FILED
SEPTEMBER 30,2014
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
WA State Court'of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
MARIO ARRIAGA, ) No. 32287-4-111
)
Appellant, )
)
v. ) PUBLISHED OPINION
)
DEPARTIMENTOFLABORAND )
INDUSTRIES OF THE STATE OF )
WASHINGTON, )
)
Respondent. )
LAWRENCE-BERREY,1. - When a final industrial insurance order, decision, or
award is based upon a medical determination, a physician is deemed an interested party.
In such a case, the Department of Labor and Industries (Department) must provide notice
of the order, decision, or award both to the physician and the claimant. Failure to provide
notice tolls the 60-day appeal period. At issue here is whether a segregation order was
communicated to a claimant's physician when the physician did not see the order because
of a breakdown in mail handling procedures in his office. We hold that the order was
communicated to the physician because the Department properly mailed it to the
physician's office, and it was actually delivered to the physician's office. We, therefore,
No. 32287-4-III
Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
affirm the decision of the trial court, which barred the claimant's untimely appeal of the
segregation order.
FACTS
Mario Arriaga injured his right upper arm, face, and scalp while employed at
Oakville Forest Products, Inc. The Department allowed a claim for an industrial injury in
December 2005. Justin Sherfey, M.D., D.O., an orthopedic surgeon and osteopathic
physician who treats injured workers, became Mr. Arriaga's attending physician.
On October 29,2008, the Department issued an order segregating a cervical disc
degenerative condition from Mr. Arriaga's claim. The order stated, "[t]he Department of
Labor and Industries is not responsible for the condition diagnosed as: cervical disck [sic]
degenerative, determined by medical evidence to be unrelated to the industrial injury for
which this claim was filed." Board Record (BR) at 28. It is undisputed that the
Department mailed the order to the claimant and also to Dr. Sherfey'S office on October
29,2008. It also is uncontested that Dr. Sherfey's office received a copy of the order on
October 31,2008. However, as will be detailed below, Dr. Sherfey apparently was
unaware of the order until 2010.
Mr. Arriaga sought legal help with his claim in April 2010. The Department
closed Mr. Arriaga's claim on November 23,2010. In December 2010, someone from
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Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
Mr. Arriaga's attorney's office contacted Dr. Sherfey about Mr. Arriaga's claim. After
discovering the segregation order, Dr. Sherfey protested on Mr. Arriaga's behalf. The
Department affirmed the order, stating that it would not reconsider it because the protest
was untimely. Mr. Arriaga appealed to the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals
(Board), which granted the appeal to review the timeliness of Dr. Sherfey's protest.
In his deposition, Dr. Sherfey explained that he functions as the attending
physician for injured workers and is, therefore, familiar with the rules and regulations of
the Department. His office has about 40 employees and he sees 40 to 45 patients per day.
Dr. Sherfey's practice includes a department that manages paperwork, including getting
authorizations, coordinating depositions, coordinating independent exams, and reviewing
"some of those records." Sherfey Dep. at 23. As to his intraoffice mail handling
procedures, Dr. Sherfey explained, "[t]ypically we have a protocol in place that either a
hard copy is placed in a mailbox for me or I receive an electronic notification of a new
document that I then either have to initial on the hard copy or I have to electronically sign
in the medical re90rd." Sherfey Dep. at 12. Dr. Sherfey stated that he reviewed mail
throughout the day, but admitted that he is not necessarily given all the documents that are
addressed to him.
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Dr. Sherfey testified that for mail to be "communicated" to him, "[i]t would have
to be appropriately received by the medical records or again our L & I management
. department. It would then have to be properly routed to me for review .... [A]fter that it
would have to be properly inserted into the medical record." Sherfey Dep. at 16. Dr.
Sherfey conceded that some documents are scanned without his "direct visualization."
Sherfey Dep. at 21. He stated that a person in the medical records department decides
whether a document is sufficiently important for his review. He explained, "[w]e have no
standard protocol in place, except typically paperwork that involves the patient is
supposed to come across the physician's desk." Sherfey Dep. at 23.
