DocketNumber: 90-07-024; CA A71605
Citation Numbers: 118 Or. App. 456, 847 P.2d 912, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 265
Judges: Deits, Durham, Richardson
Filed Date: 3/3/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Petitioner seeks review of a Department of Insurance and Finance (DIF) order requiring it to pay an additional workers’ compensation premium to its carrier, respondent Safeco. The issue is whether certain payments to employees constituted wages or unanticipated bonuses or profit sharing. We affirm.
Safeco’s premium is calculated from petitioner’s payroll. The Basic Manual for Workers’ Compensation and Employers Liability Insurance (Basic Manual)
“bonus pay which is not anticipated under the contract of employment and which is paid at the sole discretion of the employer, [and] amounts payable under profit sharing agreements * *
On May 30, 1990, Safeco audited petitioner’s payroll and assessed an additional premium for bonus payments to Ronald Smith and Donald Smith between April 1, 1989, and March 31, 1990. Petitioner argued that the payments were properly excluded as unanticipated bonus payments or as profit sharing. DIF disagreed and sustained the assessment. Petitioner contends that no substantial evidence supports DIF’s findings that the payments were not unanticipated bonuses or profit sharing, and that the order is inadequate for review because it fails to explain how DIF’s findings lead to its conclusions.
Petitioner began business in 1972 as a partnership owned by Margaret and Wesley Smith. It was incorporated at a later date and Wesley became president. In 1979, the corporation authorized Wesley to pay performance bonuses to six key personnel, subject to adequate available funds. The key personnel consisted of his wife, Margaret, his children, Ronald Smith, Donald Smith and Sheryl McCoy, and two non-family members. From 1980 to 1986, petitioner paid between $2,000 and $4,000 in bonuses to each of between three and six workers. In 1981, 1982 and 1983, it paid no
Petitioner’s bonus policy was not an agreement with employees, so the bonuses were not amounts payable under a profit sharing agreement. Moreover, employee productivity, not petitioner’s profitability, determined whether petitioner paid bonuses. Substantial evidence supports DIF’s finding that the 1989 bonuses were not amounts payable under a profit sharing agreement.
In response to petitioner’s argument that the order is inadequate for review, respondent contends that nothing requires DIF to provide an explanation of the reasons why its findings caused it to reach its conclusions. That is incorrect for the reasons stated in Home Plate, Inc. v. OLCC, 20 Or App 188, 190, 530 P2d 862 (1975):
“If there is to be any'meaningful judicial scrutiny of the activities of an administrative agency—not for the purpose of substituting judicial judgment for administrative judgment but for the purpose of requiring the administrative agency to demonstrate that it has applied the criteria prescribed by statute and by its own regulations and has not acted arbitrarily or on an ad hoc basis—we must require that its order*460 clearly and precisely state what it found to be the facts and fully explain why those facts lead it to the decision it makes. Brevity is not always a virtue. The less circumscribed an agency is by the legislative grant of power to it and by its own regulations augmenting that grant, the more detailed and precise its explanation of its actions exercising the powers granted to it must be.”
However, DIF’s order does not lack adequate reasoning. Petitioner’s evidence was equivocal at best and DIF committed no error.
Affirmed.
Respondent National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) is an authorized workers’ compensation rating organization. ORS 737.350 et seq. It promulgates the Basic Manual to identify the employee remuneration on which its member insurers calculate their premiums.