884 P.2d 193 | Ariz. Ct. App. | 1994
OPINION
We are asked to set aside an Industrial Commission award that dismissed as untimely the request for hearing filed by Petitioners, an uninsured employer. Three questions are presented:
1. Is Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 23-947(A), which limits an uninsured employer’s protest period to thirty days, unconstitutional?
2. Were the notices of determination issued in this case so ambiguous and confusing that they denied the employer due process of law?
3. Did a notice of determination amending two prior notices of determination prevent the earlier notices from becoming final?
Concluding that the answer to each question is “No,” we affirm the Commission’s award.
I.
On November 22, 1991, Alex Kara (Claimant) filed a workers’ compensation claim
On February 12, 1992, David Sosa (“Sosa”), a claims specialist for the Special Fund, received a telephone call from Robert M. Hart (“Hart”), National’s owner. Hart acknowledged receipt of the January 15 Notice and he advised that Claimant was not employed by National. After Sosa explained the employer’s thirty-day protest period,
After investigating the corporate status of Claimant’s employer, the Special Fund issued a Notice of Determination on March 6, 1992, correcting the January 15 and January 31 Notices to indicate the employer’s name as “Robert M. Hart & Jane Doe Hart; Anthony W. Trifari & Jane Doe Trifari dba National Bakeries of Arizona, Inc. aka Napoli Bakery” (“the March 6 Notice”). On April 16, 1992, the Commission issued a Notice of Hearing. In a letter dated April 29,1992, the administrative law judge (“ALJ”) informed the parties that the sole hearing issue would be whether the untimeliness of the February 18 protest letter was legally excusable.
At the hearing, Hart testified that he believed the protest letter was timely because he thought he had thirty working days from the January 31 Notice to request a hearing. He also stated that when he returned the Request for Hearing form, he left most of it blank because he did not know what to put on it. Hart further claimed that he did not request a hearing after receiving the March 6 Notice because he felt his prior request was sufficient.
On cross-examination, Hart conceded that he had received the January 15 Notice, that he was aware he had thirty days to request a hearing, and that he had not done so. Contradicting his earlier testimony, Hart stated that when he mailed the protest letter, he assumed it would arrive by February 15, thirty days after the January 15 Notice. He also testified that although he read both the January 15 and January 31 Notices, they looked “identical.” Hart further acknowledged that, despite receiving a letter from the Commission’s chief counsel instructing him to request a hearing if he disagreed with the March 6 Notice, he never requested a hearing on the March 6 Notice. Hart also conceded that he was not incapacitated between January 15, 1992, and February 18, 1992, and that no one at the Commission misled him as to his right to request a hearing.
(1) Hart had filed the protest letter to contest the January 15 Notice’s designation of Claimant’s employer;
(2) the protest letter was late solely because Hart did not mail it in time for it to be received by the Commission in a timely manner;
(3) Hart’s submission of the Request for Hearing form had no legal effect because the protest letter was already untimely;
(4) there was no justification for treating the protest letter as a protest of the January 31 Notice, which set Claimant’s average monthly wage;
(5) Hart had received the March 6 Notice, but did not file a protest, timely or otherwise, to that notice; and,
(6) as a result of Hart’s failure to protest the March 6 Notice, “all of the substantive merits which were reasonably within the scope of the [January 15 Notice] and the [March 6 Notice] ... [became] final because of the absence of an excusable or timely protest by the employer.”
On appeal, Hart does not contend that the untimeliness of his protest letter is excused by any of the grounds set forth in A.R.S. § 23-947(B). Instead, he raises a number of constitutional arguments, discussed below. The award was summarily affirmed on administrative review, and Hart brought this special action. We have jurisdiction pursuant to AR.S. §§ 23-95KA) (1983) and 12-120.21(A)(2) (1992).
II.
A.
Hart argues that A.R.S. § 23-947
A statute that creates classifications will withstand an equal protection challenge if: (1) all persons within a class are treated alike, and (2) reasonable grounds for the classification exist. See Findley v. Industrial Comm’n, 135 Ariz. 273, 276, 660 P.2d 874, 877 (App.1983). This case is similar to Findley, wherein this Court upheld the constitutionality of A.R.S. § 23-1043.01(B), which provides a more stringent standard of proof for stress-related mental injuries. The claimant in Findley had argued that singling out industrial claimants with stress-related mental injuries violates the equal protection clause. Id. This Court found the statute constitutional because all members of the class, i.e., those with stress-related mental injuries, were treated equally by the statute, and the difficulty in proving a causal connection between mental injury and the work place provided a reasonable basis for the more stringent standard of proof. Id.
