Michael Weaver v. City Of Everett

                                                                                                       FILc.D
                                                                                               COURT OF APPEALS OIV 1   ~
                                                                                                STATE OF WASHINGTON     ~T’TF

                                                                                                2018 JUL 16 AM 8: 1,6




             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MICHAEL WEAVER,                                                                 )
                                                                                )   DIVISION ONE
                                        Appellant,                              )
                                                                                )   No. 76324-5-I
                                  v.                                            )
                                                                                )   PUBLISHED OPINION
CITY of EVERETT and STATE of                                                    )
WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT of                                                       )
LABOR AND INDUSTRIES,                                                           )
                                                                                )
                                        Respondents.                            )   FILED: July 16, 2018
_______________________________________________________________________________ )

             DWYER, J.           —     Collateral estoppel and res judicata are common law

doctrines that were, for centuries, applied solely to common law claims. The

twentieth century rise of the administrative state brought with it an explosion of

executive branch quasi-judicial decision-making. Eventually, the urge to apply

common law principles in these otherwise statutorily-created forums proved

irresistible. But the apples to oranges application of common law doctrines to

statutory claims litigated in executive branch forums was—by its very nature—

never guaranteed universal success. Many times, such applications fit nicely

and a sound and fair resolution was achieved. Other times, however, the apples
No. 76324-5-1/2


to oranges application resulted ma distasteful fruit salad of injustice. This case

falls into the latter category.

       Michael Weaver, a long-time Everett firefighter, applied for compensation

resulting from that which he alleged—and the law presumes—to be a work-

related occupational disease. Weaver’s petition is serious to him and his family;

he suffers from brain cancer that has made it impossible for him to work and that

will ultimately claim his life. The Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals ruled that

either collateral estoppel or res judicata barred his claim. The superior court

unfortunately adopted the same either/or analysis and also unfortunately ruled

that Weaver’s application was barred. But a careful review of these two distinct

common law doctrines—conducted pursuant to the analytical framework

mandated by our Supreme Court—reveals that neither doctrine, properly applied,

bars Weaver’s entreaty. Accordingly, we reverse.



       Michael Weaver was employed between 1996 and 2014 by the City of

Everett (the City) as a firefighter. In June 2011, Weaver noticed a mole on the

skin of his left shoulder. The mole was removed and the resulting biopsy

revealed that it contained a malignant melanoma.

       Shortly thereafter, Weaver underwent surgery to remove the melanoma.

After a period of recovery, Weaver returned to his employment as a firefighter.




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No. 76324-5-1/3


The treatment and surgery caused Weaver to miss nearly five weeks of work,

losing the opportunity to earn just under $10,000 in wages.1

        While in recovery, in July 2011, Weaver filed a pro se application for

temporary total disability benefits from the City, a self-insured entity for workers’

compensation purposes. His application alleged that the malignant melanoma

on his shoulder arose from his 15 years of working as a firefighter. He requested

compensation for the nearly 5 weeks of wages that he had been unable to earn

due to the medical treatment.

        After initially granting Weaver’s application, the Department of Labor and

Industries (the Department) reconsidered its decision and denied his application.

Thereafter, Weaver, through counsel, appealed the Department’s denial order to

the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (the Board). A hearing before an

administrative law judge (AU) resulted. The City presented the published

deposition testimony of two medical specialists, Dr. Robert Levenson, an

oncologist, and Dr. John Hackett, a dermatologist.

        Weaver’s counsel, presumably due to monetary considerations, chose not

to present the testimony of Dr. David Aboulafia, Weaver’s treating oncologist.

Nor did Weaver’s attorney present testimony from a medical expert in oncology

or dermatology.2 Instead, Weaver’s counsel presented the published deposition

        1 Weaver’s health insurance paid for the medical costs arising from his diagnosis and

treatment in 2011.
        2 Based on our collective years of judging, we can easily imagine that significant costs

would attach to retaining a medical specialist in oncology or dermatology to testify on Weaver’s
behalf during this proceeding, costs amounting to several thousands of dollars and possibly more
than the value of the temporary total disability benefits that Weaver sought from the City. Indeed,
although not a part of our record and therefore not a basis for our decision, at oral argument
Weaver’s current attorney informed the court that Weaver’s present specialist in oncology had
already been paid $19,000 for his medical-legal services in this case. Wash. Court of Appeals


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No. 76324-5-1/4


testimony of Dr. Kenneth Coleman, a doctor with a practice in family and

emergency medicine, but with no expertise in melanoma generally or in

melanoma arising from occupational exposures specifically.

        The AU recommended that the Board affirm the Department’s order

denying Weaver’s application.3 In February 2013, the Board adopted the AU’s

recommendation and issued a final order denying Weaver’s application.

        After the Board’s ruling, Weaver’s counsel withdrew. Weaver filed a pro

se review petition in the superior court. Ten months later, with Weaver still

unrepresented and no progress being made in the appeal, the parties entered

into a stipulation and agreed order of dismissal. Weaver’s petition for review was

dismissed in late 2013.

        In January 2014, Weaver began to have difficulty with mental processing

and word finding. A magnetic resonance imaging test revealed a three-

centimeter mass, a tumor, in the left frontal lobe of his brain.

