IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
No. 07–2094
Filed February 27, 2009
JAMES BOEHME,
Appellant,
vs.
FAREWAY STORES, INC. and
IOWA INSURANCE GUARANTY
ASSOCIATION, on behalf of
HOME INSURANCE COMPANY,
in Insolvency,
Appellees.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Glenn E. Pille,
Judge.
Appellant challenges district court’s denial of his claim for workers’
compensation weekly benefits. AFFIRMED.
John E. Swanson of Hansen, McClintock & Riley, Des Moines, for
appellant.
Michael L. Mock of Bradshaw, Fowler, Proctor & Fairgrave, P.C.,
Des Moines, for appellees.
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STREIT, Justice.
James Boehme was injured while working at Fareway Stores when
an ice cream cart fell on him. Without entering into a settlement
agreement, Fareway provided Boehme with medical and weekly benefits.
Six years later, Boehme settled with the manufacturer of the ice cream
cart. That settlement resulted in a payment to Fareway for
reimbursement of some of the past payments it had made to Boehme as
well as a credit for future workers’ compensation benefits. Accordingly,
Fareway stopped paying weekly benefits, and Boehme began maintaining
a record of the amount of weekly benefits and medical expenses that
would have been owed by Fareway but for the settlement and the
resulting credit. When, after a period of years, Boehme believed
Fareway’s settlement credit was exhausted, he filed a workers’
compensation petition against Fareway claiming entitlement to medical
and weekly benefits, and requesting reimbursement from Fareway for
attorneys’ fees incurred in the litigation that produced the third-party
settlement. The deputy commissioner determined Boehme’s claim for
weekly benefits was barred by the statute of limitations and his claim for
attorneys’ fees was also barred. Boehme appealed, asserting, among
other things, the statute of limitations did not apply because of the
doctrine of equitable estoppel. The commissioner affirmed, determining
Boehme had not preserved error on his equitable estoppel claim. The
district court affirmed. Because Boehme’s equitable estoppel claim is
without merit and because he did not file his claim within three years of
Fareway’s last payment, Boehme’s claim is barred by the statute of
limitations. Further, Iowa Code section 515B.2(b) (2007) prevents
Boehme from recovering attorney’s fees from Fareway.
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I. Background Facts and Prior Proceedings.
On December 6, 1983, James Boehme was injured while working
at Fareway Stores, Inc. when an ice cream cart containing 900 pounds of
ice cream tipped over on top of him. Fareway and its insurance carrier,
Home Insurance Company, accepted the injury as compensable and
provided Boehme with medical benefits, healing period benefits, and
permanent partial disability benefits. Fareway and Boehme never
entered into a settlement agreement pursuant to Iowa Code section
86.13 (2007) to establish weekly benefits, and the extent of Boehme’s
permanent disability was never determined by the commissioner.
Boehme also pursued a third-party claim against the manufacturer of
the ice cream cart. On February 9, 1990, Boehme settled that claim for
$300,000. On February 20, 1990, Fareway and Boehme filed a
Memorandum of Third-Party Settlement with the commissioner as
required by Iowa Code section 85.22 (2007). In the agreement, Fareway
and Boehme agreed Fareway (and Home Insurance) would receive a lump
sum payment of $48,655.17 as indemnification for payments of workers’
compensation benefits made through the date of the third-party
settlement. (The gross amount of benefits paid by Fareway/Home
Insurance to Boehme by that time was $82,906.74.) The settlement also
provided that Fareway was entitled to a credit against any future
payments of medical or weekly benefits in the total amount of
$135,026.11. The agreement contained the following specific provision:
The parties, by their actions herein, do not stipulate or
agree, or in any manner concede that the Claimant is
entitled to any specified degree of permanent physical
impairment or industrial disability, either now or in the
future, such determination resting by law, with the Iowa
Industrial Commissioner, upon contested case proceeding.
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Fareway stopped making weekly benefit payments to Boehme at the end
of February 1990.
Boehme maintained a detailed record of the amount of weekly
benefits and medical expenses that would have been owed by Fareway
but for the settlement of the tort action and the resulting credit. By
Boehme’s calculations, Fareway’s settlement credit was exhausted in
December 2002. On February 26, 2003, Boehme filed a review-opening
petition with the commissioner seeking an award of additional medical
and weekly benefits. Soon thereafter, Fareway’s workers’ compensation
insurance carrier, Home Insurance Company, filed for bankruptcy. Iowa
Insurance Guaranty Association (IIGA) appeared before the commissioner
in the insolvent insurance carrier’s place. Fareway and IIGA filed a
motion for partial summary judgment asserting Boehme’s claim was
barred by the statute of limitations, Iowa Code section 85.26, because
more than three years had passed since Fareway’s last payment of
weekly benefits. A deputy commissioner granted the motion, finding
Boehme’s claim for additional weekly benefits was barred by the statute
of limitations. The deputy commissioner’s decision did not address the
issue of equitable estoppel raised by Boehme at the hearing. Boehme
filed a motion of appeal to the commissioner.
