122 April 9, 2015 No. 14
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON
In the Matter of the Compensation of
Gary D. Sather, Claimant.
Gary D. SATHER,
Petitioner on Review,
v.
SAIF CORPORATION
and Polk County Farmers-AG West Supply,
Respondents on Review.
(Agency No. 10-01494; CA A149547; SC S062466)
En Banc
On review from the Court of Appeals.*
Argued and submitted January 13, 2015.
Donald M. Hooton, Hooton Wold & Okrent, LLP,
Beaverton, argued the cause and filed the briefs for peti-
tioner on review.
Holly C. O’Dell, Appellate Counsel, SAIF Corporation,
Salem, argued the cause and filed the brief for respondents
on review.
Sara Ghafouri, Portland, filed the brief for amicus cur-
iae Oregon Trial Lawyers Association. With her on the brief
was Jodie Phillips Polich, Milwaukie.
BREWER, J.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the
case is remanded to that court for a determination of the
merits of the petition for judicial review.
______________
* Judicial review from Amended Opinion and Order from Workers’ Com-
pensation Board dated January 20, 2011. 262 Or App 597, 325 P3d 819 (2014).
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 123
The personal representative of claimant’s estate sought to be substituted
as the real party in interest for purposes of judicial review of claimant’s work-
ers’ compensation claim. The Court of Appeals held that claimant’s estate was
not authorized to pursue a claim to final determination under ORS 656.218(3),
and, therefore, denied the motion for substitution and dismissed the petition for
judicial review. Held: In the absence of persons who would have been entitled to
receive death benefits if the injury causing a deceased worker’s disability had
been fatal, an award of permanent partial disability benefits that is finally deter-
mined after the worker’s death pursuant to ORS 656.218(3) is payable to the
worker’s estate under ORS 656.218(5).
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded
to that court for a determination of the merits of the petition for judicial review
124 Sather v. SAIF
BREWER, J.
The question before us in this workers’ compensation
case is whether, under ORS 656.218(3) and (5),1 claimant’s
estate is authorized to pursue a request for hearing seeking
an award of permanent partial disability (PPD) benefits that
claimant filed before his death, when the cause of his death
was unrelated to the work injury. The Court of Appeals held
that claimant’s estate, through his personal representative,
was not authorized to pursue the claim to final determination
under ORS 656.218(3) on the grounds that (1) the estate is
not one of the “persons” described in 656.218(5), and (2) the
phrase “unpaid balance of the award” in the second sentence
of subsection (5) restricts an estate’s entitlement to PPD
benefits that were awarded before a worker’s death. Sather
v. SAIF, 262 Or App 597, 325 P3d 819 (2014). The court
therefore denied the motion for substitution and dismissed
the petition for judicial review. We review those determi-
nations for errors of law, ORS 183.482(8), and, for the rea-
sons explained below, we reverse the decision of the Court of
Appeals and remand to that court for a determination of the
merits of the petition for judicial review.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2009, claimant sought workers’ compensa-
tion benefits for a work-related injury. Before the date of
his injury, claimant had preexisting multilevel degener-
ative disc disease and a history of intermittent low back
pain with some bilateral radiation to his legs. SAIF, the
employer’s workers’ compensation insurer, accepted a claim
for a lumbar strain. Claimant subsequently sought accep-
tance of a combined condition, which SAIF ultimately
denied on the ground that the accepted injury was no lon-
ger the major contributing cause of the combined condition.
Claimant filed a request for hearing on the denial under
ORS 656.283(1), which authorizes parties to file requests
for hearings on matters concerning a claim.2 The Workers’
1
We quote ORS 656.218 below.
2
ORS 656.283(1) provides:
“Subject to ORS 656.319, any party or the Director of the Department of
Consumer and Business Services may at any time request a hearing on any
matter concerning a claim, except matters for which a procedure for resolving
the dispute is provided in another statute, including ORS 656.704.”
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 125
Compensation Board upheld SAIF’s denial, and claimant
sought judicial review in the Court of Appeals. Before that
court, claimant conceded that the accepted lumbar strain
was no longer the cause of his combined condition. However,
claimant contended that, in determining the compensa-
bility of his claim, the board erroneously had framed the
inquiry in terms of whether the accepted condition contin-
ued to be the major contributing cause of his disability or
need for treatment. In claimant’s view, the proper inquiry
was whether his accidental injury continued to be the major
contributing cause of his combined condition. Claimant con-
tended that there was no evidence that that injury was no
longer the major contributing cause of his disability or need
for treatment.
While judicial review was pending before the Court
of Appeals, claimant died of causes unrelated to his work-
place injury, without a surviving spouse or other benefi-
ciary entitled to a death benefit under ORS 656.204. See
also ORS 656.005(2) (defining “beneficiary” to mean “an
injured worker, and the husband, wife, child or dependent
of a worker, who is entitled to receive payments under this
chapter”). After claimant’s death, SAIF moved to dismiss
the petition for judicial review; in response, the personal
representative of claimant’s estate sought to be substituted
as the real party in interest for purposes of judicial review.