Somewhere in this process, the October 29 order never made it to Dr. Sherfey'S
desk. Dr. Sherfey explained that he had not initialed it, which suggested to him that he
had not reviewed it. Although the order had been in Mr. Arriaga's file since 2008, Dr.
Sherfey could not recall reviewing it until nearly two years later when Mr. Arriaga's
attorney brought it to his attention. He stated that if he had reviewed the order in 2008, he
"[l]ikely" would have responded with a letter indicating an additional evaluation was
needed in regard to the diagnosis. Sherfey Dep. at 15.
Mr. Arriaga ultimately appealed the order in January 2011. However, the
Department refused to reconsider the order "because the protest was not received within
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Arriaga v. Dep 'f ofLabor & Indus.
the 60 day time limitation" ofRCW 51.52.060(l)(a). BR at 24. The Board accepted
review of the appeal concerning the timeliness of Dr. Sherfey's protest of the segregation
order. Upon review, it also dismissed the appeal as untimely, finding:
[Mr. Arriaga's] attending physician acknowledges that he did not protest
the October 29,2008 Notice of Decision within 60 days of the date it was
communicated to his medical office, as he was unaware of the existence of
the document until sometime in 2010. The timely filing of a protest or
appeal is a statutorily imposed jurisdictional limitation upon every
claimant's ability to get relief from a Department order and upon the
Board's authority to hear an appeal. There is simply no legal precedent for
excusing Mr. Arriaga from performing his statutory duty to file a timely
protest or appeal. The result does not change even though he relied upon
his attending physician to monitor correspondence from the Department of
Labor & Industries.
BR at 18.
Mr. Arriaga appealed to the Thurston County Superior Court, which also dismissed
his appeal as untimely, finding that Dr. Sherfey received a copy of the Department's order
on October 31, 2008, and that he did not protest the order within 60 days of its receipt. In
its oral ruling, the court stated, "[m]y take on this is that the statute that requires
communication was met when this order was clearly conveyed to the physician's office."
Report of Proceedings (RP) at 18. It elaborated:
It is my take that "communication" means that it was received as addressed,
that is to the physician. If the Department had misaddressed this, if there
had been some showing that a postal worker was not delivering the mail
and threw it all in the back of a station wagon ... that might be a different
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No. 32287-4-111
Arriaga v. Dep 't ofLabor & Indus.
situation, but it is clear that it was time stamped two days after it was
mailed. It was received.
RP at 19.
Mr. Arriaga appeals.
ANALYSIS
The issue before us is whether the trial court erred in concluding that the
October 29,2008, order was "communicated" to Dr. Sherfey's office when it was
properly addressed and received by his office.
Standard o(Review
Washington's Industrial Insurance Act (IIA), Title 51 RCW, includes judicial
review provisions that are specific to workers' compensation claims. Rogers v. Dep't of
Labor & Indus., 151 Wn. App. 174, 179,210 P.3d 355 (2009). In particular, the IIA
provides that the judicial review of a decision by the Board is de novo, but is limited to
the evidence and testimony presented to the Board. RCW 51.52.115; Rabey v. Dep 't of
Labor & Indus., 101 Wn. App. 390,393,3 P.3d 217, review granted, 142 Wn.2d 1007, 16
P.3d 1266 (2000). The superior court presumes the Board's findings and conclusions are
"prima facie correct." RCW 51.52.115. We review the findings of the superior court's
decision de novo to determine whether substantial evidence supports them and whether its
conclusions of law flow from the findings. Rogers, 151 Wn. App. at 180 (quoting
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No. 32287-4-111
Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
Watson v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 133 Wn. App. 903, 909,138 P.3d 177 (2006)).
RCW 51.52.060 and "Communicated"
Mr. Arriaga argues that even though Dr. Sherfey's office received the order on
October 31, 2008, the order was not "communicated" within the meaning of
RCW 51.52.060 due to a breakdown in mail handling procedures, which resulted in the
order being placed in Mr. Arriaga's file without Dr. Sherfey's knowledge. Mr. Arriaga
contends the word "communicated" denotes actual possession and availability, and that
because Dr. Sherfey did not have knowledge of the order's existence in October 2008, it
was not available to him. Citing Board decisions, Mr. Arriaga contends it would be
"unjust to Mr. Arriaga and contrary to legislative intent to hold that the Department order
of October 29,2008 had been communicated to Dr. Sherfey simply because it was
received in his office on October 31,2008." Br. of Appellant at 13. Accordingly, Mr.