While the appeal of the statute-of-limitations issue was pending,
the commissioner entered an order directing an evidentiary hearing be
held to address the other issues, including (1) the extent of Boehme’s
entitlement to past medical expenses, and (2) the effect of Iowa Code
chapter 515B on Boehme’s entitlement to reimbursement of attorneys’
fees incurred by Boehme in the third-party litigation. In an arbitration
decision, the deputy commissioner found (1) Boehme was entitled to past
medical expenses incurred after the date of the third-party settlement in
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the amount of $13,520.87 (to be deducted from Fareway’s third-party
settlement credit), and (2) Boehme’s claims for attorneys’ fees and
litigation expenses were barred by Iowa Code section 515B.2(b)(4) and (8)
and by the express language of the Memorandum of Third-Party
Settlement filed with the agency in February 1990.
Boehme filed a notice of intra-agency appeal, which was
consolidated with the earlier appeal of the summary judgment ruling.
The commissioner affirmed both rulings and also determined Boehme
had failed to preserve error with respect to two issues: whether equitable
estoppel precludes Fareway from asserting a statute-of-limitations
defense, and whether future credits from a third-party settlement should
be construed as a payment of weekly benefits that extended the statute
of limitations under Iowa Code section 85.25. The commissioner also
determined that, even if error had been preserved, Boehme’s claims on
these issues were without merit.
Boehme filed a petition for judicial review. The district court
affirmed. Boehme appealed.
II. Scope of Review.
We review whether the commissioner correctly interpreted the
agency’s appellate procedural rules regarding preservation of error for an
abuse of discretion. Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(n) (2007). We review the
commissioner’s legal findings for errors at law. Iowa Code
§ 17A.19(10)(c), (m). We are bound by the commissioner’s finding of facts
so long as those findings are supported by substantial evidence. Excel
Corp. v. Smithart, 654 N.W.2d 891, 896 (Iowa 2002); Iowa Code
§ 17A.19(10)(f).
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III. Merits.
A. Statute of Limitations. Under Iowa Code section 85.26, an
employee must bring a claim for workers’ compensation benefits within
two years from the date of the injury or, “if weekly compensation benefits
are paid under section 86.13, within three years from the date of the last
payment of weekly compensation benefits.” Boehme’s claim for weekly
benefits should have been brought within three years of February 1990,
when Fareway stopped making payments to Boehme.
1. Equitable estoppel. Boehme argues the commissioner erred in
ruling he did not properly preserve the issue of whether equitable
estoppel precluded Fareway’s statute-of-limitations defense. Although
Boehme did not mention equitable estoppel in his resistance to the
defendant’s motion for summary judgment, he did raise the issue of
equitable estoppel at the hearing on the motion for partial summary
judgment. In the arbitration decision, the deputy commissioner did not
rule on the issue. Although Boehme’s appeal to the commissioner
acknowledged the lack of a ruling on the issue, he did not file a motion
for rehearing requesting the deputy commissioner to enter a ruling on
the issue. In the appeal decision, the commissioner determined Boehme
“did not properly preserve the issue of whether equitable estoppel
prevented the defendants’ statute-of-limitations defense as there is no
underlying ruling . . . to affirm, modify, or overrule.” The commissioner
also determined that, even if error had been preserved, the equitable
estoppel claim was without merit. The district court affirmed the
commissioner’s appeal decision on both counts.
Under the Iowa Administrative Code rule 876–4.28(7) (2007), “An
issue will not be considered on appeal if the issue could have been, but
was not, presented to the deputy.” (Emphasis added.) In the appeal
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decision, the commissioner interpreted this provision to require not only
an issue be raised, but also the issue be decided in the ruling in order for
a claim to be properly preserved on appeal. See, e.g., Meier v. Senecaut,
641 N.W.2d 532, 537 (Iowa 2002) (“It is a fundamental doctrine of
appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided
by the district court before we will decide them on appeal.”); Explore Info.
Sevs. v. Iowa Ct. Info. Sys., 636 N.W.2d 50, 57 (Iowa 2001) (motion for
reconsideration “necessary to preserve error only when the district court
fails to resolve an issue, claim, or legal theory properly submitted for
adjudication”). Although we give an agency substantial deference when
it interprets its own regulations, TLC Home Health Care, L.L.C. v. Iowa
Dep’t of Human Servs., 638 N.W.2d 708 (Iowa 2002), the plain language
of the rule is clear and unambiguous. “When the language of a statute is
plain and its meaning clear, the rules of statutory construction do not
permit us to search for meaning beyond the statute’s express terms.”
