No. 85CA0510Colorado Court of Appeals.
Decided May 29, 1986. Rehearing Denied June 26, 1986. Certiorari Denied September 2, 1986 (86SC227).
Review of Order from the Industrial Commission of the State of Colorado
Sherman Howard, Lee Dale, for Petitioner.
Duane Woodard, Attorney General, Charles B. Howe, Chief Deputy Attorney General, Richard H. Forman, Solicitor General, Mary Karen Maldonado, Assistant Attorney General, for Respondents Industrial Commission, and Director, Department of Labor and Employment, Division of Labor, State of Colorado.
Douglas R. Phillips, P.C., Douglas R. Phillips, for Respondent Rita Pankey.
Division II.
Opinion by JUDGE VAN CISE.
[1] Employer, Eastman Kodak Company, seeks review of an order of the Industrial Commission awarding claimant, Rita Pankey, permanent partial disability benefits and assessing a penalty against it for failing timely to admit or deny liability. WePage 86
affirm the order in part and set aside in part.
[2] Claimant sustained two back injuries while working for the employer, the first occurring in 1979 and the second in July of 1982. The employer admitted liability for the first injury and claimant was paid temporary partial, temporary total, and five percent permanent partial disability benefits. After undergoing surgery in 1980, claimant returned to work for the employer. [3] In July 1982, claimant was assigned heavier job duties and, by July 22, her back was hurting so badly that she could no longer go to work. She reported her condition to the employer and was referred by the employer’s medical department to a neurosurgeon. She was then diagnosed as suffering from herniated nucleus pulposus which required a laminectomy and decompression. [4] On September 26, 1982, the employer filed a special admission of liability in the original workmen’s compensation proceeding which, in addition to the liability previously admitted, included additional temporary total disability benefits for the July 1982 incident. On November 23, 1983, claimant filed a new claim for compensation based on the July 1982 injury, alleging that the repetitive and continuous lifting on the job had aggravated her back condition causing a disc injury. [5] The Commission concluded that claimant’s July 1982 injury was a new injury and not a continuation of the 1979 injury, and awarded her temporary total and ten percent permanent partial disability benefits. The employer was also ordered to pay $24,520 to claimant as a penalty for failing timely to admit or deny liability in this new claim proceeding. The hearing officer determined that claimant was entitled to $40.53 per day for each day that employer failed to admit or deny liability, and that the penalty period ran from August 16, 1982 (25 days from the July 22, 1982 notification) to April 11, 1984, the date of the hearing. I.
[6] On review, the employer first contends that the Commission erred in interpreting § 8-53-102(2), C.R.S. (1985 Cum. Supp.) to authorize assessment of a penalty against an employer in addition to requiring the employer to pay compensation to a claimant. We disagree.
II.
[12] Employer next contends that the Commission erred in not determining that the penalty period ended on September 26, 1982, which was the date the employer filed its admission of liability in the original
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claim and admitted additional temporary total disability for the July 1982 injury. We agree.
[13] Where, at a hearing, an employer clearly denies liability on the record, this denial, albeit not in writing, is sufficient to terminate running of the penalty period because this denial substantially fulfills the goals of § 8-53-102. Hanson v. Industrial Commission, supra. [14] Here, the September 26, 1982, admission of liability substantially fulfilled the goals of § 8-53-102; hence, it was likewise sufficient to terminate the running of the penalty period. This admission, even though filed in the previous proceeding, informed the claimant and the Director of the Division of Labor that the employer considered claimant’s condition to be a continuation of the 1979 injury and that the employer was only admitting liability for additional periods of temporary disability. Claimant was further alerted that her failure to contest this admission would result in its becoming a final order. As in Hanson v. Industrial Commission, supra, it would exalt form over substance to allow the penalty period to run beyond the date of this admission. [15] Under circumstances such as occurred here, the classification of a subsequent “injury” as merely a worsening of condition justifying a reopening or as a new injury is one of fact to be made by the hearing officer or Commission long after the admission or denial deadlines of § 8-53-102 have passed. To hold that the penalty period continued to run after the September 26, 1982, admission of liability would unfairly penalize the employer for reasonable actions it took based upon its initial classification of claimant’s subsequent back injury as a worsening of claimant’s first back injury. [16] Here, the subsequent injury occurred on July 22, 1982, and the admission was due by August 16, 1982. Therefore, the liability for a penalty ran from that latter date until September 26, 1982, the date the admission was filed, and the Commission erred in assessing penalties beyond this date. III.
[17] Employer next contends that the facts do not support the Commission’s findings that the July 1982 injury was a new injury and not a continuation or worsening of the 1979 injury. We disagree.
IV.
[19] Finally, the employer contends that the hearing officer erred in awarding the claimant an additional ten percent permanent partial disability because the hearing officer failed to take into account the earlier permanent partial disability. It is employer’s position that the five percent functional disability should have been credited or otherwise taken into account. We disagree.
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for determination of the appropriate penalty in accordance with this opinion.
[22] JUDGE SMITH and JUDGE SILVERSTEIN[*] concur.