Arriaga contends the 60-day period to appeal under RCW 51.52.060 was tolled until Dr.
Sherfey actually was aware of the order's existence.
The Department counters that an order or letter is "communicated" under
RCW 51.52.060 when it is received and that Dr. Sherfey received the order when it was
delivered to his correct mailing address. It contends that a breakdown in office
procedures or communication does not excuse an untimely appeal, and that it is
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No. 32287-4-III
Arriaga v. Dep 't ofLabor & Indus.
incumbent upon a party or agency to ensure that it has a system in place regarding
distribution of its mail. It also contends Mr. Arriaga's proposal would produce an
unworkable system: "Mr. Arriaga's proposed rule of a law would allow a doctor's office
to receive mail from the Department, but be able to disclaim responsibility for that receipt
of mail if the office procedures are allegedly not followed." Resp't's Br. at 12.
According to the Department, "[a] party has the responsibility of providing his or her
address to the Department, and when an order is received at that address, it is
communicated." Resp't's Br. at 12.
In his reply brief, Mr. Arriaga maintains that even if we apply the Department's
interpretation of "receipt," which it defines in terms of possession and availability, there
is still no evidence that Dr. Sherfey received the order. He argues that "Dr. Sherfey had
no knowledge that his office had received the order in question or that the order even
existed, and as a result, for all intents and purposes, it was not available to him."
Appellant's Reply Br. at 7.
Washington's IIA provides injured workers a swift, certain, no fault remedy that is
primarily enforced in an administrative process that the act establishes. RCW 51.04.010;
Kingery v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 132 Wn.2d 162, 168-69,937 P.2d 565 (1997). The
IIA generally provides finality to Department decisions. Kingery, 132 Wn.2d at 169.
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Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
RCW 51.52.050(1) directs the Department to serve its orders, decisions, and awards on
"the worker, beneficiary, employer, or other person affected thereby" by mail. When an
order, decision, or award is based upon a medical determination, the attending physician
is deemed an interested party who, in addition to the claimant, is entitled to receive the
order, decision, or award. Shafer v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 140 Wn. App. 1, 11, 159
P.3d 473 (2007), aff'd, 166 Wn.2d 710,213 P.3d 591 (2009).
The time for appeal ofa Department order is specified in RCW 51.52.060(l)(a) as
follows:
[A party] ... or other person aggrieved by an order ... must, before he or
she appeals to the courts, file with the board and the director, by mail or
personally, within sixty days from the day on which a copy of the order,
decision, or award was communicated to such person, a notice or'appeal to
the board.
(Emphasis added.) If a party fails to appeal within the 60-day time limit, the claim is
deemed "res judicata on the issues the order encompassed, and '[t]he failure to appeal an
order ... turns the order into a final adjudication, precluding any reargument of the same
claim.'" Kusturav. Dep'tofLabor&Indus., 142 Wn. App. 655, 669,175 P.3d 1117
(2008) (footnote omitted) (quoting Marley v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 125 Wn.2d 533,
538,886 P.2d 189 (1994)), aff'd, 169 Wn.2d 81, 233 P.3d 853 (2010).
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It is well settled under Washington law that an order is "communicated" to a party
within the meaning ofRCW 51.52.060 upon receipt. Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v.
Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 57 Wn. App. 886, 889, 790 P.2d 1254 (1990); Rodriguez v.