        Weaver immediately underwent surgery and the tumor was removed. The

resulting biopsy diagnosed the tumor as a metastatic malignant melanoma, a

form of cancer developing out of a primary cancer site. The logical conclusion

was that the brain tumor had metastasized out of the malignant melanoma that

Weaver noticed on his shoulder in 2011.


oral argument, Weaver v. City of Everett, No. 76324-5-I (June 4, 2018), at 6 mm., 08 sec. (on
file with court).
         ~ The AU acknowledged that the Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51 RCW, mandates that
cancer arising during a worker’s employment as a firefighter is presumed to be an occupational
disease. See RCW 51.32.185. However, the AU concluded that the City had rebutted this
presumption and that Weaver had not presented additional evidence to rebut the City’s evidence.
Notably, the AU found that the opinion testimony of the City’s medical specialists outweighed
that of Dr. Coleman, Weaver’s sole expert witness.


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No. 76324-5-1/5


        Weaver did not return to work as a firefighter after the surgery. He was

estimated to have a 20 to 30 percent chance of survival over the next two years.

        In July 2014, Weaver, now represented by counsel, submitted an

application for workers’ compensation from the City, seeking permanent total

disability benefits. The application alleged that he suffered from a malignant

melanoma located on his “upper back/scapula area, w/ cancer spreading to

brain.” He alleged that the condition arose from “sun exposure during outdoor

firefighting and training from 1996 forward.”

        The Department denied Weaver’s application on the basis that it had

already rejected his application for compensation based on the malignant

melanoma discovered on his shoulder and that the metastasized melanoma had

arisen from the earlier melanoma.

        Weaver sought an administrative appeal and, in the resulting proceeding,

the AU recommended that the Board affirm the Department’s rejection of

Weaver’s application for permanent total disability benefits. The executive

branch official concluded that the common law doctrines of res judicata and

collateral estoppel barred Weaver’s application. The board, an executive branch

agency, adopted the AU’s proposed decision and order as its final order.4




        ~ The Board is an executive branch agency. RCW 51.52.010. Accordingly, insofar as we
review the Board’s determination concerning the application of common law doctrines, we grant
no deference to an assessment by an executive branch agency of the applicability of court
created doctrines of preclusion. Dana’s Housekeeping, Inc. v. Dept of Labor & Indus., 76 Wn.
App. 600, 605-06, 886 P.2d 1147 (1995) (“An agency’s legal interpretation in areas outside of its
expertise is entitled to no deference.” (citing Russell v. Dep’t of Human Rights, 70 Wn. App. 408,
412, 854 P.2d 1087 (1993))). Executive branch officials do not have specific expertise in the
development and applicability of the common law. Judges do.


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No. 76324-5-1/6


       Weaver filed a notice of appeal to the superior court. The superior court

affirmed the Board’s order and denied Weaver’s petition, ruling that either

collateral estoppel or res judicata barred his claim.

       Weaver now appeals.



                                          A

       It is necessary for us to determine whether the superior court erred by

affirming the Board’s application of the doctrines of collateral estoppel and res

judicata to bar Weaver from pursuing his claim for compensation under the

Industrial Insurance Act, Title 51 RCW.

       At the outset, we note that collateral estoppel and res judicata are

equitable, court-created doctrines established at common law. See J.M.

Weatherwax Lumber Co. v. Ray, 38 Wash. 545, 80 P. 775 (1905); see also

Phillip A. Trautman, Claim and Issue Preclusion in Civil Litigation in Washington,

60 WASH. L. REV. 805, 806, 842 (1985). We further note that the Industrial

Insurance Act, as set forth below, was enacted by our legislature in 1911 with the

intent to abolish the common law cause of action then-available to workers and

establish in its place a distinct statutory scheme aimed at providing workers “sure

and certain relief.” LAWSOF 1911, ch. 74,     § 1, at 345.
      Accordingly, in resolving the matter before us, we proceed with due

caution so as to not unduly shoehorn common law concepts into a statutory

scheme wherein our legislature did not specifically call for them to apply or may

not otherwise have intended for their application.



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No. 76324-5-1/7


                                                  B

        Collateral estoppel and res judicata are affirmative defenses. Lemond v.

Dep’t of Licensing, 143 Wn. App. 797, 805, 180 P.3d 829 (2008) (collateral

estoppel) (quoting State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Avery, 114 Wn. App. 299,

304, 57 P.3d 300 (2002)); Davignon v. Clemmey, 322 F.3d 1, 17(1st Cir. 2003)

(res judicata). The proponent of either doctrine has the burden of proof.

Lemond, 143 Wn. App. at 805 (quoting State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 114 Wn.

App. at 304); Davignon, 322 F.3d at 17.

        Whether collateral estoppel or res judicata apply to preclude litigation is a

question of law that we review de novo. Lemond, 143 Wn. App. at 803 (collateral

estoppel) (citing State v. Vasguez, 109 Wn. App. 310, 314, 34 P.3d 1255 (2001),

affd, 148 Wn.2d 303, 59 P.3d 648 (2002)); Lynn v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 130

Wn. App. 829, 837, 125 P.3d 202 (2005) (res judicata) (citing Kuhlman v.

Thomas, 78 Wn. App. 115, 119-20, 897 P.2d 365 (1995)). In reviewing a

superior court ruling in a workers’ compensation matter, we apply a standard of

review akin to our review of any other superior court trial judgment. Rogers v.

Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 151 Wn. App. 174, 180-81, 210 P.3d 355 (2009).

        On appeal, both the Department and the City urge us to affirm the

decision of the superior court on the basis that they established that collateral

estoppel and res judicata apply to preclude litigation on Weaver’s application.5

We address each doctrine in turn.


        ~ At oral argument, the Department and the City each pressed a different basis for
affirmance. While the Department contended that it established that collateral estoppel bars
Weaver’s application for permanent total disability benefits, the City contended that it established
that Weaver’s application is precluded by res judicata.


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No. 76324-5-1/8


                                                 Ill

        As an initial matter, the Department and the City contend that they

established that collateral estoppel bars Weaver’s application for permanent total

disability benefits. We disagree.