Rock v. Warhank, 757 N.W.2d 670, 673 (Iowa 2008). Rule 876–4.28(7)
clearly states that an issue will not be considered on appeal if it was not
presented to the deputy. A deputy’s ruling is not a final agency action.
See Iowa Code § 86.24(5) (“The decision of the workers’ compensation
commissioner is final agency action.”); see also Myers v. F.C.A. Servs.,
Inc., 592 N.W.2d 354, 358 (Iowa 1999). Further, “[a]n issue raised on
appeal [to the commissioner] is decided de novo, and the scope of the
issue is viewed broadly.” Iowa Admin. Code r. 876–4.28(7). Thus, as
Boehme presented the issue to the deputy, the commissioner should
have examined Boehme’s claim that Fareway was equitably estopped
from asserting a statute-of-limitations defense. Obtaining a ruling from
the deputy commissioner on that issue was not required in order to
preserve error.
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However, we do agree with the district court that Boehme’s
equitable estoppel claim has no merit. Boehme contends Fareway is
estopped from asserting a statute-of-limitations defense under the
doctrine of equitable estoppel. Under this doctrine, a party who has
fraudulently prevented the other party from seeking redress within the
limitations period cannot benefit from the statute of limitations. Hook v.
Lippolt, 755 N.W.2d 514, 525 (Iowa 2008). A party asserting equitable
estoppel must demonstrate the following by clear and convincing
evidence:
“(1) The defendant has made a false representation or has
concealed material facts; (2) the plaintiff lacks knowledge of
the true facts; (3) the defendant intended the plaintiff to act
upon such representations; and (4) the plaintiff did in fact
rely on such representations to his prejudice.”
Id. at 524–25 (quoting Christy v. Miulli, 692 N.W.2d 694, 702 (Iowa
2005)). To establish false representation or concealment, there must be
evidence the party acted “with the intent to mislead the injured party.”
Id. at 525 (quoting Meier v. Alfa-Laval, Inc., 454 N.W.2d 576, 580 (Iowa
1990)).
Boehme asserts that, at the time he and Fareway filed the third-
party settlement agreement with the commissioner, he understood that a
petition to establish weekly benefits did not need to be filed until the
credits from the third-party settlement had been exhausted and that
Fareway knew he misunderstood the contract. There is no evidence in
the record indicating Fareway “made a false representation or has
concealed material facts” when the agreement was signed in order to
prevent Boehme from filing a timely petition for weekly benefits. Id. at
524–25. Fareway never represented to Boehme that he could wait until
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the settlement credits ran out before filing a petition to establish weekly
benefits.1
Further, the language of the agreement is clear and unambiguous
that Boehme’s entitlement to weekly benefits was disputed and
undetermined:
The parties, by their actions herein, do not stipulate or
agree, or in any manner concede that the Claimant is
entitled to any specified degree of permanent physical
impairment or industrial disability, either now or in the
future, such determination resting by law, with the Iowa
Industrial Commissioner, upon contested case proceeding.
Both parties were represented by lawyers, and Boehme’s lawyers
reviewed the settlement documents and were present when Boehme and
his wife signed them. Boehme did not establish Fareway “made a false
representation or has concealed material facts.” Id.
Even if Fareway knew Boehme misunderstood the contract, we will
not impose a duty on counsel to inform the opposing party of the
intricacies of an agreement, its long-term consequences, or why they may
not want to sign it. Nor are we inclined to impose a duty on counsel in
an adversarial setting to tell a party that his lawyer has not correctly or
adequately advised him. It is the duty of a lawyer to represent his client
zealously. Weigel v. Weigel, 467 N.W.2d 277, 281 (Iowa 1991); see also
Iowa Ct. R. 32:1.3. Advising the opposing party that his counsel is
wrong would conflict with this important duty.
We agree with the commissioner and the district court that
Boehme’s equitable estoppel claim is without merit.
1Neither party claims Fareway waived the statute of limitations. Even if Fareway
had, any such agreement would have to be approved by the commissioner. See Iowa
Code § 86.13 (a settlement agreement regarding compensation is valid “only if signed by
all parties and approved by the workers’ compensation commissioner”).