Dep't ofLabor & Indus., 85 Wn.2d 949,952-53,540 P.2d 1359 (1975). Our Supreme
Court discussed the meaning of "communicated" under the IIA in Nafus v. Department of
Labor and Industries, 142 Wash. 48, 251 P. 877 (1927). In that case, the worker's claim
was initially allowed, but later closed after the Department concluded the worker's
condition was not due to the work accident. Id. at 48-49. The Department notified the
worker by sending a letter to him in April 1925. Id. at 49. The worker received the letter
in the hospital, where he was a patient for an extended stay, and put the order in his robe
pocket without reading it. Id. at 49-50. He later stated that "[0]ne of the nurses opened
[the letter], but she did not tell me what it contained. I was in no condition to concern
myself with the contents of the letter." Id. at 50.
In January 1926, the worker appealed the claim closure, asserting he had not
received notice because he had not read the letter. Id. at 51. The Department responded
that the appeal was untimely. The court concluded the order had been communicated
under the IIA, reasoning:
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No. 32287-4-111
Arriaga v. Dep'l ofLabor & Indus.
The fact that the respondent says that he did not read the letter and did not
know its contents is not controlling. The department had done all it was
required to do in making "communication" of its decision in closing the
claim to the party affected thereby. There is no evidence from which it
would be found that the respondent was not competent to understand the
nature of the communication at the time.
Id. at 52.
Similarly here, the fact that Dr. Sherfey did not read the letter upon receipt does
not toll the statutory deadline. The Department addressed the order to Dr. Sherfey's
correct address, and the order was actually delivered to the correct address. This
constitutes communication under RCW 51.52.060.
Rodriguez also supports our conclusion. In that case, a worker was injured on the
job and timely filed his claim. Rodriguez, 85 Wn.2d at 949-50. The Department initially
granted his claim, but subsequently sent the worker a letter closing his claim. Id. at 950.
The worker could speak only in Spanish, and could not read or write in either Spanish or
English. Id. The worker did not timely appeal the Department's order closing his claim.
The Supreme Court reiterated the rule that, "the word 'communicated' contained in
RCW 51.52.060 requires only that a copy of the order be received by the workman."
Rodriguez, 85 Wn.2d at 952-53 (emphasis added). Although the Rodriguez court
ultimately granted equitable relief based on the worker's illiteracy, it made a point to
distinguish Nafus, which involved "a mere failure or refusal to read a letter from the
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No. 32287-4-111
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department" from a case where "extreme illiteracy" rendered the claimant virtually
incompetent. Rodriguez, 85 Wn.2d at 954.
Despite this well-settled precedent, Mr. Arriaga cites Shafer, 140 Wn. App. at 11,
and Board decisions in his attempt to broaden the rule. In Shafer, the court stated:
The legislature expects the attending physician to serve as a medical
advocate for the injured worker and as a fulcrum in the agency's evaluation
of the claim. The Department implements this expectation by advising
physicians they have the right and are expected to seek review on their
patients' behalf. The physician cannot decide whether to appeal unless the
physician knows of the order. Failure to ensure that the physician learns of
the order therefore deprives both the worker and the agency of the voice of
the physician, just at the critical point of finalizing a determination of the
worker's future medical condition.
Id. We interpret the above language as justification for requiring the Department
to provide the worker's physician copies of certain orders, decisions, or awards.
We do not interpret it as changing prior Supreme Court precedent, which does not
require a party to have actually read the properly addressed and delivered order.
Citing In re: Dorena R. Hirschman, No. 09 17130 (Wash. Bd. of Indus. Ins.
Appeals May 7, 2010) and In re: Edward S. Morgan, No. 9667 (Wash. Bd. of Indus. Ins.
Appeals Aug. 25, 1959), Mr. Arriaga contends that "communication [is] not complete"
until a recipient has actual knowledge ofthe order. Br. of Appellant at 12. Board
decisions are not binding precedent for this court; however, we may give substantial
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No. 32287-4-111
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weight to an agency's interpretation of the laws it is charged to enforce. Lynn v. Dep 'f of
Labor & Indus., 130 Wn. App. 829, 836, 125 P.3d 202 (2005); Jensen v. Dep 'f of
Ecology, 102 Wn.2d 109, 113,685 P.2d 1068 (1984).