                                                 A

        The principles underlying the common law doctrine of collateral estoppel

are well set forth in our opinion in Lemond.

                 Collateral estoppel “‘prevents relitigation of an issue after the
         party estopped has had a full and fair opportunity to present its
         case.” Barry. Day, 124 Wn.2d 318, 324-25, 879 P.2d 912 (1994)
         (quoting Hanson v. City of Snohomish, 121 Wn.2d 552, 561, 852
         P.2d 295 (1993)). Collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, is the
         applicable preclusive principle when “the subsequent suit involves a
        different claim but the same issue.” Phillip A. Trautman, Claim and
         Issue Preclusion in Civil Litigation in Washington, 60 WASH. L. REV.
         805 (1985). Thus,
                 [w]hen an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and
                determined by a valid and final judgment, and the
                determination is essential to the judgment, the
                determination is conclusive in a subsequent action
                 between the parties, whether on the same or a
                different claim.
         RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS § 27 (1982). Collateral
        estoppel prevents relitigation of issues in a subsequent claim or
        cause of action, whereas res judicata prevents a second assertion
        of the same claim or cause of action. Seattle-First Nat’l Bank v.
         Kawachi, 91 Wn.2d 223, 225-26, 588 P.2d 725 (1978). Thus, res
        judicata is generally referred to as claim preclusion, and collateral
        estoppel as issue preclusion. Trautman, supra, at 829.
                The purpose of the doctrine of collateral estoppel is to
        promote judicial economy by avoiding relitigation of the same issue,
        to afford the parties the assurance of finality of judicial
        determinations, and to prevent harassment of and inconvenience to
        litigants. Hanson, 121 Wn.2d at 561. These purposes are balanced
        against the important competing interest of not depriving a litigant


        That the Department and the City, each defending the superior court’s ruling here at
issue, do not agree as to the proper basis on which to affirm the superior court’s decision informs
our inquiry in this matter.


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No. 76324-5-1/9


       of the opportunity to adequately argue the case in court.
       RESTATEMENT, supra, § 27 cmt. c. at 252.
              The proponent of the application of the doctrine has the
       burden of proving four elements to demonstrate the necessity of its
       applicability:
              “(1) the issue decided in the prior adjudication is
               identical with the one presented in the second action;
               (2) the prior adjudication must have ended in a final
              judgment on the merits; (3) the party against whom
              the plea is asserted was a party or in privity with the
              party to the prior adjudication; and (4) application of
              the doctrine does not work an injustice.”
       Thompson v. Dep’t of Licensinp, 138 Wn.2d 783, 790, 982 P.2d
       601 (1999) (quoting Nielson v. Spanaway Gen. Med. Clinic, Inc.,
       135 Wn.2d 255, 262-63, 956 P.2d 312 (1998)). Because all four
       elements must be proved, the proponent’s failure to establish any
       one element is fatal to the proponent’s claim.

143 Wn. App. at 803-05 (emphasis added).

       Here, the Department has established the first three elements of collateral

estoppel. Both of Weaver’s applications for compensation regarded the identical

issue of whether the malignant melanoma diagnosed on his left shoulder was

caused by his employment as a firefighter. In addition, Weaver’s application for

temporary total disability benefits ended in a final judgment on the merits (the

dismissal of his appeal). Additionally, the Department and the City were both

parties to Weaver’s application for temporary total disability benefits.

                                          B

       The remaining question is whether the Department and the City proved

the fourth element of collateral estoppel—that application of the doctrine would

not work an injustice against Weaver.

       They did not.




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No. 76324-5-1110


       “Collateral estoppel is, in the end, an equitable doctrine that will not be

applied mechanically to work an injustice.” Hadley v. Maxwell, 144 Wn.2d 306,

315, 27 P.3d 600 (2001). Application of the doctrine works an injustice upon a

party when, during an earlier proceeding, that party did not have a “full and fair

opportunity” to litigate the contested issue. Lemond, 143 Wn. App. at 803-04

(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Barr, 124 Wn.2d at 324-25). Indeed,

for collateral estoppel to apply, the party must have had “sufficient motivation for

a full and vigorous litigation of the issue.” Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 315.

       Our Supreme Court’s decision in Had 1ev is both controlling and instructive.

In Hadley, two automobiles collided with one another. One of the drivers, Helen

Maxwell, was issued a $95 citation for an improper lane-travel traffic infraction.

Thereafter, Maxwell, pro se, unsuccessfully contested the citation before the

district court. She did not call any witnesses on her behalf nor did she elect to

appeal the district court’s adverse decision to the superior court. Hadley, 144

Wn.2d at 308-09. In a subsequent personal injury lawsuit arising from the

collision, the trial court ruled that Maxwell was collaterally estopped from denying

her violation of the lane change statute. This was so, the trial court ruled,

because Maxwell failed to appeal the district court’s decision that she had

committed the infraction. Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 309-10. In the resulting trial,

Maxwell was found liable for $136,000 in damages. Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 310.

