KWIKSET/EMHART and Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, Petitioners, v. Patricia MAYBERRY, Respondent [Claimant]
No. 70147
Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Oct. 23, 1990
800 P.2d 239
THE COURT OF APPEALS’ OPINION IS VACATED; THE TRIAL COURT‘S DISMISSAL ORDER IS REVERSED; CASE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
All Justices concur.
John N. MacKenzie, Whitten, Davies and Layman, Tulsa, for petitioners.
Mark O. Thurston, Tulsa, for respondent.
OPALA, Vice Chief Justice.
The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether a Workers’ Compensation Court review panel may modify the trial judge‘s fact finding that limits claimant‘s on-the-job injury in contest to her left hand and arm by adding another compensable injury—that to her right shoulder—based solely on medical reports and without the aid of a transcript of the hearing held before the trial judge. We answer this question in the negative.
The trial judge found that the claimant had sustained a work-related injury to her left hand and arm but denied compensation for a claimed injury to her right shoulder. The claimant appealed to a three-judge panel of the Workers’ Compensation Court. That tribunal modified the trial judge‘s finding by adding to claimant‘s work-related harm an injury to her right shoulder. The Court of Appeals sustained the panel‘s order modifying the trial judge‘s findings and held that the panel‘s decision must be left undisturbed because the record tendered by employer for review (which did not include a transcript) fails to overcome the presumption of correctness that is due the panel‘s decision. We granted certiorari upon the employer‘s petition.
In her brief the claimant admits that “[n]either party requested a transcript and the only record before the ... [review panel below consisted of] the doctor‘s reports which had been admitted into evidence.”1 The record here is entirely consistent with claimant‘s concession.2 This controversy
Appeals to a three-judge panel of the Workers’ Compensation Court are not de novo proceedings.3 They must be determined on the record made before the trial judge.4 Without the benefit of a transcript the panel can neither assess the correctness of any claim-related facts nor condemn a trial judge‘s finding on the grounds that it is clearly contrary to the evidence adduced.5 Although a physician‘s evaluation may include the claimant‘s history, the competency of his opinion depends largely on the assumption of critical facts consist-
For affirmance of the panel‘s decision in question the record must disclose competent evidence that supports a work-related injury to the right shoulder.7 The panel‘s finding, which was made solely upon consideration of medical history in a physician‘s report, stands without any basis in testimony connecting the shoulder injury to the on-the-job harm in contest.8 This court‘s past jurisprudence recognizes that due process is denied when a reviewing tribunal alters a trial judge‘s findings without support in a transcript of the proceedings heard by that judge.9 In
The review panel‘s need for a transcript has not always been essential. Under the terms of
In sum, this case reveals the panel supplied a finding that added a right shoulder injury without any support in record proof. Insofar as it expands the trial judge‘s description of the claimant‘s compensable injury without the benefit either of a transcript or of any other form of lay evidence heard by the trial judge, the panel‘s order is both unauthorized by statutory law and in contravention of due process.
The claim is hence remanded to the three-judge review panel with directions to reconsider the claimant‘s appeal and to afford her the opportunity to designate that part of the record which is necessary to support her quest for relief before the panel. On her failure timely to secure a transcript of evidence, the review panel shall confine its appellate reexamination process and corrective relief to errors apparent on the face of the proceedings as reflected by the orders and paperwork found in the case file.
HARGRAVE, C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER and SIMMS, JJ., concur.
KAUGER, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
DOOLIN, ALMA WILSON and SUMMERS, JJ., dissent.
SUMMERS, Justice, dissenting.
The issue is whether an Order of a three judge panel of the Workers’ Compensation Court modifying a trial judge‘s earlier Order may be sustained in the absence of a Designation of Record accompanying the initial appeal from the trial judge to the three judge panel. My conclusion is that the appealing parties have failed to show that such an instrument was essential to the validity of the three judge panel‘s Order. The panel‘s Order favoring claimant in this case should be sustained.