SAIF objected to the proposed substitution on the ground
that claimant’s estate is not a “person” entitled to pursue a
claim under ORS 656.218(3).
As discussed, the Court of Appeals agreed with
SAIF and dismissed the petition for judicial review. That
court initially observed that, under the pre-2009 version of
the statute, it had held in several cases that the persons
entitled to pursue a claim under ORS 656.218(3) after a
worker’s death were the same persons entitled to receive
death benefits under ORS 656.204, and did not include the
worker’s estate or personal representative. See, e.g., Cato v.
Alcoa-Reynolds Metals Co., 210 Or App 721, 729-30, 152 P3d
981, rev den, 343 Or 115 (2007) (former ORS 656.218(3) and
(5) limited the right to pursue a hearing after the death of
a worker to persons entitled to death benefits under ORS
656.204).
126 Sather v. SAIF
The Court of Appeals concluded that a 2009 amend-
ment to ORS 656.218 did not fundamentally alter the
analysis:
“[T]the only amendment of ORS 656.218 in 2009 was to
subsection (5), by the replacement of the subsection’s for-
mer second sentence (‘In the absence of persons so entitled,
a burial allowance may be paid not to exceed the lesser of
either the unpaid award or the amount payable by ORS
656.204.’) with a new second sentence—‘In the absence of
persons so entitled, the unpaid balance of the award shall
be paid to the worker’s estate.’ ”
Sather, 262 Or App at 604. The court reasoned:
“ORS 656.218(3) continues to describe the persons who may
pursue a claim as ‘the persons described in subsection (5).’
The first sentence of ORS 656.218(5) continues to state that
the payments required by the statute are to be made to
‘the persons who would have been entitled to receive death
benefits[.]’ The most straightforward reading of the text is
that those are the ‘persons’ to whom ORS 656.218(3) refers,
and they do not include the worker’s estate or personal rep-
resentative. The new second sentence’s requirement that,
in the event that there are no ‘persons so entitled,’ ‘the
unpaid balance of the award’ is to be paid to the estate does
not alter our conclusion. That sentence reveals two factors
central to its application: (1) an estate is not among the
‘persons so entitled,’ and (2) there exists a previous award
with an ‘unpaid balance,’ that is, the worker’s entitlement
to benefits has been previously determined. In other words,
the second sentence is applicable when the deceased work-
er’s eligibility for benefits or the amount of benefits has
been determined—when there has been an award. In the
absence of persons entitled to receive death benefits, the
estate receives the remaining unpaid balance of an award
previously determined. But, contrary to the dissent’s rea-
soning, that sentence does not provide independent author-
ity for the estate to pursue a claim that has not yet been
determined.”
Id. at 605.
The Court of Appeals also noted that, when the
2009 legislature amended subsection (5) by eliminating the
provision for a burial allowance and authorizing a worker’s
estate to receive unpaid awards, it made a similar change
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 127
to ORS 656.204(1)(b), which previously had provided for
payment of the cost of “burial.” Id. at 606. According to the
court, “Those changes, together with the amendment to
ORS 656.218(5), reflect a consistent intention that, when an
award has been made and there are no surviving statutory
beneficiaries of the worker as defined in ORS 656.204, the
estate must receive any previously awarded benefits.” Id.
(emphasis added).
In sum, the Court of Appeals’ holding hinged on two
legal conclusions: First, for purposes of subsection (3), “the
persons described in subsection (5)” include only the “per-
sons” described in the first sentence of subsection (5), not a
worker’s estate under the second sentence of subsection (5);
and second, the phrase “unpaid balance of the award” in the
second sentence of subsection (5) restricts an estate’s entitle-
ment to PPD benefits that were awarded before a worker’s
death.3 This court accepted review to address the personal
representative’s challenge to those conclusions.
STATUTORY OVERVIEW
A brief overview will be helpful in understanding
the key statutory terms. ORS 656.218 governs the survival
of claims for benefits after the death of an injured worker as
a result of causes unrelated to the accidental injury. That
statute provides:
“(1) In case of the death of a worker entitled to compen-
sation, whether eligibility therefor or the amount thereof
have been determined, payments shall be made for the
period during which the worker, if surviving, would have
been entitled thereto.
“(2) If the worker’s death occurs prior to issuance of
a notice of closure under ORS 656.268, the insurer or the
self-insured employer shall determine compensation for
permanent partial disability, if any.
“(3) If the worker has filed a request for a hearing pur-
suant to ORS 656.283 and death occurs prior to the final
disposition of the request, the persons described in subsec-
tion (5) of this section shall be entitled to pursue the matter
3
Judge Egan, in dissent, disagreed with both conclusions.
128 Sather v. SAIF
to final determination of all issues presented by the request
for hearing.
“(4) If the worker dies before filing a request for hear-
ing, the persons described in subsection (5) of this section
shall be entitled to file a request for hearing and to pursue
the matter to final determination as to all issues presented
by the request for hearing.
“(5) The payments provided in this section shall
be made to the persons who would have been entitled to
receive death benefits if the injury causing the disability
had been fatal. In the absence of persons so entitled, the
unpaid balance of the award shall be paid to the worker’s
estate.