       Appealing to our Supreme Court, Maxwell challenged the collateral

estoppel ruling on the basis that its application constituted an injustice. As the

court explained:



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No. 76324-5-I/Il


                To determine whether an injustice will be done, respected
       authorities urge us to consider whether “the party against whom the
       estoppel is asserted [had] interests at stake that would call for a full
       litigational effort.” 14 LEwis H. ORLAND & KARL B. TEGLAND,
       WASHINGTON PRACTICE: TRIAL PRAcTIcE, CIVIL § 373, at 763 (5th
       ed.1996); see also Parklane [Hosiery Co. v. Shore], 439 U.S. [322,]
       330[, 99 S. Ct. 645, 58 L. Ed. 2d 552 (1979)] (holding incentive to
       vigorously contest cases with small or nominal damages at stake
       could be a reason not to apply collateral estoppel); Beale v. Speck,
       127 Idaho 521, 903 P.2d 110, 119 (1995) (holding collateral
       estoppel for misdemeanor traffic offenses generally inappropriate);
       Rice v. Massalone, 554 N.Y.S.2d 294, 160 A.D.2d 861 (1990)
       (holding collateral estoppel inappropriate after an administrative
       determination of liability for a traffic accident).

Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 312. The Supreme Court adopted this consideration and

instructed that collateral estoppel “is not generally appropriate when there is

nothing more at stake than a nominal fine.” Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 315. Turning

to Maxwell’s circumstance, the court determined that “the incentive to litigate was

low—Maxwell was at risk $95.” Hadley, 144 Wn.2d at 312. The court

accordingly ruled that, in the district court proceeding, Maxwell lacked sufficient

motivation to fully and vigorously litigate whether she, in fact, committed the

traffic infraction. Thus, the Supreme Court held, the superior court erred by

precluding her from contesting that issue at the subsequent civil trial.

       Weaver’s circumstances are strikingly similar to those in Hadley. As with

Maxwell’s nominal incentive to litigate a $95 citation before the district court,

Weaver’s incentive to fully and vigorously litigate during the proceeding on his

application for temporary compensation was low. Indeed, Weaver’s initial

application for compensation sought only temporary total disability benefits, those

wages equivalent to five weeks of missed work. Weaver anticipated that he

would—and he did—return to his duties as a firefighter after completing his


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No. 76324-5-1/12


recovery. He was not then, as he is now, confronted by a brain cancer that is

alleged to have left him permanently disabled, unable to work, with significant

out-of-pocket medical expenses, and with a real possibility of death arising from

the cancer.

        Moreover, that Weaver had less than $10,000 in benefits at stake during

his application for temporary compensation further informs our inquiry. Indeed,

had Weaver retained a specialist in oncology or dermatology (or both), the cost

of doing so might rival—or perhaps even eclipse—the modest benefit amount

that he sought and, if his efforts proved unsuccessful, he would be entirely

unable to recover these costs. See RCW 51.32.1 85(7).6

        We note that our legislature has, for over 30 years, recognized that civil

actions in which the amount in controversy is less than $10,000 fall into a special

category of “small claims.” See RCW 4.84.250. The legislature thus provided

that

        in any action for damages where the amount pleaded by the
        prevailing party as hereinafter defined, exclusive of costs, is seven
        thousand five hundred dollars or less, there shall be taxed and
        allowed to the prevailing party as a part of the costs of the action a
        reasonable amount to be fixed by the court as attorneys’ fees.


        RCW 51.32.185(7) reads, in pertinent part,
        6

               (7)(a) When a determination involving the presumption established in this
      section is appealed to the board of industrial insurance appeals and the final
      decision allows the claim for benefits, the board of industrial insurance appeals
      shall order that all reasonable costs of the appeal, including attorney fees and
      witness fees, be paid to the firefighter or his or her beneficiary by the opposing
      party.
               (b) When a determination involving the presumption established in this
      section is appealed to any court and the final decision allows the claim for
      benefits, the court shall order that all reasonable costs of the appeal, including
      attorney fees and witness fees, be paid to the firefighter or his or her beneficiary
      by the opposing party.
(Emphasis added.)


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No. 76324-5-1/13


        After July 1, 1985, the maximum amount of the pleading under this
        section shall be ten thousand dollars.

RCW 4.84.250 (emphasis added). This cost- and fee-shifting provision

manifested a recognition by the legislature of the economic difficulties that arise

in fully litigating—whether as plaintiff or defendant—small monetary claims.

         In this light, that Weaver’s application for temporary compensation sought

less than $10,000 in benefits supports that he sought an amount that did not

provide sufficient motivation for a full and vigorous litigation of the initial

compensation claim.

        Viewed in the totality, the prevailing circumstances underlying Weaver’s

application for temporary total disability benefits suggest that he did not have

sufficient motivation to fully and vigorously litigate the issue of whether his

employment caused his cancer during the proceeding on his temporary

compensation application. Accordingly, application of collateral estoppel to

preclude him from litigating that issue in his present application works an

injustice.

        The Department and the City did not establish that application of collateral

estoppel would not work an injustice against Weaver.7 Accordingly, the superior

court erred by barring Weaver’s application on the basis of collateral estoppel.



         ~ The Department contends that it established the fourth element of collateral estoppel
because no procedural unfairness resulted to Weaver during the proceeding on his application for
temporary compensation. The Department’s argument fails. Procedural unfairness is not the
only consideration material to whether application of collateral estoppel would work an injustice
against a party. See, e.g., Hadley, 144 Wn.2d 306.
         The Department next relies on State v. Hite, 3 Wn. App. 9, 472 P.2d 600 (1970), for the
proposition that the inquiry into the fourth element of collateral estoppel includes a foreseeability
component. Because Hite sets forth no such proposition, the Department’s reliance is unavailing.


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No. 76324-5-1/14


                                            lv
        The Department and the City next contend that they established that res

judicata precludes Weaver’s application for permanent total disability benefits.

        We disagree.

