OPINION
¶ 1 The Kessens, Claimant Lynn Stewart’s uninsured employer, seek special action review of the Industrial Commission of Arizona’s (“ICA”) affirmance of the lump-sum commutation of Claimant’s workers’ compensation award. The Kessens assert that, as Claimant’s employer, their consent was required before the ICA could commute Claimant’s award of unscheduled permanent partial disability benefits to a lump sum. We hold that it was not. On cross-petition, Claimant challenges the ICA’s reduction of the lump-sum award by subtracting the monthly disability payments made to him after he submitted his lump-sum request. We hold that Claimant failed to preserve this issue for review. Accordingly, we affirm the ICA’s award approving the lump-sum commutation.
BACKGROUND
¶2 On August 6, 1993, Claimant injured his back while working for the Kessens’ rock-crushing business in Globe, Arizona. Because the Kessens did not have workers’ compensation insurance for the period in which Claimant’s injury occurred, the claim was handled by the ICA’s No Insurance Section/Special Fund Division (“Special Fund”). The claim was eventually closed with a five percent unscheduled permanent impairment, entitling Claimant to $404.29 per month in unscheduled disability payments.
¶ 3 On October 3, 1997, Claimant requested a “lump-sum commutation” of his unscheduled award — that is, he requested a lump-sum payment in lieu of further monthly payments. The ICA granted the request and, because the $79,000 present value of Claimant’s future disability payments exceeded the statutory cap, awarded Claimant the statutory maximum of $50,000, less any payments received after the request was made. See Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“A.R.S.”) § 23-1067(B) (1995). The Kessens timely protested. After considering the parties’ legal memoranda, the ICA affirmed the lump-sum commutation. The Kessens then brought this special action. Claimant cross-petitioned, claiming that the ICA was erroneously deducting his monthly payments from his $50,000 award.
DISCUSSION
A. Uninsured Employer’s Consent
¶ 4 The Kessens argue that the ICA erred by failing to obtain their consent to the Claimant’s request for a lump-sum commutation. By statute, the consent of the “carrier liable to pay the claim” must be obtained before a lump-sum commutation may be awarded:
The [ICA] may allow commutation of compensation pursuant to § 23-1044, subsection C, and 23-1045, subsections B, C, and D, to a lump sum of not to exceed ... fifty thousand dollars for commutation requests made from and after June 30, 1987, with the consent of the carrier liable to pay the claim, under such rules, regulátions and system of computation as it devises for obtaining the present value of the compensation.
AR.S. § 23-1067(B) (emphasis added).
¶ 5 The Kessens assert that section 23-1067(B) requires the consent even of an uninsured employer before the ICA may approve a request for a lump-sum commutation because, by statute, an uninsured employer is liable to reimburse the Special Fund for benefit payments made on the employers behalf. See A.R.S. § 23-907(0 (Supp.1998). They argue that a contrary interpretation would frustrate the legislature’s intent and would violate due process and equal protection principles. We disagree.
¶ 6 Our primary goal when interpreting a statute is to give effect to the legislature’s intent.
See State v. Korzep,
¶ 7 “Insurance carrier” is defined in the workers’ compensation statutes as “the state compensation fund and every insurance carrier duly authorized by the director of insurance to write workers’ compensation ... insurance in the state of Arizona.” A.R.S. § 23-901(8) (1995). This definition does not encompass an uninsured employer such as the Kessens. Thus, as the Kessen’s acknowledge in their opening brief, if we apply the statutory definition of “insurance carrier” to section 23-1067(B), our inquiry is finished; the legislature plainly excluded uninsured employers from the ambit of the statute.
¶ 8 Such an analysis is problematic, however, for as the Kessens observe the definition of “insurance carrier” in section 23-901(8) also does not include either the Special Fund or self-insured employers.
See
A.R.S. § 23-961(A)(2) (Supp.1998);
see also Spear v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶ 9 Given the uncertain scope of the term “carrier” as used in section 23-1067(B), the Kessens assert that the key to interpreting to whom the legislature intended to grant a veto power lies in the phrase “liable to pay the claim.” They argue that, because the uninsured employer is liable to reimburse the Special Fund for all benefits paid on the employer’s behalf, plus a ten percent penalty, see A.R.S. § 23-907(C), the uninsured employer is “liable to pay the claim” within the meaning of section 23-1067(B).
¶ 10 We agree with the Kessens that an uninsured employer is “hable to pay”— that is, the uninsured employer is ultimately responsible for reimbursing the Special Fund for benefits it pays a claimant on the uninsured employer’s behalf. See id. However, we think the Kessens have parsed the statute too finely. We cannot interpret “hable to pay” in a vacuum; instead, we must examine the phrase “carrier hable to pay the claim” as a whole. In doing so, we conclude that the sum of the entire phrase is greater than that of its parts, and the legislature intended to grant a veto power only to the entity directly liable for the claim, as opposed to an entity secondarily hable to the Special Fund.
¶ 11 This court recently addressed a similar argument. In
Bohn v. Industrial Commission,
Although an uninsured employer is liable to the Special Fund, the Special Fund may never recover the workers’ compensation it paid a claimant. Consequently, the Special Fund, not an uninsured employer, is the “other person liable to pay the [workers’ compensation] claim” under A.R.S. section 23-1023(0).
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Bohn,
¶ 12 The same reasoning applies here. That the uninsured employer is ultimately responsible to reimburse the Special Fund for payments it has made on the employer’s behalf does not grant the uninsured employer the veto power reserved for the entity presently liable to pay the claim. See A.R.S. § 23-1067(B).