“(6) This section does not entitle any person to double
payments on account of the death of a worker and a contin-
uation of payments for permanent partial disability, or to
a greater sum in the aggregate than if the injury had been
fatal.”
Regardless of whether a deceased worker’s claim
for an award of benefits was finally determined before the
worker’s death, subsection (1) provides that payments “shall
be made” for the period during which the worker would have
been entitled to such benefits if he or she had survived. When
a worker dies after requesting a hearing on the denial of a
claim but before the final determination of a request for judi-
cial review, subsection (3) states that “the persons described
in subsection (5) of this section shall be entitled to pursue
the matter to final determination.” (Emphasis added.) The
“persons” described in the first sentence of subsection (5)
include those persons “who would have been entitled to
receive death benefits if the injury causing the disability
had been fatal.” Those persons, if any, are determined with
reference to ORS 656.204,4 which designates the deceased
4
ORS 656.204 provides, in part:
“If death results from the accidental injury, payments shall be made as
follows:
“(1)(a) The cost of final disposition of the body and funeral expenses,
including but not limited to transportation of the body, shall be paid, not to
exceed 20 times the average weekly wage in any case.
“(b) The insurer or self-insured employer shall pay bills submitted
for disposition and funeral expenses up to the benefit limit established in
paragraph (a) of this subsection. If any part of the benefit remains unpaid
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 129
worker’s surviving spouse, dependent children, and other
dependents as the recipients of “benefits” when the worker’s
death resulted from accidental injury. If no person within
the class of persons described in the first sentence of ORS
656.218(5) exists who is authorized to pursue a deceased
worker’s request for a hearing to a final determination, the
second sentence of subsection (5) provides that “the unpaid
balance of the award shall be paid to the worker’s estate.”
The dispute between the parties depends, textually, on
whether the worker’s estate is a person that may pursue a
matter to final determination under subsection (3).
Although the current version of ORS 656.218 applies
to the issues before us, the evolution of the statute into its
current form is helpful context. The reference to an “unpaid
balance of the award” in ORS 656.218(5) dates back to early
versions of the statute, which provided that a deceased
60 days after claim acceptance, the insurer or self-insured employer shall pay
the unpaid amount to the estate of the worker.
“(2)(a) If the worker is survived by a spouse, monthly benefits shall be
paid in an amount equal to 4.35 times 66-2/3 percent of the average weekly
wage to the surviving spouse until remarriage. The payment shall cease at
the end of the month in which the remarriage occurs.
“(b) If the worker is survived by a spouse, monthly benefits also shall be
paid in an amount equal to 4.35 times 10 percent of the average weekly wage
for each child of the deceased who is substantially dependent on the spouse
for support, until such child becomes 18 years of age.
“(c) If the worker is survived by a spouse, monthly benefits also shall
be paid in an amount equal to 4.35 times 25 percent of the average weekly
wage for each child of the deceased who is not substantially dependent on the
spouse for support, until such child becomes 18 years of age.
“* * * * *
“(4)(a) If the worker leaves neither wife nor husband, but a child under
18 years of age, a monthly benefit equal to 4.35 times 25 percent of the aver-
age weekly wage shall be paid to each such child until the child becomes
18 years of age.
“* * * * *
“(5)(a) If the worker leaves a dependent other than a surviving spouse
or a child, a monthly payment shall be made to each dependent equal to
50 percent of the average monthly support actually received by such depen-
dent from the worker during the 12 months next preceding the occurrence
of the accidental injury. If a dependent is under the age of 18 years at the
time of the accidental injury, the payment to the dependent shall cease when
such dependent becomes 18 years of age. The payment to any dependent shall
cease under the same circumstances that would have terminated the depen-
dency had the injury not happened.”
130 Sather v. SAIF
worker’s surviving beneficiaries were entitled to receive only
benefits that finally had been determined before the death of
the worker.5 In 1973, the legislature amended ORS 656.218
by adding to subsection (1) the phrase “whether his eligibil-
ity therefor or the amount thereof have been determined.”
Or Laws 1973, ch 355, § 1. In the same amendment, the
legislature added new subsections (2), (3), and (4), to provide
for the survival—in favor of such beneficiaries—of claims
that had not finally been determined before the worker’s
death. Id. To effectuate its purpose, the 1973 legislature
also amended former subsection (2), now subsection (5), to
provide:
“The payments provided in subsections (1), (2), (3) and
(4) of this section shall be made to the persons who would
have been entitled to receive death benefits if the injury
causing the disability had been fatal. In the absence of
persons so entitled, a burial allowance may be paid not to
exceed the lesser of either the unpaid award or the amount
payable by ORS 656.204.”
Id.
In 1987, the legislature amended the first sentence
of subsection (5) to read: “The payments provided in this
section shall be made to the persons who would have been
entitled to receive death benefits if the injury causing the
disability had been fatal.” Or Laws 1987, ch 884, § 16. The
second sentence of subsection (5) was not changed. Based on
the word “may” in the second sentence, the Court of Appeals
previously had held that payment of a burial allowance was
discretionary; as a consequence, the Court of Appeals had
determined that “there is no need to give personal repre-
sentatives the right to pursue claims under ORS 656.218.”