                                            A

        Res judicata is an equitable court-created doctrine established at common

law. See Weidlich v. lndeic. Asrhalt Paving Co., 94 Wash. 395, 406, 162 P. 541

(1917); see also J.M. Weatherwax Lumber Co., 38 Wash. at 548; United States

v. 111.2 Acres of Land, 293 F. Supp. 1042, 1049(E.D. Wash 1968), affd, 435

F.2d 561 (9th Cir. 1970); accord Trautman, 60 WASH. L. REV, at 806, 828-29.

Generally, res judicata bars the relitigation of claims that were litigated, might

have been litigated, or should have been litigated in a prior action. Loveridge v.

Fred Meyer, Inc., 125 Wn.2d 759, 763, 887 P.2d 898 (1995).

        In Washington, res judicata applies “where a prior final judgment is

identical to the challenged action in ‘(1) subject matter, (2) cause of action, (3)

persons and parties, and (4) the quality of the persons for or against whom the

claim is made.” Lynn, 130 Wn. App. at 836 (quoting Loveridge, 125 Wn.2d at

763).

        Here, there is no dispute that the Department and the City established the

third element of res judicata—concurrence of identity between persons and

parties—and the fourth element—concurrence of identity between quality of the

persons for or against whom the claim is made.




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No. 76324-5-1/15


       The City and Department contend that they established the second

element of res judicata—concurrence of identity of cause of action between

Weaver’s applications for compensation. This is so, the City and Department

assert, because the Industrial Insurance Act grants workers a single cause of

action for an allowance.

       We accept, without analysis and for the limited purpose of resolving the

matter before us, the contention that the Act sets forth a single cause of action

for an allowance.

                                          B

       The Department and the City next contend that they established the first

element of res judicata—concurrence of identity in subject matter between

Weaver’s applications for compensation under the Act. They did not.

                                          1

       In determining whether a party has established concurrence of identity of

subject matter between two claims, the critical factors are “the nature of the claim

or cause of action and the nature of the parties.” Trautman, 60 WASH. L. REv, at

812-13 (citing Mellorv. Chamberlin, 100 Wn.2d 643, 673 P.2d 610 (1983)). As

set forth in Black’s Law Dictionary, “subject matter” is “[t]he issue presented for

consideration; the thing in which a right or duty has been asserted; the thing in

dispute.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1652 (10th ed. 2014) (emphasis added).

       Our Supreme Court’s decision in Mellor is instructive. There, the court

addressed whether a lawsuit predicated on the same real estate transaction as

an earlier lawsuit constituted litigation of the same subject matter for the purpose



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No. 76324-5-1/16


of res judicata. Answering in the negative, the court ruled that, “[a]lthough both

lawsuits arose out of the same transaction (sale of property), their subject matter

differed. The first lawsuit disputed whether the Chamberlins misrepresented the

parking lot as part of the sale. The second questioned whether Buckman’s claim

of encroachment breached the covenant of title.”8 Mellor, 100 Wn.2d at 646.

        In support of its ruling, the Mellor court relied on its decision in Harsin v.

Oman, 68 Wash. 281, 123 P. 1(1912), wherein

        the plaintiff initially sued for a breach of a covenant against
        encumbrances and recovered nominal damages. A more
        substantial breach occurred and plaintiff sued on the same
        covenant. Harsin v. Oman, supra at 283. Defendants argued the
        second action was barred by res judicata. Holding for the plaintiff,
        we declared:
                 While it is admitted, there can be but one recovery
                 upon the same cause of action. This does not mean
                the subject-matter of a cause of action can be litigated
                 but once. It may be litigated as often as an
                 independent cause of action arises which, because of
                its subsequent creation, could not have been litigated
                in the former suit, as the right did not then exist. It
                follows from the very nature of things that a cause of
                action which did not exist at the time of a former
                judgment could not have been the subject-matter of
                the action sustaining that judgment.
        68 Wash. at 283-84.
                The law in Harsin is applicable in this present case. When
        the first suit for misrepresentation was filed, Mellor had neither
        suffered damages from the encroachment nor was he under an
        obligation to insist Buckman enforce her rights. Mellor v.
        Chamberlin, supra [34 Wn. App. 378,] 382-83 [, 661 P.2d 996
        (1983)]. It was over a year after the settlement of the
        misrepresentation claim that Buckman decided to enforce her
        encroachment claim. Until that time, Mellor’s lawsuit was not ripe.



        8 The misrepresentation action sought damages arising from the misleading conduct

regarding the parking lot and the breach of a covenant of title action presumably sought recovery
of $5,000 (the amount that the Chamberlins paid to Buckman to purchase the encroaching
property), plus costs and fees. Mellor, 100 Wn.2d at 644-45.


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No. 76324-5-1/17


MeIlor, 100 Wn.2d at 646-47 (emphasis added). Thus, the Mellor court ruled that

the second claim therein was not identical in subject matter to the prior claim

because, at the time that the prior claim was filed, the subject matter underlying

the second claim did not exist—and, hence, could not have been litigated.

       Accordingly, pursuant to the reasoning in Mellor and Harsin, the question

before us is whether the Department and the City established that the subject

matter of Weaver’s applications for compensation were identical—that is,

whether the subject matter of his application for permanent total disability

benefits could—or should—have been litigated during the proceeding on his

application for temporary total disability benefits.

                                           2

       The Department and the City have not established that the subject matter

of Weaver’s applications pursuant to the Act is identical. Indeed, the Department

and the City have not shown that Weaver’s applications sought identical relief.

They have not shown that his applications alleged identical facts. And, critically,

they have not shown that the foregoing relief and facts set forth in his application

for permanent total disability benefits could have or should have been litigated

during the proceeding on his application for temporary total disability benefits.



       The Department has not established that the relief sought by Weaver in

his applications for compensation under the Act was identical.