¶ 13 We are further aided in our analysis by the legislature’s express desire to exclude uninsured employers from the protections granted other interested parties under the workers’ compensation statutes: “Employers who are subject to and who fail to comply with the provisions of § 23-961 or 23-962 shall not be entitled to the benefits of this chapter [A.R.S. §§ 23-901 to 23-1091],...” A.R.S. § 23-907(A) (Supp.1998). Accordingly, we conclude that section 23-1067(B) does not require the consent of an uninsured employer before the ICA may approve an employee’s lump-sum commutation request.
¶ 14 The Kessens further argue that such a construction of section 23-1067(B) violates equal protection by unreasonably treating uninsured employers differently from self-insured employers for the purpose of approving or vetoing lump-sum commutations. We agree that the two classes are treated differently, but disagree that the differing treatment violates equal protection.
¶ 15 The equal protection clause is satisfied if “all persons within a class are treated'alike, and ... reasonable grounds for the classification exist.”
1
Hart v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶ 16 The Kessens also argue that the lump-sum commutation statute infringes their fundamental right not to be deprived of their property without due process of law. “It is axiomatic that no person may be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”
Iphaar v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶ 17 The Kessens were afforded such an opportunity; their claim that they did not receive notice of or an opportunity to be heard on the claimant’s lump-sum commutation request is inaccurate. Although they were not given a veto power over Claimant’s lump-sum commutation request, they were served with a copy of the ICA’s November 13, 1997 Special Findings and Award, which granted the lump-sum commutation request and delineated the parties’ right to request a hearing. The Kessens timely protested the lump-sum commutation and requested a hearing. Their attorney subsequently waived a hearing and submitted a legal memorandum addressing the legal question at *493 issue. We conclude that the Kessens received all the process they were due with regard to the claimant’s lump-sum commutation request.
B. Cross-Petition
¶ 18 In his cross-petition, Claimant argues that the ICA is erroneously reducing his lump-sum award by subtracting from it the monthly disability payments made to him after he filed his request for a lump-sum commutation. 2 He argues that the reduction exceeds the ICA’s statutory authority and constitutes a rule not properly promulgated pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act. See A.R.S. §§ 41-0001 to 41-1092.12 (1999). Claimant, however, failed to raise this issue before the ICA, and we will not consider it now.
¶ 19 Generally, this court will not consider on appeal an issue that was not raised before the ICA.
See Norsworthy v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶20 Claimant was aware that the ICA would deduct all permanent partial disability benefits payments made to him after his lump-sum commutation request was filed. Notice was given both in italics on the face of the lump-sum request packet and in the ICA’s November 13, 1997 award:
AWARD
Award is made payable to applicant by the defendant insurance carrier [Special Fund] as follows:
1. Applicant’s request for lump sum commutation of Award of April 08, 1996 in the sum of $50,000.00 less any amounts advanced and/or payments made subsequent to the lump sum request.
If you do not agree with this award and wish a hearing, then your written request for hearing must be received in either office of the Industrial Commission of Arizona within TEN (10) DAYS from the date of this order, pursuant to A.R.S. § 23-941 and 23-947. IF NO SUCH REQUEST FOR HEARING IS RECEIVED WITHIN THAT TEN (10) DAY PERIOD, THIS AWARD IS FINAL.
(Italics added.) Yet Claimant never questioned the computation of his lump-sum payment until this appeal. He argues, however, that this case falls within one of several exceptions to the general rule prohibiting consideration of issues for the first time on appeal. We address these arguments in turn.
¶ 21 First, Claimant asserts that we may consider the issue because it is “extant in the record.”
Stephens v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶22 Second, Claimant argues that he should not be required to raise the issue before a biased tribunal. We rejected this argument in
Phoenix Children’s Hospital,
¶ 23 Third, Claimant argues that the issue is one of a “general public nature, affecting the interests of the state at large.”
Ruth v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶24 Finally, citing
Gerhardt v. Industrial Commission,
¶25 In this case, however, Claimant was aware of the ICA’s practice and knew that it would apply to him. He was also aware that the award was subject to challenge by a petition for special action in this court, which would further delay his lump-sum payment and result in a greater reduction in the lump sum. Claimant does not dispute that he was affected by the reduction; he alleges only that it was not worth the fight at that time. We need not engage in the difficult task of distinguishing among degrees of incentive. If Claimant felt that he was wronged by the award, then he should have raised the issue before the ICA.
¶ 26 Throughout his argument, Claimant alleges that the ICA has substantively and impermissibly changed its practice of computing lump-sum payments. To demonstrate this point, Claimant has appended to his reply brief documents from an unrelated case, documents which are, of course, not part of the record in this case and of which we may not take judicial cognizance. That
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Claimant supports his claim with outside-the-record factual allegations highlights the impropriety of our review now. This court is not the appropriate forum for resolving factual disputes.
See Phoenix Children’s Hosp.,
¶27 We affirm the ICA’s February 12, 1998 award.
Notes
. Assuming, of course, that no fundamental right or suspect class is involved, in which case we would review under a strict scrutiny analysis.
See Kenyon v. Hammer,
. After this case was set for consideration on appeal, the Special Fund moved to withdraw its brief responding to the cross-petition, in which it argued that Claimant failed to preserve the issue for appeal by not raising it before the ICA and that, in any event, the ICA’s interpretation of the statutes and rules governing lump-sum commutations is both permissible and correct. This court granted the motion. Although we may, in our discretion, view the withdrawal as a confession of error,
see Swift Transp. v. Industrial Comm'n,