Edwards v. Cherry City Elec., Inc., 141 Or App 578, 584, 919
5
For example, ORS 656.218 (1959) provided, in pertinent part:
“(1) In case of the death of a workman receiving monthly payments on
account of permanent partial disability, such payments shall continue for
the period during which the workman, if surviving, would have been entitled
thereto.
“(2) The payments shall be made to the persons who would have been
entitled to receive death benefits if the injury causing the disability had been
fatal. In the absence of persons so entitled, a burial allowance may be paid
not to exceed the lesser of either the unpaid award or the amount payable by
ORS 656.204.”
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 131
P2d 501 (1996). After the 1987 amendment, ORS 656.218
did not substantively change for purposes relevant to this
matter until 2009.
The 2009 amendments to ORS 656.204 and ORS
656.218 were part of Senate Bill (SB) 110 (2009), which
was enacted in response to a Workers’ Compensation
Management-Labor Advisory Committee (MLAC) study.
The purpose of that study, which was submitted to the leg-
islative committees that considered SB 110, was to exam-
ine the adequacy of death-related benefits that were avail-
able to a deceased worker’s survivors under the Workers
Compensation laws. With regard to ORS 656.218, the exec-
utive summary of the MLAC report stated:
“ORS 656.218 states that if a worker dies before his or her
permanent partial disability award is paid in full and the
worker has a spouse or dependent children, the insurer pays
the full remainder of the award to them. However, the law
also states that if the worker does not have a spouse or
dependent children, the insurer only pays the statutory
burial amount or the remaining permanent partial dis-
ability award, whichever is less. MLAC concluded that the
insurer should be obligated to pay the full remaining award,
whether or not the worker has a spouse or children.”
Workers’ Compensation Management-Labor Advisory Com-
mittee, Senate Bill 835 (2007) Death Benefit Study Report,
Executive Summary (January 2009) (emphasis added). The
body of the report essentially repeated the quoted descrip-
tion of the operative effect of the then-existing version of the
statute, with the following variation on the first sentence:
“ORS 656.218 states what happens if a worker dies before
his or her permanent partial disability award is paid in
full.” Id. at 9.
Based on the MLAC study report, the 2009 legisla-
ture amended ORS 656.218(5) to eliminate the discretion-
ary provision for a burial allowance and to provide that an
estate “shall” receive the “unpaid balance of the award” if no
eligible beneficiaries exist. Or Laws 2009, ch 171, § 2. The
legislature made a similar change to ORS 656.204(1)(b),
which previously had provided for payment of the cost of
“burial.” As amended by Or Laws 2009, ch 171, § 1, ORS
656.204(1) requires an insurer to pay the expenses for
132 Sather v. SAIF
disposition of the worker’s body and funeral expenses, but
not to exceed 20 times the worker’s average weekly wage.
It further provides that “any part of the [funeral] benefit
[that] remains unpaid 60 days after claim acceptance” is to
be paid to the estate of the worker. ORS 656.204(1)(b). With
those changes, ORS 656.204 (as to disposition and funeral
benefits) and ORS 656.218 (as to PPD benefits), for the first
time, specifically required the payment of benefits to a work-
er’s estate.
As elaborated below, an aspect of the parties’ dis-
agreement about the meaning of ORS 656.218(3) and (5)
appears to have its roots in the above quoted statements
from the MLAC study report, which imprecisely described
the operative effect of ORS 656.218 (1999). As noted, sub-
section (1), which was not altered by the 2009 amendment,
had—since 1973—required the payment of benefits after
the death of an injured worker, regardless of whether the
worker’s eligibility for, or the amount of, such benefits had
been determined before the worker died. Also since 1973,
ORS 656.218(2), (3), and (4) had provided for the survival of
pending claims that had not been finally determined before
a worker’s death. The term “award” itself, as used in subsec-
tion (5), was an apparent holdover from pre-1973 versions
of the statute that provided for survivor payments only of
benefits that finally had been determined before the work-
er’s death. Thus, although the MLAC study report spoke in
terms of an “award,” ORS 656.218, by its terms, imposed on
insurers an obligation to pay benefits that had not finally
been determined before a worker’s death. Against that stat-
utory backdrop, the terminology used in that report was
carried forward into ORS 656.218(5) (2009), which requires
payment of the “unpaid balance of the award” to the worker’s
estate if no eligible beneficiaries exist under ORS 656.204.
With that background, we turn to the controlling statutory
construction analysis.
ANALYSIS
As discussed, the first issue before us is whether “the
persons described in subsection (5)” under ORS 656.218(3)
include not only the “persons” described in the first sentence
of subsection (5), but also a worker’s estate under the second
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 133
sentence of subsection (5). In addressing that issue, we
examine the text of that statute in context and, where appro-
priate, consider legislative history and pertinent canons of
statutory construction. State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72,
206 P3d 1042 (2009). As the term is used in ORS chapter
656, “person” “includes [a] partnership, joint venture, asso-
ciation, limited liability company and corporation.” ORS
656.005(23).6 Although an “estate” is not expressly included
in that definition, neither, for that matter, are individual
human beings. The question is how broadly or narrowly the
phrase “persons described in subsection (5)” was meant to
be interpreted. As we now explain, we conclude that the leg-
islature intended that phrase to include, where applicable, a
deceased worker’s estate.