       As indicated, Weaver submitted two different applications for benefits—an

application for temporary total disability benefits and an application for permanent



                                         -17-
No. 76324-5-1/18


total disability benefits. In his application for temporary benefits, Weaver sought

a one-time award of compensation arising from his total inability to work for a

period of five weeks due to the treatment of the malignant melanoma on his

shoulder. His application for permanent benefits, in contrast, requested recurring

pension payments arising from his total inability to obtain gainful employment

because of his metastasized malignant melanoma. That each of Weaver’s

applications requested different compensation suggests that he was not seeking

identical relief in each application.

       As will be addressed below, both the circumstances under which the Act

was enacted and the Act’s provisions reinforce this view. In addition, in

reviewing the Act, we are mindful that

       [t]he guiding principle in construing provisions of the Industrial
       Insurance Act is that the Act is remedial in nature and is to be
       liberally construed in order to achieve its purpose of pro viding
       compensation to all covered employees injured in their
       employment, with doubts resolved in favor of the worker.

Dennis v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 109 Wn.2d 467, 470, 745 P.2d 1295 (1987)

(emphasis added) (citing RCW 51.12.010; Sacred Heart Med. Ctr. v. Carrado, 92

Wn.2d 631, 635, 600 P.2d 1015 (1979); Lightle v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 68

Wn.2d 507, 510, 413 P.2d 814 (1966); Wilberv. Dep’tofLabor& Indus., 61

Wn.2d 439, 446, 378 P.2d 684 (1963); State ex rel. Crabb v. Clinger, 196 Wash.

308, 311, 82 P.2d 865 (1938); Gaines v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 1 Wn. App.

547, 552, 463 P.2d 269 (1969)).

       The provisions and structure of the Act suggest that the legislature

deliberately separated out the subject matter of a worker’s personal injury action.



                                         -   18-
No. 76324-5-1/19


Prior to the Act’s passage, workers seeking damages for injuries suffered in the

course of their employment resorted to a common law personal injury action

against their employers. See, e.g., McGuire v. Bryant Lumber & Shingle Mill Co.,

53 Wash. 425, 102 P. 237 (1909); Ongaro v. Twohy, 49 Wash. 93, 94 P. 916

(1908). In this personal injury action, a worker had to not only allege and prove

all factual bases and damages arising from the workplace injury but also prove

the possibility of future damages (aggravation or death) arising from the injury, or

else be precluded from doing so in a subsequent action. Sprague v. Adams, 139

Wash. 510, 520, 247 P. 960 (1926) (“[T]he decided weight of authority in this

country supports the view that damages resulting from a single tort.. are, when      .




suffered by one person, the subject of only one suit as against the wrongdoer.”);

McGuire, 53 Wash, at 429. Accordingly, at common law, the cause of action

then-available to workers and the subject matter underlying that cause of action

were one and the same.9

        In 1911, however, the legislature abolished the worker’s personal injury

action, declaring:

                The common law system governing the remedy of workmen
        against employers for injuries received in hazardous work is
        inconsistent with modern industrial conditions. In practice it proves
        to be economically unwise and unfair. Its administration has
        produced the result that little of the cost of the employer has
        reached the workman and that little only at large expense to the
        public. The remedy of the workman has been uncertain, slow and
        inadequate. Injuries in such works, formerly occasional, have
        become frequent and inevitable. The welfare of the state depends

        ~ Indeed, in such a tort action, splitting a claim was forbidden. Sprague, 139 Wash. 510;
White v. Miley, 137 Wash. 80, 241 P. 670 (1925); Kinsey v. Duteau, 126 Wash. 330, 218 P. 230
(1923); Collins v. Gleason, 47 Wash. 62, 91 P. 566 (1907); Kline v. Stein, 46 Wash. 546, 90 P.
1041 (1907); see also Enslev v. Pitcher, 152 Wn. App. 891, 222 P.3d 99(2009); Landrv v.
Luscher, 95 Wn. App. 779, 976 P.2d 1274 (1999).


                                              -   19-
No. 76324-5-1/20


        upon its industries, and even more upon the welfare of its wage-
        worker. The State of Washington, therefore, exercising herein its
        police and sovereign power, declares that all phases of the
        premises are withdrawn from private controversy, and sure and
        certain relief for workmen, injured in extra hazardous work, and
        their families and dependents is hereby provided regardless of
        questions of fault and to the exclusion of every other remedy,
        proceeding or compensation, except as otherwise provided in this
        act; and to that end all civil actions and civil causes of action for
        such personal injuries and all jurisdiction of the courts of the state
        over such causes are hereby abolished, except as in this act
        provided.

LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,        § 1, at 345 (emphasis added).1°
        As explained by our Supreme Court:

        The Act is based on a quid pro quo compromise between
        employees and employers. The court in Stertz v. Industrial Ins.
        Comm’n, 91 Wash. 588, 590-91, 158 P. 256 (1916) explained the
        compromise: The employer agreed to pay on some claims for
        which there had been no common law liability in exchange for
        limited liability. The employee agreed to give up available common
        law actions and remedies in exchange for sure and certain relief
        under the Act. See Weiffenbach v. Seattle, 193 Wash. 528, 534-
        35, 76 P.2d 589 (1938).

