STATE of Alaska, DIVISION OF WORKERS’ COMPENSATION, Petitioner, v. TITAN ENTERPRISES, LLC; Titan Topsoil, Inc.; CCO Enterprises; and Todd Christianson, Respondents.
No. S-15166.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
Nov. 28, 2014.
338 P.3d 316
C. The Court Did Not Err In Ordering Jason To Pay Visitation Expenses.
[REDACTED] Jason argues that the court “placed an undue hardship” on him by requiring him to pay all travel expenses for visitation, when it was Courtney‘s choice to leave Alaska, forcing him to travel to see his daughter.
V. CONCLUSION
We REMAND for the superior court to reconsider the alcohol-related condition in the visitation order in accordance with this opinion. We otherwise AFFIRM the superior court‘s custody, visitation, and child support orders.
Aesha Pallesen, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for Petitioner.
David A. Nesbett, Nesbett & Nesbett, PC, Anchorage, for Respondents.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
FABE, Chief Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
The Alaska Workers’ Compensation Board fined an uninsured employer a substantial amount because the employer had since 2005 operated for a significant period of time without carrying statutorily required workers’ compensation insurance. This was not the employer‘s first failure to carry the required insurance. On appeal, the Alaska Workers’ Compensation Appeals Commission affirmed part of the Board‘s decision, but it reversed the Board on the amount of the fine and remanded the case to the Board for further proceedings. The employer then asked the Commission for an award of attorney‘s fees as a successful party on appeal. The State, Division of Workers’ Compensation, which had initiated the Board proceedings, opposed the award on the basis that it, too, had been successful on a significant issue. The Commission awarded the employer full fees of approximately $50,000. The Division petitioned for review of the fee award, and we granted review. Because the Commission failed to consider the Division‘s partial success in the appeal, we reverse the Commission‘s decision and remand for further proceedings.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Todd Christianson is the sole owner of several businesses, including the three involved in this proceeding: Titan Enterprises, LLC; Titan Topsoil, Inc.; and CCO Enterprises, LLC.1 At various times Titan has failed to carry workers’ compensation insurance, in violation of Alaska law. According to the Board‘s decision in this case, Titan had
The Division began proceedings against Titan in 2008 for failing to carry workers’ compensation insurance and failing to provide proof of workers’ compensation liability coverage. Titan came to the Division‘s attention when “a routine records check” showed that Christianson‘s companies’ insurance policies had been cancelled in March 2006, “for nonpayment of premium.” The records also showed Titan had not obtained a new policy until October 2007; that policy was cancelled in early January 2008. Christianson paid out of pocket for an uncovered injury to a worker in 2006. The Division investigated Titan at that time but closed its file without requesting a Board hearing.
The Board held two hearings on the Division‘s petition. Neither party was represented by counsel before the Board: Christianson represented himself and his companies, and Christine Christensen, an investigator, represented the Division. The parties presented conflicting evidence about the length of Titan‘s lapses in coverage and the reasons for them. They also disputed the extent to which Christianson observed corporate formalities and kept the corporations separate. The Division contended that a number of aggravating factors in its regulation applied to the case.8
The Board found that Titan was an uninsured employer for 563 calendar days after 2005. The Board looked at Titan‘s history of workers’ compensation coverage problems and Christianson‘s appearance before the Board in 2002 for failing to insure when he was doing business as another corporation. The Board found that Christianson‘s businesses had been involved in 13 injuries, including “a leg amputation, upper and lower extremity injuries, and back injuries.” The Board also noted the uninsured injury in 2006. Using data from the Employment Security Division, the Board found Christianson had “utilized 6,399 uninsured employee workdays after November 7, 2005” and had “purchased a single workers’ compensation insurance policy for several different business entities.” It summarized facts related to the use and purchase of CCO, an employee leasing company, including the fact that CCO‘s only client was Titan. The Board pierced the corporate veil and found Chris
Noting that Christianson had previously been before the Board for failing to have insurance, the Board found that he had a “blatant disregard for the law” and had “gamed the workers’ compensation system in attempts to avoid paying fully for coverage.” The Board acknowledged that its regulation about uninsured employers did not apply because the regulation became effective only after the coverage lapses, but the Board nonetheless used the factors as a guide in assessing a penalty. The Board decided that had the regulation applied, Titan‘s conduct would have justified nine aggravating factors and no mitigating factors,9 resulting in a minimum penalty of $500 per uninsured employee workday and a maximum of $999 per uninsured employee workday. The Board fined Titan $999 per employee workday for the period it was uninsured, resulting in a fine of more than $6 million.
Titan appealed to the Commission, appealing both the size of the fine and the Board‘s decision to pierce the corporate veil. Titan also argued that the Board violated Titan‘s due process rights by “refusing to allow [it] additional time to hire representative legal counsel prior to the Board hearing.” The Division responded that the fine was not excessive given the facts of the case and that piercing the corporate veil was appropriate in the case.