Our point of departure is the principle of ejusdem
generis, which “serves to confine the interpretation of [a]
general term according to one or more common character-
istics of the listed examples.” State v. Kurtz, 350 Or 65, 74,
249 P3d 1271 (2011); see also Lewis v. CIGNA Ins. Co., 339
Or 342, 350-51, 121 P3d 1128 (2005) (under ejusdem generis
rule, court examines “basic characteristics” of enumerated
items when construing more general words). When they pre-
cede a list of examples, statutory terms such as “includes”
and “including but not limited to” typically convey an intent
that the accompanying examples be read in a nonexclusive
sense. Kurtz, 350 Or at 75. In that context, we “give inter-
pretive weight to all the words that the legislature used,”
including both the general term and any specific examples.
Schmidt v. Mt. Angel Abbey, 347 Or 389, 404, 223 P3d 399
(2009). As this court explained in Schmidt:
“That does not mean, of course, that the specific exam-
ples constitute the universe of items to which the general
term refers; rather, it means only that our interpretation
6
That definition is consistent with the definition of “person” in ORS 174.100,
which provides, in part:
“As used in the statute laws of this state, unless the context or a specially
applicable definition requires otherwise:
“* * * * *
“(5) ‘Person’ includes individuals, corporations, associations, firms, part-
nerships, limited liability companies and joint stock companies.”
134 Sather v. SAIF
of the general term includes consideration of those specific
examples.”
Id.
We conclude that, by using the word “includes” in
ORS 656.005(23), the legislature likely intended a non-
exclusive meaning for the word “person.” Otherwise, as
noted, the term necessarily would exclude an individual
human being, which would make no sense. Instead, the
word “person” more plausibly encompasses its ordinary
meaning: “a human being, a body of persons, or a corpora-
tion, partnership, or other legal entity that is recognized
by law as the subject of rights and duties.” Webster’s Third
New Int’l Dictionary 1686 (unabridged ed 2002). If, as the
term is used in ORS 656.218(3), “persons” is understood
to include, in addition to the categories of entities listed in
ORS 656.005(23), other entities that are recognized by law
as subject to legal rights and duties, an estate, too, would
qualify. Estates, acting through a personal representative,
have numerous legal rights and duties in connection with
the administration of a decedent’s affairs, including the pay-
ment of debts and distribution of property. As an example,
a decedent’s estate is a “taxpayer” for purposes of Oregon’s
income tax law. See ORS 316.022(7) (defining “taxpayer” to
include an estate); see also Barber v. Dept. of Rev., 5 OTR
342, 344 (1973) (“A decedent’s estate is a legal entity sepa-
rate and apart from the decedent. (See ORS ch 114.).”).
Definitions of “person” in statutes outside ORS chap-
ter 656 are consistent with the understanding that an estate
is a legal entity that can qualify as a “person.” For exam-
ple, under the Uniform Adult Guardianship and Protective
Proceedings Jurisdiction Act, ORS 125.802(10)(a),
“
‘[p]erson’ means an individual, corporation, business
trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,
association, joint venture, public corporation, government
or governmental subdivision, agency or instrumentality or
any other legal or commercial entity.”
See also ORS 128.316(6) (“ ‘Person’ means an individual, cor-
poration, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 135
liability company, association, joint venture, public corpo-
ration, government or governmental subdivision, agency or
instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity.”);
ORS 646A.602(10) (“ ‘Person’ means any individual, private
or public corporation, partnership, cooperative, association,
estate, limited liability company, organization or other entity,
whether or not organized to operate at a profit, or a public
body as defined in ORS 174.109.”).7 In each of the described
statutes, the qualifying list of persons is more comprehen-
sive than the list of examples in ORS 656.005(23), likely
because the legislature used the restrictive word “means”
in those statutes, rather than the broader word “includes.”
However, those statutes show that the legislature often has
expressly designated an estate as a person when, as in ORS
656.005(23), it has defined “person” to mean any among an
array of legal entities that are recognized by law as the sub-
ject of rights and duties.8
The difficulty with the Court of Appeals’ narrower
interpretation of “person” in ORS 656.218(3) is that it fails to
read subsections (3) and (5) in the context of the statute as a
whole. As discussed, subsection (1) provides that payment of
compensation to which a deceased worker was entitled shall
be made “whether eligibility therefor or the amount thereof
have been determined.” The Court of Appeals’ interpreta-
tion would result in the anomalous consequence that com-
pensation for an undetermined permanent partial disability
claim must be paid even if no surviving spouse or dependents
exist, without providing a remedy to enforce the obligation if
it is not voluntarily paid. Where, as here, neither claimant’s
7
But see State v. Patton, 237 Or App 46, 50, 238 P3d 439 (2010), rev den, 350
Or 131 (2011) (estate of victim was not entitled to restitution where statutory
definition of “victim” referred to a “person,” and relevant statutory definition of
“person” in ORS 161.015(5) was limited by its terms to “mean[ ] a human being,
and, where appropriate, a public or private corporation, an unincorporated asso-
ciation, a partnership, a government or a governmental instrumentality”).