B.
Hart also contends that the January 15, January 31, and March 6 Notices denied him due process of law because they “are hopelessly confusing and ambiguous to a lay person.” We disagree. Each of the three notices of determination clearly indicated it was being issued for a different reason. The January 15 Notice stated that it accepted Claimant’s workers’ compensation claim for benefits. The January 31 Notice stated that it set Claimant’s average monthly wage at $1191.58. The March 6 Notice stated that it was issued to correct the January 15 and January 31 Notices to reflect the employer’s correct name. Each of these notices also contained the following language:
NOTICE TO NON-INSURED EMPLOYER: If you do not agree with this DETERMINATION and wish a hearing on the matter, your written Request for Hearing must be received at either office of the Industrial Commission listed below within THIRTY (30) DAYS after the date of mailing of this DETERMINATION pursuant to ARS Section 23-941 and 23-947. IF NO SUCH REQUEST IS RECEIVED WITHIN THAT THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD, THIS DETERMINATION IS FINAL. The defendant employer is liable to the Special Fund for all benefits payable on claim.
After Hart received the January 15 Notice, Sosa told him that he had thirty days to file a hearing request. After Hart received the March 6 Notice, the Commission’s chief counsel wrote him and called the hearing request period to his attention.
The elements of procedural due process are notice and an opportunity to be heard. Iphaar v. Industrial Comm’n, 171 Ariz. 423, 426, 831 P.2d 422, 425 (App.1992). The notices in this case did not deprive Hart of procedural due process.
C.
Hart claims that the March 6 Notice prevented the January 15 and January 31 Notices from becoming final. We disagree. Each of these notices carried its own statutorily-mandated protest period. See A.R.S. § 23-947(A). Because Hart failed to file a timely hearing request for either the January 15 or the January 31 Notices, these notices had become final before the March 6 Notice issued. See A.R.S. § 23-947(B) (“Failure to file [a request for hearing] with the commission within the required time by a party
III.
The March 6 Notice did not affect the finality of the January 15 Notice or the January 31 Notices. There was no protest, timely or otherwise, to the January 31 and March 6 Notices. The protest letter challenged only the January 15 Notice, and the ALJ did not err in dismissing that protest letter as being untimely filed without a statutory excuse. The award is affirmed.
. Under A.R.S. § 23-947(A), an uninsured employer has thirty days from the date of determination in which to file a request for hearing. The request for hearing must be in the Commission’s possession by the thirtieth day. See A.R.S. § 23-947(B) (Supp.1993).
. When asked, Hart could not recall speaking with Sosa. Sosa, however, did testify that he
. The statute provides, in relevant part:
A hearing on any question relating to a claim shall not be granted unless the employee has previously filed an application for compensation within the time and in the manner prescribed by § 23-1061, and such request for a hearing is filed within ninety days after the notice sent under the provisions of § 23-1061, subsection F or within ninety days of notice of a determination by the commission, insurance carrier or self-insuring employer under § 23-1047 or 23-1061, except that an employer who is subject to and fails to comply with § 23-961 or 23-962 [workers’ compensation coverage] must file a request for hearing within thirty days of notice of a determination by the commission, or within ten days of all other awards issued by the commission.
A.R.S. § 23-947(A) (Supp.1993).
. As support for his argument that the thirty-day protest period in section A.R.S. § 23-947 violates the equal protection clause, Hart cites Gila Valley Block Co., Inc. v. Industrial Comm'n, 120 Ariz. 264, 585 P.2d 572 (App.1978). His reliance on Gila Valley is misplaced, however, because equal protection was not an issue in that case. The only issue in Gila Valley was whether an Industrial Commission rule limiting insured employers to a thirty-day protest period was an unreasonable exercise of the Commission’s rule-making authority. See 120 Ariz. at 264, 585 P.2d at 572. In holding the rule invalid, this Court found that the rule conflicted with A.R.S. section 23-947, which at that time provided a sixty-day protest period for all interested parties. See id. at 265, 585 P.2d at 573. We also find Gila Valley distinguishable from the present case because in 1987 the legislature amended A.R.S. section 23-947(A) specifically to limit uninsured employers to a thirty-day protest period instead of the ninety-day period that applies to other interested parties. See 1987 Ariz.Sess.Laws ch. 38, § 1.