Lead Opinion
Aрpellant, Glenn Eskola, ap-udge. Compensation Commission’s denial of his request for additional benefits on the basis that his claim was barred by the statute of limitations. We affirm the Commission’s decision finding that appellant’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations.
The facts are not in dispute. Appellant, a former math teacher and football coach at J.A. Fair High School, sustained a compensable injury to his right shoulder on September 15, 1998, during football practice. Appellant saw the team doctor, Dr. Richard Nix, who treated appellant with muscle relaxers, cortisone injections, and physical therapy. In June of 1999, appellant’s shoulder was still symptomatic, and he completed and filed the AR-C form for a workers’ compensation claim on June 17, 1999. When he completed that form, appellant checked both the “initial benefits” box and the “additional benefits” box.
At the time he completed the AR-C form, appellant had not received any workers’ compensation benefits.
Reviewing his AR-C form, appellees accepted the claim as compensable, and appellant was treated at that time by Dr. Reed Kilgore, who ultimately reсommended surgery on his shoulder. Appellant, who had retired by this time, did not have the surgery performed at that time because of various demands on his time, including volunteering and assisting his nephew in constructing his house. Later, in May 2003, when appellant contacted the workers’ compensation carrier about the surgery, he was informed that the statute of limitations had run on the claim. Appellant elected to have the surgery performed on June 13, 2003.
The administrative law judge found that appellant’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations, and the Commission affirmed the ALJ’s opinion. Appellant now appeals, arguing that the statute of limitations “is tolled when a benefit claim has been filed before the expirаtion of two years from the date of an injury and remains tolled unless a dismissal is obtained.”
Arkansas Code Annotated section 11-9-702(a)(1) (Repl. 2002) provides the time limitations for filing an initial claim for workers’ compensation:
A claim for compensation for disability on account of an injury, other than an occupational disease and occupational infection, shall be barred unless filed with the Workers’ Compensation Commission within two (2) years from the date of the cоmpensable injury. If, during the two-year period following the filing of the claim, the claimant receives no weekly benefit compensation and receives no medical treatment resulting from the alleged injury, the claim shall be barred thereafter.
Subsection (a)(4) provides, “If, within six (6) months after the filing of a claim for compensation, no bona fide request for a hearing has been made with respect to the claim, the claim may, upon motion and after hearing, be dismissеd without prejudice to the refiling of the claim within limitation periods specified in subdivisions (a)(1)-(3) of this section.”
Arkansas Code Annotated section 11-9-702(b)(1) (Repl. 2002) sets forth the time limitations for filing claims for additional compensation:
In cases wherе any compensation, including disability or medical, has beenpaid on account of an injury, a claim for additional compensation shall be barred unless filed with the commission within one (1) year from the date of the last payment of compensation or two (2) years from the date of the injury, whichever is greater.
Subsection 11-9-702(d) provides, “If, within six (6) months after the fifing of a claim for additional compensation, no bona fide request for a hearing has been made with respect to the claim, the claim may, upon motion and after hearing, be dismissed without prejudice to the refiling of the claim within limitation periods specified in subsection (b) of this section.”
There is no question that appellant filed for initial benefits within two years of his injury, and appellees began paying for his medical treatment through workers’ compensation after he filed his AR-C form on June 17, 1999. According to appellant, prior to fifing the AR-C form, he filed his medical claims with his health insurance, and no workers’ compensation benefits were paid prior to June 17, 1999. It is also undisputed that appellees last paid compensation on May 8, 2000, and that appellant did not inquire about payment for his shoulder surgеry until May 2003.
Appellant argues that Spencer v. Stone Container,
Appellant argues that his surgical request is a continuation of initial benefits and that the statute of limitations was tolled because appellees never asked the Commission to dismiss his claim, even though appellees voluntarily accepted the claim as compensable and the Commission was never involved in the case until appellant inquired about surgery in May 2003. Appellant makes much of the fact that appellees nevеr moved to dismiss the claim, but as appellees correctly point out, they would not have asked for the claim to be dismissed because they accepted it as an initial request for benefits for a compensable injury. Furthermоre, the statutes do not absolutely require that the claim be dismissed; they merely state that the claim may be dismissed upon motion from either party and notice to all parties.
In Petit Jean Air Service v. Wilson,
It is trae that claims had been filed with the commission, but such filing is by no means comparable to the lodging of a formal complaint in a court of law. Court cases, almost without exception, are contested; and even those that are allowed to go by default are eventually terminated by an affirmative order ofcourt. By contrast, hardly one compensation case in fifty is controverted. Uncontro-verted claims, such аs this one, make up the vast majority of all claims that are filed. Such claims are not ordinarily brought to the attention of the commission nor acted upon by it in any way whatever. The insurance carrier pays the claim to the satisfaction of all concerned, and that is the end of the matter.
In this case, appellant suffered a compensable injury on September 15, 1998; he filed one request for compensation, the initial request, on June 17, 1999; and his last benefits paid were on May 8, 2000. Two years from the date of injury would have been September 15, 2000. One year from the last payment of benefits would have been May 8, 2001; this would be the applicable limitations period because it is greater than two years from the date of the compensable injury. Appellant did not request his shoulder surgery until May 2003, which was clearly more than one year after the last payment of benefits. Therefore, the statute of limitations had run on appellant’s claim, and the Commission’s decision denying the claim for additional benefits was correct.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The majority holds that appellant’s claim for medical benefits related to his shoulder surgery was untimely beсause, as provided in Ark. Code Ann. § 11 — 9—702(b)(1) (Repl. 2002), he failed to file a claim for additional compensation either within one year from the last payment of compensation on May 8, 2000, or within two years from his September 15, 1998, injury. The majority’s reliance on this statute is misplaced, however, as the shoulder surgery was part of his initial claim for compensation. Appellant’s claim was timely because, as provided in Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-702(a)(1), appellant filed his initial compensation claim on June 17, 1999, within two years from the date of his September 15, 1998, injury.
Following his injury and his filing of his initial claim for compensation, appellant was seen by Dr. Reed Kilgore, who noted on December 27, 1999, that appellant would undergo diagnostic tеsts to determine whether he needed either “open rotator cuff surgery” or “arthroscopic subacromial decompression with possible distal clavicle resection.” Dr. Kilgore noted on March 8, 2000, that if appellant had “multiple recurrences” of pain, he would “probably require distal clavicle resection.” On May 8, 2000, Dr. Kilgore wrote that appellant understood that he might need “AC resection arthroplasty for complete and permanent relief of his symptoms” and that if he had “worsening,” he would “require arthroscopy and AC distal clavicle resection, which he can schedule if he wishes.” According to appellant, he continued to have problems with his shoulder. On June 13, 2003, Dr. John Yocum performed an “[ajrthroscopy of the right shoulder with arthroscopic repair of SLAP lesion and arthroscopic Bankart repair with debridement of labral tear.”
I respectfully dissent.