8
Worth noting is that the term “estate” does not always refer to an entity
recognized by law as having legal rights and duties. The term also can refer to
the property of a decedent. See ORS 111.005(15) (so defining “estate” for purposes
of the probate code); see also ORS 114.505(3) (so defining “estate” for purposes
of small estate procedure). However, it is readily apparent from the text of ORS
656.218(5), in context, that “estate,” as used in that provision, refers to a legal
entity that is entitled to receive payment of benefits, not to the property of the
decedent.
136 Sather v. SAIF
eligibility for—nor the amount of—permanent partial dis-
ability benefits finally had been determined at the time of
his death, the matter can be much more complicated than
simply making a payment or series of payments. As the par-
ties’ dispute on the merits of the claim indicates, any num-
ber of factual and legal disagreements can arise that, in the
absence of a forum with authority to adjudicate them, could
end in impasse, thereby frustrating the legislature’s express
purpose that unpaid benefits to which a deceased worker
was entitled, whether finally determined or not, should be
paid after his or her death. A broader interpretation of “per-
son” in subsection (3) avoids that anomaly.
The fact that the legislature used the word “per-
sons” in the first sentence of subsection (5), but did not
expressly refer to an estate as a “person” in the second sen-
tence of that subsection, does not alter our conclusion. As
noted, the first sentence of subsection (5) refers to “persons
who would have been entitled to receive death benefits if
the injury causing the disability had been fatal.” That refer-
ence implicates ORS 656.204, which provides for payments
where a workplace injury has caused the worker’s death.
As noted, under ORS 656.204(1)(b), although an estate is
entitled to payment of the costs of disposition and funeral
expenses, an estate is not a person who would have been
entitled to a “death benefit” under ORS 656.204. “Benefits”
are payable under subsections (2) through (8) of that statute
to a deceased worker’s spouse and dependents. The fact that
a worker’s estate is not such a person is confirmed by the
perceived need for the second sentence of ORS 656.218(5),
which applies only when no “persons” described in the first
sentence exist.
However, the fact that an estate is not a person
described in ORS 656.204 does not mean that an estate
is not a person at all. As used in the first sentence of sub-
section (5), “persons” refers to a specific category, not the
entire universe, of persons. Although the second sentence
of subsection (5) excludes the specific category of persons
in the first sentence, it still may describe a “person” within
the meaning of ORS 656.005(23). Whether an estate is such
a person requires the more detailed analysis that we have
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 137
undertaken. Based on that analysis, which includes the text
and context of ORS 656.218, including ORS 656.005(23), we
conclude that “the persons described in subsection (5),” as the
term is used in subsection (3), include a deceased worker’s
estate.9
We now turn to the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that
the phrase “unpaid balance of the award” in ORS 656.218(5)
restricts an estate’s entitlement to the payment of benefits
that finally had been determined before the worker died. At
one level, our determination that claimant’s estate is a per-
son described in subsection (5) for purposes of subsection (3)
could be deemed to fatally undermine that conclusion. That
is, by its terms, subsection (3) provides that such persons,
including a worker’s estate, are entitled to pursue a deceased
worker’s request for hearing “to final determination of all
issues presented by the request for hearing.” However, even
though we have concluded that a worker’s estate is a per-
son described in subsection (5), it is arguable that an estate
nevertheless could have a restricted right to the payment of
benefits, depending on the meaning of the phrase “unpaid
balance of the award” in the second sentence of subsection (5).
Accordingly, it is appropriate to determine—using our cus-
tomary statutory construction methodology—whether that
phrase restricts a worker’s estate’s entitlement to the pay-
ment of benefits that finally had been determined before the
worker died.
The word “award” and the phrase “unpaid balance
of the award” are not defined in the Workers’ Compensation
9
Before turning to the second ground of the Court of Appeals decision, we
briefly note an aspect of ORS 656.283(1) that has peripheral bearing on the prob-
lem before us. As discussed above, that provision authorizes “any party” or the
Department of Consumer and Business Services to “request a hearing on any
matter concerning a claim.” “Party,” for purposes of the Workers Compensation
Law, means “a claimant for compensation, the employer of the injured worker at
the time of injury and the insurer, if any, of such employer.” ORS 656.005(21).
SAIF argues that claimant’s estate is not a “party” for purposes of ORS 656.283
because it is not an employer, insurer, nor “a claimant for compensation.” We need
not decide whether an estate qualifies as a claimant for compensation because, as
SAIF itself observes, by its terms ORS 656.283(1) does not apply to “matters for
which a procedure for resolving the dispute is provided in another statute.” And,
as SAIF also observes, ORS 656.218(3) is such a statute. Accordingly, whether
or not claimant’s estate would qualify as a “party” under ORS 656.283(1) is not
dispositive of the issue before us.