The trial judge found that Patricia Mayberry sustained a compensable injury to her left arm and left hand. She appealed to a three judge panel, which affirmed the earlier order in part but also modified it in finding that Mayberry had additionally sustained a compensable injury to her right shoulder. The employer and insurance carrier then appealed the Order of the three judge panel.
On their appeal the only argument made by the employer and insurance carrier was that no Designation of Record had been filed by the claimant with her appeal to the three judge panel, and that because of this deficiency the panel had no record before it on which to base its decision. The claimant countered with the argument that on appeal to the three judge panel “neither party requested a transcript and the only record before the Review Panel were the doctor‘s reports which had been admitted into evidence“. The majority accepts the employer‘s position and holds that the “history alone [as contained in admitted medical reports]—without this underlying lay testimony—may not afford support for finding that a claimant has sustained a work-related injury.”
Rule 28 of the Workers’ Compensation Court does not expressly require the filing of a Designation of Record. It states in pertinent part:
Rule 28. Appeals
A. Appeals to the three judge panel may be taken by filing an original and three copies of a request for review within ten (10) days from the date the order appealed from was stamp filed by the Court. The request for review shall include:
(1) The name of the trial judge from whose decision the appeal is taken;
(2) A copy of the order appealed;
(3) A statement of each conclusion of law and finding of fact urged as error; and
(4) A brief statement of the relief sought. No response to a request for review is necessary. Appeals to the three judge panel shall be strictly on the record made before the trial court. No new evidence shall be allowed....
C. .... If a basis of the appeal involves medical evidence, copies of the medical evidence shall be attached to the original and all copies of the request for review.”
85 O.S.Supp.1987, Ch.4, App. (emphasis added)
A short review of the function of a Designation of Record demonstrates that such is not necessary in the Workers’ Compensation Court. A Designation of Record is currently required in civil appellate practice by Rule 1.20 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure in Civil Cases.
The primary importance of a designated record for appellate review is not that the pages are numbered, indexed, or clipped together, but that it is certified as the record of the inferior court. The certification of the Clerk is a declaration that the material bound and transmitted to an appellate court is that which is, in fact, contained in the record of the inferior one. In this way a second court can have judicial knowledge of those records of the first, and base its decision thereon. Instruments not so certified are “extra-judicial“, and usually beyond the cognizance of the appellate court. Chamberlin v. Chamberlin, 720 P.2d 721, 724 (Okla.1986); Muncrief v. Memorial Hospital of Southern Oklahoma, 767 P.2d 400, 402 (Okla.1988).
But an appeal from a trial judge of the Workers’ Compensation Court to the three judge panel of that same court is not an appeal from one court to a different court; it is rather an intra-court re-examination of the decision made by the trial judge. Parks v. Norman Municipal Hospital, 684 P.2d 548 (Okla.1984). Rule 28 provides that “Appeals to the three judge panel shall be strictly on the record made before the trial court“. When an order is appealed to the three judge panel the record is already before the Workers’ Compensation Court.
An appeal to a three judge panel is also statutorily authorized.
The Order under review in the present case states that “After reviewing the record in this case, said Judges find that parts of said order were against the clear weight of the evidence and hence the order of the Trial Judge ... should be and the same is hereby MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED AS FOLLOWS“. The Order states on its face that the panel reviewed the evidence. The appealing employer and insurance carrier have not shown that the panel failed to examine the relevant portions of the record, including the medical reports in evidence. They have not shown that the plaintiff‘s medical report failed to include a history that would support a finding of a work-related injury to her right shoulder. In fact they, although bearing the burden of being the appealing parties, did not designate for our review a record containing any of the transcript of proceedings nor any of the exhibits offered and admitted into evidence.
This court reviews a panel-altered factual determination by the any-competent-evidence test. Parks v. Norman Municipal Hospital, 684 P.2d 548, 549 (Okla.1984). Only in the absence of competent evidence will we exercise our supervisory authority to vacate an award. Parks at 552. If an appealing party would have us vacate an award for lack of competent evidence it should furnish us a record whereby the
Justice DOOLIN advises that he would do likewise.