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2. Weekly benefits. Boehme also asserts the statute of limitations
does not preclude his claim because future credits from the third-party
settlement should be considered in the nature of weekly benefits that
would have otherwise been paid. Boehme maintained a detailed record
of the amount of weekly benefits and medical expenses that would have
been owed by Fareway but for the settlement of the tort action and the
resulting credit of $135,026.11. He contends these virtual payments
should be considered payments of weekly benefits by Fareway to him
because Fareway was not paying weekly benefits only because of the
credit derived from the third-party settlement. Although it is likely that
Fareway would have continued to pay Boehme weekly benefits for some
period of time if not for the third-party settlement, the Memorandum of
Third-Party Settlement does not replace the need for an agency
determination of Fareway’s liability or a settlement agreement approved
by the commissioner determining weekly benefits prior to the expiration
of the statute of limitations. See Iowa Code § 86.13; Bergen v. Iowa
Veterans Home, 577 N.W.2d 629 (Iowa 1998) (holding statute of
limitations runs from last day of voluntary payment). At best, the third-
party payments could be characterized as payments in Fareway’s stead.
However, neither the Memorandum of Third-Party Settlement nor the
conduct of the parties supports such a characterization.
The language in the settlement agreement does not support
Boehme’s interpretation: “The parties . . . do not stipulate or agree, or in
any manner concede that the Claimant is entitled to any specified degree
of permanent physical impairment or industrial disability, either now or
in the future. . . .” As the commissioner explained in the appeal decision,
the terms of the third party settlement contradict [Boehme’s]
assertion that there was an agreement that the credit was
given in lieu of weekly checks being submitted to [him].
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There is no language in the settlement document which
supports [Boehme’s] argument that he was entitled to
indemnity benefits in the total amount of the credit created
in the third party settlement. In fact, the terms of the
settlement agreement contradict such a conclusion as the
agreement mandated the commencement of a contested case
to determine entitlement to any additional benefits.
We agree with the commissioner and the district court that Boehme’s
claim the settlement credits should be considered weekly benefit
payments for the purpose of determining when the statute of limitations
begins to run has no merit.
B. Allocation of Attorneys’ Fees, Credits, and Court Costs.
“[I]t is the obligation of the employer or insurer to contribute toward the
cost of bringing the third-party action in proportion to the benefits
received therefrom.” Marin v. DCS Sanitation, 596 N.W.2d 62, 64 (Iowa
1999); see also Ewing v. Allied Const. Servs., 592 N.W.2d 689 (Iowa
1999). Here, the insurer, Home Insurance Company, was insolvent, and
the Iowa Insurance Guaranty Association (IIGA) appeared in its place.
Under Iowa Code section 515B.2(b)(4), the IIGA is not responsible for
amounts “due an attorney . . . for services rendered to the insolvent
insurer.” Section 515B.2(b)(8) indicates a party may present a
noncovered claim, such as attorneys’ fees, against the insolvent insurer
or its liquidator, but such noncovered claims cannot be pursued against
the insured of the insolvent insurer.
The deputy commissioner determined Iowa Code section
515B.2(b)(4) and (8) prevents Boehme from recovering attorneys’ fees for
the third-party settlement from IIGA or Fareway (the insured). Further,
the deputy commissioner noted the plain language of the settlement
agreement between Boehme and Fareway indicates that attorneys’ fees
and costs associated with the third-party litigation were not meant to be
assessed against Fareway’s $135,026.11 credit. See Petty v. Faith Bible
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Christian Outreach Ctr., Inc., 584 N.W.2d 303, 306 (Iowa 1998) (holding
“where the intent of the parties is expressed in clear and unambiguous
language, we enforce the contract as written”). Paragraph four of the
agreement states Fareway “will be entitled to take a future credit for any
and all future payment of weekly benefits and medical or associated
expenses . . . up to the amount of . . . $135,026.11.” The deputy
commissioner reasoned that as “[m]ost of the attorneys’ fees and court
costs associated with third party litigation . . . had already been incurred
by February 9, 1990 . . . they cannot be said to be ‘future’ benefits or
expenses to be assessed against the . . . credit.”
Boehme contends section 515B.2(b)(4) does not apply because the
attorneys’ fees and costs associated with the third-party settlement
occurred well before the insurance carrier declared bankruptcy and IIGA
stepped in. We disagree. The language of section 515B.2(b)(4) and the
contract is clear. Iowa Code section 515B.2(b)(4) prevents Boehme from
recovering attorneys’ fees from IIGA and Fareway.
IV. Conclusion.
Boehme’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations since he did
not file his claim within three years of Fareway’s last payment of weekly
benefits. His equitable estoppel claim and his claim that the third-party
settlement proceeds constituted payments of weekly benefits are without
merit. In addition, Iowa Code section 515B.2(b)(4) prevents Boehme from
recovering attorneys’ fees from Fareway.
AFFIRMED.