138 Sather v. SAIF
statutes. However, “award” is used throughout the statu-
tory framework—in particular, with reference to perma-
nent partial disability—to describe the final disposition of
a claim that is favorable, at least in part, to the claimant.10
Moreover, the term “unpaid balance” could be understood
to indicate that part—but not all—of an existing award
was paid before the worker’s death. Viewed accordingly,
the Court of Appeals’ interpretation is, as a textual mat-
ter, plausible. That is, “the unpaid balance of the award”
could refer to the unpaid amount of an award that finally
was determined before the worker’s death.
However, there is another plausible interpretation of
the disputed phrase. Under that interpretation, “the unpaid
balance of the award” does not restrict an estate’s entitlement
to previously awarded benefits. Instead, it was meant more
broadly to capture—in a single provision—two scenarios.
The first is the one that the Court of Appeals envisaged. In
contrast, in the second scenario, the worker’s eligibility for,
and the amount of, benefits would be determined after the
worker’s death. See ORS 656.218(2), (3), (4). In that scenario,
if a deceased worker was determined to have been eligible
for compensation, an award ultimately would be made, the
entire balance of which would have been unpaid when the
worker died. When understood in that way, the second sen-
tence of subsection (5) refers to an estate’s entitlement to the
10
For example, ORS 656.214 provides, in part:
“(2) When permanent partial disability results from a compensable
injury or occupational disease, benefits shall be awarded as follows:
“(a) If the worker has been released to regular work by the attending
physician or nurse practitioner authorized to provide compensable medical
services under ORS 656.245 or has returned to regular work at the job held
at the time of injury, the award shall be for impairment only.
“* * * * *
“(b) If the worker has not been released to regular work by the attend-
ing physician or nurse practitioner authorized to provide compensable med-
ical services under ORS 656.245 or has not returned to regular work at the
job held at the time of injury, the award shall be for impairment and work
disability.
“* * * * *
“(3) Impairment benefits awarded under subsection (2)(a) of this section
shall be expressed as a percentage of the whole person.”
(Emphasis added).
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 139
unpaid balance of an award, regardless of whether the award
finally had been determined when the worker died.11 That is,
the estate is entitled to “the unpaid balance of the award”
pursuant to subsection (5), regardless—in accordance with
subsection (1)—of “whether eligibility therefor or the amount
thereof” had been determined before the worker died.
Because both constructions of the phrase “unpaid
balance of the award” are textually plausible, we consider
them in the context of the other provisions of ORS 656.218
to determine which construction better comports with the
legislature’s probable intent. See, e.g., Bergmann v. Hutton,
337 Or 596, 603, 101 P3d 353 (2004) (using context to resolve
choice between two textually plausible constructions of stat-
ute). For several reasons, that inquiry favors the broader
construction of the disputed phrase.
First, only that broader construction is consistent
with our conclusion that an estate is a person described in
subsection (5) that is authorized, under subsection (3), to
pursue requests for hearing to a final determination after
a worker’s death. Second, the broader construction is con-
sistent with the plain text of ORS 656.218(1), which states
that, if a deceased worker was entitled to compensation,
“whether eligibility therefor or the amount thereof have
been determined, payments shall be made for the period
during which the worker, if surviving, would have been enti-
tled thereto.” In contrast, the Court of Appeals’ narrower
construction of the phrase “unpaid balance of the award”
11
In reaching a different conclusion, the Court of Appeals emphasized that,
as amended in 2009, ORS 656.204(1)(b), adopted a formula that, among other
things, requires an insurer to pay an estate for the costs of disposition of the
worker’s body and funeral expenses “that remain unpaid” 60 days after claim
acceptance. From those changes, along with the amendment to ORS 656.218(5),
the Court of Appeals inferred “a consistent intention that, when an award has
been made and there are no surviving statutory beneficiaries of the worker as
defined in ORS 656.204, the estate must receive any previously awarded ben-
efits.” Sather, 262 Or App at 606. With respect, we fail to discern evidence in
the provisions of ORS 656.204(1), as amended in 2009, for the inference that
the Court of Appeals drew. Where a worker’s death results from an accidental
workplace injury, ORS 656.204(1) requires an insurer to pay certain bills, and
if they remain unpaid 60 days after claim acceptance, to pay the unpaid amount
of the funeral and burial benefit to the worker’s estate. The fact that that fall-
back payment obligation involves “previously awarded benefits” is a function of
the insurer’s primary obligation to pay the bills in the first instance. It does not
materially inform our analysis of the issue at hand.
140 Sather v. SAIF
depends on one or both of two less plausible propositions:
(1) ORS 656.218(1) requires an insurer to pay compensation
for claims on which no award was made before an injured
worker died, only where persons exist who would have been
entitled to death benefits under ORS 656.204 if the work-
er’s injury had been fatal; or (2) ORS 656.218(1) requires
an insurer to pay compensation to which a deceased worker
would have been entitled on claims on which no award was
made before the worker died, but, in the absence of one or
more eligible beneficiaries under ORS 656.204, the obliga-
tion is unenforceable.