In Hirschman, the Department mailed a copy of an order to Ms. Hirschman's
house while she was on vacation. Her employer argued that the order was communicated
to Ms. Hirschman, regardless of whether she was home to receive and read it. The
Department disagreed with the employer, concluding that the order was not
communicated to Ms. Hirschman until she returned from her trip. We decline to follow
Hirschman because it conflicts with Nafus and Rodriguez, which look to whether the
mailing was properly addressed and delivered. I
Regardless, there was no testimony that Dr. Sherfey was out of town for any period
of time during October 2008. In fact, it was nearly two years between the time the order
was received in his office and Mr. Arriaga's attorneys notified Dr. Sherfey of the order.
The record also shows that Dr. Sherfey was treating Mr. Arriaga regularly during that
time and that the order was available to him at any time he chose to review Mr. Arriaga's
chart. A breakdown in office mail handling protocol is not analogous to a recipient being
out of town when a Department order is delivered.
I Although we decline to follow Hirschman, we note that Rodriguez allows courts
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No. 32287-4-111
Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
Morgan is also inapposite. In that case, the claimant worked in the timber industry
and kept a separate address from his physical location, which changed according to his
work. While off work due to an industrial injury, the worker continued to maintain his
permanent mailing address and checked his mail daily. Although the claimant testified
that he had received other communications from the Department at his permanent mailing
address, he stated he did not receive the closing order at issue in the case. Assuming that
the evidence was "sufficient to give rise to the presumption of receipt by the addressee in
due course of mails," the Board found these circumstances were sufficient to overcome
the presumption. Morgan, No. 9667 (Wash. Bd. of Indus. Ins. Appeals). Noting the
proposition that mailing a letter is prima facie evidence of receipt, the court then noted:
Although a claimant who deliberately or negligently disregards or fails to
read a communication delivered to his residence may well be charged with
knowledge or notice thereof, the claimant in this case called for his mail
each day and, in our opinion, it would be manifestly unjust and contrary to
the legislative intent to charge him with notice of an order he did not
receive based solely on a presumption ofits receipt at a "mail depot."
Id.
In contrast to Morgan, the "presumption of receipt" is not at issue here. This
presumption arises once proper mailing of an item is established. Scheeler v. Emp 't Sec.
Dep't, 122 Wn. App. 484,489, 93 P.3d 965 (2004). Here, it is not disputed that the
to equitably toll the 60-day period under appropriate circumstances.
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No. 32287-4-III
Arriaga v. Dep't ofLabor & Indus.
Department mailed the letter to Dr. Sherfey's office and that it was received in the office
on October 31,2008. In fact, the letter was date stamped and scanned into the records.
There is no evidence that due to an error in mailing, he did not receive the order. Any
failure in Dr. Sherfey's actual receipt of the order was due to the breakdown of his office
procedures, not a defect in the Department's mailing.
A more analogous Board case is In re: Robert A. Wiyrick, Nos. 01 11323 & 01
12028 (Wash. Bd. of Indus. Ins. Appeals Aug. 26, 2003). In that case, the claimant's
attorney improperly noted the time for extension in which to file a petition for review.
The issue before the Board was whether the subsequent failure to file a timely motion was
due to excusable neglect. The Board was clear in its decision: "[t]he breakdown ofoffice
procedures or secretarial error, which results in claimant's failure to file a timely petition
for review, cannot be considered excusable neglect." Id. (emphasis added).
The same reasoning applies here. Dr. Sherfey's office received the Department
order on October 31,2008. The delay in Dr. Sherfey's actual knowledge of the order was
due to an intraoffice mail delivery breakdown, which is not excusable neglect or a basis
for tolling the statutory deadline. Mr. Arriaga suggests that we liberally construe the
statute to grant the relief he requests. However, liberal construction does not apply here
because the statute in question is not ambiguous. Harris v. Dep 't ofLabor & Indus., 120
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No. 32287-4-II1
Arriaga v. Dep '( ofLabor & Indus.
Wn.2d 461, 472 n.7, 474,843 P.2d 1056 (1993). Accordingly, the trial court did not err
in concluding that Mr. Arriaga's appeal was untimely.
We affirm.
Lawrence-Berrey, J.
WE CONCUR:
Sidd~l ~lF
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