The Commission affirmed the Board‘s decision to pierce the corporate veil and hold Christianson liable individually. But the Commission decided that the Board had abused its discretion when setting the penalty, calling the fine “a shocking amount.” The Commission reversed part of the basis for the Board‘s fine, including its finding on the time periods when Christianson‘s businesses were uncovered, and remanded to the Board for additional findings about the liability of Christianson‘s various corporate entities. According to the Commission, the Division “conceded that two of the aggravating factors” were not supported by the evidence, and Christianson conceded “at least initially” that five of the aggravating factors were supported by the evidence. The Commission also remanded for the Board to “hear evidence on any disputed aggravating factors.”
Titan then requested attorney‘s fees as the successful party on appeal, contending that under Lewis-Walunga v. Municipality of Anchorage10 it was entitled to an award of full fees ($50,925) because it had won a significant issue on appeal. Titan justified the amount of fees in part because “[a]ppellants consisted of three business entities and one person, which necessitated legal analysis and counsel individual to each entity” and because “the law involving piercing the corporate veil ... required intensive and expansive legal research.”
The Division responded that both parties were partially successful in the appeal, since it had won the veil-piercing issue, and asserted that no fee award was warranted. The Division argued in the alternative that Commission precedent required the Commission to reduce the amount of fees from the full amount because Titan had not won all issues on appeal. Finally, it maintained that full fees should not be awarded to Titan because “the public policy concern of securing competent counsel for injured workers” was “not implicated in this case.”
The Commission decided that Titan qualified for an award of fees. Before setting out its legal analysis, the Commission “point[ed] out ... that Christianson‘s conduct entailed deliberate wrongdoing.” It first stated that neither the statute nor the Commission‘s regulations “discriminate between claimants and other parties to an appeal, as far as eligibility for attorney fee awards is concerned.” It then decided that Christianson should be considered a “successful party” under Lewis-Walunga because he had “prevailed on at least two issues that were significant.” The Commission wrote that it took “a dim view of
The Division petitioned for review, which we granted on two questions: (1) whether a successful party who is not a workers’ compensation claimant should be awarded attorney‘s fees under
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
[REDACTED] We apply our independent judgment to questions of law that do not involve agency expertise.11 Interpretation of a statute is a question of law to which we apply our independent judgment; we interpret the statute according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute‘s language, its legislative history, and its purpose.12
IV. DISCUSSION
A. A Successful Party Should Be Awarded Attorney‘s Fees Even When The Party Is Not A Workers’ Compensation Claimant.
[REDACTED]
[REDACTED] We apply a sliding-scale approach to statutory interpretation: We consider the plain meaning of the statutory language, but we also look at the legislative history because “legislative history can sometimes alter a statute‘s literal terms.”17 “The plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.”18 We construe all sections of an act together.19
As we observed in Lewis-Walunga, there is very little legislative history about
The Division asks us to construe the statute to prohibit awards of full fees in cases like this one, where the Board has fined an employer for failing to insure, because such fee awards contravene the statute‘s purpose of protecting injured workers and do not accomplish the goal of ensuring that competent counsel are available to injured workers. The Division also contends that the legislature likely did not consider a situation like this one when it wrote subsection .008(d). Titan responds by emphasizing the statutory language.
[REDACTED] We do not rewrite statutes even when the legislative history suggests that the legislature may have made a mistake in drafting,27 but here, there is no indication the legislature made such a mistake. Even if the Division is correct that the legislature did not envision the possibility of an attorney‘s fee award to an employer who is subject to a fine for failing to insure, “[t]he Division‘s remedy lies with the legislature, not this court.”28 We thus agree with the Commission that attorney‘s fees in appeals to the Commission are not restricted to claimants.
B. When Two Non-Claimant Parties Are Both Successful On A Significant Issue On Appeal, The Commission Must Consider The Success Of Both Parties In Making A Fee Award.
Although we have previously interpreted
Similarly, in Humphrey v. Lowe‘s Home Improvement Warehouse, Inc. we reversed the Commission‘s denial of attorney‘s fees to a claimant who had partial success on appeal.33 There the Commission vacated the Board‘s attorney‘s fee award to the claimant but affirmed the Board‘s decision that the claimant was not entitled to temporary total disability benefits for a specific period of time.34 When the claimant asked the Commission to award him attorney‘s fees for the appeal, the Commission denied his motion, deciding he was not a successful party and thus not entitled to any fees for the appeal.35 We reversed the Commission‘s decision about attorney‘s fees, holding that “a claimant who prevails on ‘a significant issue’ on appeal is a successful party.”36 Disregarding the partial success of the employer in Humphrey is consistent with the statute‘s language, which shields an injured worker from having to pay fees unless his “position on appeal was frivolous or unreasonable or the appeal was taken in bad faith.”37
But
[REDACTED] If two non-claimants both succeed on significant issues in an appeal, the Commission must weigh the success of both parties when it considers a motion for attorney‘s fees. The Commission may take one of two approaches in evaluating this type of fee request. The Commission may decide that neither party can truly be deemed a successful party, just as a trial court in applying
Treating non-claimants differently from claimants follows from the language of
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the Commission‘s decision that Titan was the successful party on appeal and REMAND to the Commission for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
MAASSEN, Justice, not participating.