The proposition that subsection (1) requires an
insurer to pay undetermined claims only when eligible ben-
eficiaries exist under ORS 656.204 ignores the plain text of
subsection (1) and requires rewriting it by inserting a ref-
erence to the beneficiaries listed under ORS 656.204. That
interpretation would be inconsistent with a court’s duties
not to insert into a statute what has been omitted, or to
omit what has been inserted, and, where there are several
provisions or particulars, to adopt a construction that will
give effect to all parts of the statute whenever possible. ORS
174.010.12
The alternative proposition that subsection (1) cre-
ates an obligation without a remedy fails to account for
why—in the absence of eligible beneficiaries under ORS
656.204—the legislature would create an obligation under
ORS 656.218(1) to pay previously undetermined benefits to
12
At oral argument, SAIF raised an additional argument in support of that
first proposition that was not developed in its brief on review nor addressed by the
Court of Appeals—namely, that an estate is not entitled to “compensation” pursu-
ant to ORS 656.218(1), because, under ORS 656.005(8), compensation is only pro-
vided to a “subject worker or the worker’s beneficiaries.” The term “beneficiary,”
the argument proceeds, is restricted to an injured worker and the worker’s spouse
or dependents. ORS 656.005(2). The answer to that argument is straightforward:
ORS 656.218(1) refers to the worker’s entitlement to compensation; it directs that
payment be made based on that entitlement, a direction that does not depend on
whether the worker was survived by a person who would have been entitled to
death benefits under ORS 656.204 if the worker’s injury had been fatal. To the
contrary, if SAIF were correct in asserting that only a subject worker or his or
her statutory beneficiaries are entitled to receive payments under subsection (1),
then SAIF’s own reading of subsection (5), under which a worker’s estate would
be entitled to the unpaid balance of a pre-death PPD award where the worker
died without qualifying beneficiaries under ORS 656.204, would be in direct ten-
sion with subsection (1).
Cite as 357 Or 122 (2015) 141
which the worker, if surviving, would have been entitled, but
designate no person to receive, much less enforce, the obliga-
tion to pay such benefits. SAIF downplays that quandary for
two reasons. First, as discussed, it asserts that an estate is
entitled to receive only an award of benefits that was deter-
mined before the worker died—a proposition that we already
have rejected. Second, SAIF points out that the director of
the Department of Business and Consumer Services has
authority under ORS 656.745(2)(b) to assess a civil penalty
against an insurer that “[f]ails to comply with statutes * * *
or other requirements necessary to carry out the purposes of
[ORS Chapter 656].” Perhaps so, but that is a far cry from a
direct remedy that can be sought by a person who is entitled
to pursue a claim and receive payment.
Finally, the broader construction of the phrase
“unpaid balance of the award” is consistent with the legis-
lative history of the 2009 amendment to subsection (5). As
noted, the executive summary of the MLAC report indicated
that “the insurer should be obligated to pay the full remain-
ing award, whether or not [a deceased] worker has a spouse
or children.” In making that declaration, there is no indica-
tion that the MLAC—much less the legislature that adopted
its proposal—intended to distinguish between awards that
had been finalized before, as opposed to after, a worker’s
death.13
In short, we conclude that the phrase “unpaid bal-
ance of the award” in the second sentence of ORS 656.218(5)
does not restrict an estate’s entitlement to PPD benefits
that were awarded before a worker’s death. Instead, in
the absence of persons who would have been entitled to
receive such benefits if the injury causing a worker’s dis-
ability had been fatal, an estate is entitled to pursue to final
13
The MLAC report did not refer to any particular subsection of ORS
656.218; it simply purported to describe the operative effect of the statute. That is
unsurprising in view of the fact, that—as discussed—the reference in subsection
(5) to an “award” is directly traceable to a long-superseded version of the statute
in which no survivor’s benefits were payable on claims that had not finally been
determined before an injured worker’s death and, perforce, the first sentence of
subsection (5) did not exist at all. At most, the history suggests that the MLAC
and the legislature may not have actually considered how the two sentences
of subsection (5) would work together now that, for the first time, a particular
entity—the deceased worker’s estate—was designated to receive payment of a
death benefit in the absence of eligible beneficiaries under ORS 656.204.
142 Sather v. SAIF
determination a worker’s request for a hearing pursuant to
ORS 656.283 when the worker dies prior to the final dispo-
sition of the request.
CONCLUSION
To summarize: we hold that, in the absence of per-
sons who would have been entitled to receive death benefits
if the injury causing a deceased worker’s disability had been
fatal, an award of permanent partial disability benefits that
is finally determined after the worker’s death pursuant to
ORS 656.218(3) is payable to the worker’s estate under ORS
656.218(5). That conclusion follows from our first deter-
mination that, for purposes of subsection (3), “the persons
described in subsection (5)” include a worker’s estate under
the second sentence of subsection (5); and our second deter-
mination that the phrase “unpaid balance of the award” in
the second sentence of subsection (5) does not restrict an
estate’s entitlement to PPD benefits that were awarded
before the worker’s death. It follows that the Court of Appeals
erred in denying the personal representative’s motion for
substitution as the real party in interest on review and that
the court further erred in dismissing the petition for judicial
review.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed,
and the case is remanded to that court for a determination
of the merits of the petition for judicial review.