with a constitutional provision, we must
    uphold the laws the legislature has enacted. Neither Adams nor Dowell had a
    vested right to certain benefits, only a right to some benefits that are to be
    determined under current law.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons explained above, we hold that 2018 amendment to KRS
    342.730(4) does not violate the Contracts Clause of the Federal or Kentucky
    Constitutions. We affirm the holdings of the Court of Appeals in both cases.
    All sitting. All concur. Nickell, J., concurs by separate opinion.
    NICKELL, J., CONCURRING: I concur with the majority’s holding but write
    separately to briefly address what could be seen as an inconsistency in my
    position in the companion opinion, Cates v. Kroger, rendered this same date. In
    Cates, I dissented in part based on my belief the plain language of CR 73.03(1),
    as interpreted by City of Devondale v. Stallings, 
    795 S.W.2d 954
     (Ky. 1990),
    required dismissal because of the failure to name the Attorney General in the
    30   Cates v. Kroger, 2020-SC-0275.
    14
    notice of appeal. My vote in this matter should not be read to diminish the
    position I espoused in Cates. Although not fully addressed in the lead opinion,
    the particular facts of this case do not mandate such a result. Here, Dowell
    attempted to add the Attorney General as a party in the Court of Appeals. This
    was following rendition of our decision in Holcim. Holcim definitively determined
    the amended KRS 342.730(4) applied retroactively to pending cases but
    declined to reach the constitutionality of the amendment. Only then did Dowell
    have grounds to raise a constitutional challenge. This was nearly eighteen
    months after filing the petition for review of the Board’s decision. The Court of
    Appeals denied the request, a decision I believe was correct given the
    circumstances. Our civil rules simply do not contemplate a situation such as
    the one presented here where the basis of a challenge does not arise until after
    the notice of appeal has been filed and the time limit for its amendment has
    long 2 since passed. Dowell had no valid reason to name the Attorney General
    as a party to this appeal at the time it was initiated. Thus, CR 73.03(1) is
    inapplicable, and no mechanism exists to add a party to an action after the
    passage of such a length of time, even if that party is—or has become—
    ostensibly indispensable. As this situation is likely to recur in the future,
    perhaps our rules are ripe for amendment.
    15
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT,
    GLORIA DOWELL:
    Wayne Charles Daub
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT,
    TERRY ADAMS:
    Charles Phillip Wheeler, Jr.
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    MATTHEWS CONTRACTING:
    Douglas Anthony U’Sellis
    U’Sellis Mayer & Associates, PSC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE,
    EXCEL MINING, LLC:
    James Gregory Allen
    Jones & Walters, PLLC
    COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE COMMONWEALTH
    OF KENTUCKY EX REL. ATTORNEY GENERAL
    DANIEL J. CAMERON:
    Stephen Chad Meredith
    Matthew Franklin Kuhn
    Office of Solicitor General
    Office of the Attorney General
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGES:
    Hon. John Barry Coleman
    Hon. Chris Davis
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD:
    Michael Wayne Alvey
    16
    AMICI KENTUCKY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE,
    KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES,
    KENTUCKY COAL ASSOCIATION,
    KENTUCKY LEAGUE OF CITIES:
    Brent Robert Baughman
    Kyle W. Miller
    R. Clay Larkin
    Dentons Bingham Greenbaum LLP
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020 SC 0170

Filed Date: 8/24/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/26/2021