McCarthy v. Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs., 110 Wn.2d 812, 816, 759 P.2d 351

(1988) (emphasis added). Accordingly, the Act provided a legal framework for

relief distinct from that previously available to workers at common law.11

        As applied to the statutory relief made available to workers, the Act’s

provisions suggest that the legislature split the relief obtainable by workers in a



        10   This provision, as codified, remains identical, with the exception of its first sentence,
which now reads: The common law system governing the remedy of workers against employers
for injuries received in employment is inconsistent with modern industrial conditions.” RCW
51 .04.010 (emphasis added).
           ~ See also Carrera v. Olmstead, 196 Wn. App. 240, 246, 383 P.3d 563 (2016), affd, 189
Wn.2d 297, 401 P.3d 304 (2017) (the Act “grant[ed] workers injured on the job ‘speedy and sure
relief’ in the form of workers’ compensation benefits, but prohibit[ed] them from bringing
negligence actions against their employers”).


                                                -   20   -
No. 76324-5-1/21


manner that did not previously exist at common law. Initially, and most

obviously, the Act both categorized the relief available to workers into

compensation schedules—predicated on the scope of the worker’s injury—and

fixed to a specified amount the relief available to workers. See LAWS OF 1911,

ch. 74,    § 5(a), at 356-58 (compensation schedule for an injury causing death);
LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,      § 5(b), at 358 (compensation schedule for an injury
causing permanent total disability); LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,       § 5(d), at 359
(compensation schedule for an injury causing temporary total disability); LAWS OF

1911, ch. 74,    § 5(f), at 360 (compensation schedule for an injury causing
permanent partial disability).12 Compensation schedules that separated out and

established the relief to which a worker was entitled based on the scope of the

disability did not, of course, exist at common law.

          Additionally, the Act separated out the relief that the worker could obtain

for an aggravation of an initial injury.

          If aggra vat/on, diminution, or termination of disability takes place or
          be discovered after the rate of compensation shall have been
          established or compensation terminated in any case the
          department may, upon the application of the beneficiary or upon its
          own motion, readjust for future application the rate of compensation
          in accordance with the rules in this section provided for the same,
          or in a proper case terminate the payments.

LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,     § 5(h) at 360-61 (emphasis added).13 The Act thus
provided a worker with the ability to obtain relief for an initial injury and—in a



          12See also RCW 51.32.050 (compensation schedule where injury causes death): RCW
51.32.060 (compensation schedule where injury causes permanent total disability): RCW
51 .32.080(compensation schedule where injury causes permanent partial disability): ROW
51.32.090 (compensation schedule where injury causes temporary total disability).
         13 See also ROW 51 .32.160.




                                           -21   -
No. 76324-5-1/22


subsequent action—obtain additional relief that had not been alleged during the

initial action. Consequently, this provision also separated the relief available to a

worker in a manner not existing at common law. Accordingly, these provisions

support that the legislature explicitly separated out the relief available to workers

into distinct subject matter, rather than the unified subject matter of the common

law claim.

       In this light, Weaver’s applications under the Act did not seek identical

relief. In fact, neither the Department nor the City dispute that his requests for

temporary total disability benefits and permanent total disability benefits sought

distinct compensation.

       Nevertheless, the Department and the City contend that Weaver’s

applications sought identical relief. This is so, they assert, because the only

subject of relief set forth in the Act was compensation for workplace injuries.

Therefore, the Department and the City continue, Weaver’s applications merely

sought compensation under the Act and thus had identical subject maffer.

       This myopic contention is unconvincing. As analyzed, the foregoing

provisions of the Act suggest that the legislature did not, in actuality, set forth a

singular form of relief for compensation for workplace injuries. Indeed, a single

award of compensation was the relief previously available at common law and,

as indicated, the legislature specifically declared that it was abolishing the

common law action and replacing it with a distinct statutory scheme. LAWS OF

1911, ch. 74,   §   1, at 345.




                                         -   22   -
No. 76324-5-1/23


        Thus, the Department and the City have not established that Weaver’s

applications sought identical relief under the Act.



        The Department and the City have also not established that Weaver’s

applications involved identical facts.

       As indicated, Weaver filed an application for temporary total disability

benefits and another application for permanent total disability benefits. In

support of his application for temporary compensation that he filed in 2011, he

alleged that he suffered from a malignant melanoma on the skin of his shoulder,

the treatment of which caused him to miss five weeks of work before he was able

to return. He further alleged that his employment as a firefighter caused the

cancer.

        In support of his application for permanent compensation that he filed in

2014, he alleged that he suffered from a newly diagnosed metastatic malignant

melanoma that manifested itself as a brain tumor and that he was permanently

unable to obtain gainful employment.14

        Generally speaking, although there are some commonalities between

Weaver’s applications, it is evident that the facts underlying his applications are

not identical. The Act—and judicial construction thereof—reinforce this view.

       As will be iterated below, the Act’s provisions suggest that the legislature

split the evidence and proofs that a worker’s application could establish in a



        14 Weaver’s 2014 application also alleged that he suffered from a malignant melanoma

on his shoulder and that his employment as a firefighter caused the cancer.


                                            -23-
No. 76324-5-1/24


manner that did not previously exist at common law. To begin, the Act required

the following in order to request compensation:

                 SEC. 5. Schedule of Awards
               Each workman who shall be injured whether upon the
        premises or at the plant or, he being in the course of his
        employment, away from the plant of his employer, or his family
        or dependents in case of death of the workman, shall receive out
        of the accident fund compensation in accordance with the
        following schedule, and, except as in this act otherwise provided,
        such payment shall be in lieu of any and all rights of action
        whatsoever against any person whomsover.

               SEC. 12. Filing Claim for Compensation
               (a) Where a workman is entitled to compensation under
        this act he shall file with the department, his application for
        such, together with the certificate of the physician who
        attended him, and it shall be the duty of the physician to inform the
        injured workman of his rights under this act and to lend all
        necessary assistance in making this application for compensation
        and such proof of other matters as required by the rules of the
        department without charge to the workman.

LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,       §~ 5, 12, at 356, 364-65 (bolded emphasis added).15
These provisions therefore require a worker to submit a certification of his

attending physician in order to support his application for compensation, a factual

predicate that was not specifically mandated at common law.

        Moreover, establishing an attending physician’s certification as a predicate

for a worker’s application suggests the worker was limited to only alleging the

factual basis for an actual—rather than a potential—injury. Unlike at common

law, these provisions do not suggest that the worker could allege facts in support


        15 See also RCW 51.28.020(1)(a). The Act defined that “[t]he words injury or injured, as
used in this act, refer only to an injury resulting from some fortuitous event as distinguished from
the contraction of disease.” LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74, § 3, at 349. The Act was later amended to
add “occupational diseases—including of the type alleged by Weaver in this matter—as
compensable when “such disease or infection” “arises naturally and proximately out of extra
hazardous employment.” LAWS OF 1941, ch. 235, § 1, at 772. See also RCW 51.32.160.


                                               -   24   -
No. 76324-5-1/25


of the possibility of additional injury or death arising from the initial injury.

Furthermore, by setting forth that a qualifying worker would receive

“compensation in accordance with the following schedule,” these provisions

linked a workers’ compensation to the specific injury alleged by the worker.

        Hence, by requiring specific proof of injury and linking the specified

compensation to such proof, a distinction not made at common law, these

provisions support that the Act separated out the factual basis for requesting

relief under the Act.

        Additionally, the foregoing provision authorizing compensation for a later-

discovered aggravation of a worker’s initial injury supports this view. ~ LAWS

OF 1911, ch. 74,    § 5(h) at 360-61 ~16 Indeed, a worker submitting an application
for an aggravation of an initial injury could not rely on the factual basis that

supported the worker’s initial application for compensation. Rather, the worker

was required “to present medical testimony of a causal connection based on

‘some objective medical evidence’ that the injury ‘has worsened since the initial

closure of the claim.” Hendrickson v. Dep’t of Labor & Indus., 2 Wn. App. 2d

343, 353, 409 P.3d 1162 (2018) (emphasis added) (quoting Tollycraft Yachts

Corp. v. McCoy, 122 Wn.2d 426, 432, 858 P.2d 503 (1993)) (quoting Washington

appellate decisional authority).17 Hence, this provision allowed a worker to

        16  If aggravation, diminution, or termination of disability takes place or be
         discovered after the rate of compensation shall have been established or
         compensation terminated in any case the department may, upon the application
         of the beneficiary or upon its own motion, readjust for future application the rate
         of compensation in accordance with the rules in this section provided for the
         same, or in a proper case terminate the payments.
         17 These evidentiary requirements are no mere formality.        [ljn dealing with the
Washington Industrial Insurance Act, ‘persons who claim rights thereunder should be held to strict
proof of their right to receive benefits provided by the [A]ct.” Wilson v. Dept of Labor & Indus., 6


                                              -   25   -
No. 76324-5-1/26


introduce new facts related to the initial injury in a subsequent compensation

proceeding that were not alleged during the initial compensation proceeding. As

indicated, at common law, a worker could not, of course, split his claim for

damages arising from a single injury.

        The provisions setting forth the factual basis for obtaining compensation

for an injury that disabled the worker and for an injury that resulted in the

worker’s death also support that the legislature split the factual basis of a

worker’s action. As indicated,      § 12 of the Act regarded the filing of a claim for
compensation and subsection (a) thereof set forth that, “Where a workman is

entitled to compensation under this act he shall file with the department, his

application for such, together with the certificate of the physician who attended

him.” LAWS OF 1911, ch. 74,       § 12(a), at 364. Notably, in subsection (b) of that
provision, the legislature set forth that,

        [w]here death results from injury the parties entitled to
        compensation under this act, or some one in their behalf, shall
        make application for the same to the department, which application
        must be accompanied with proof of death and proof of relationship
        showing the parties to be entitled to compensation under this act,
        certificates of attending physician, if any, and such other proof as
        required by the rules of the department.

Laws of 1911, ch. 74,     § 12(b), at 364-65 (emphasis added).18 Given that, an
application for an injury resulting in death required proof of death and proof of

relationship, a factual basis not identical to an application for an injury that results




Wn. App. 902, 907, 496 P.2d 551 (1972) (quoting Hastings v. Dept of Labor & Inclus., 24 Wn.2d
1, 12, 163 P.2d 142 (1945)).
         18 See also RCW 51.28.030.




                                            -26-
No. 76324-5-1/27


in a disabling condition. Again, such claim splitting was not permitted at common

law.

       Lastly, that the Act requires distinct factual bases in order to establish a

worker’s entitlement to a specific compensation schedule supports that the Act

separated out the facts of a worker’s claim. As pertinent here, the provision

regarding a “temporary total disability” requires a worker to establish that the

worker suffers from “a condition temporarily incapacitating the workman from

performing any work at any gainful occupation.” Bonko v. Dep’t of Labor &

Indus., 2 Wn. App. 22, 25, 466 P.2d 526 (1970) (emphasis added) (citing RCW

51.32.090; Nash v. De~’t of Labor & Indus., I Wn. App. 705, 709, 462 P.2d 988

(1969)). In contrast, a “[p]ermanent total disability is defined as a ‘condition

permanently incapacitating the workman from performing any work at any gainful

occupation.” Bonko, 2 Wn. App. at 25 (quoting RCW 51 .08.160).

       In this light, the foregoing provisions suggest that the Act split the factual

bases of the common law cause of action when creating the workers’

compensation system.

       As applied to the maffer herein, Weaver’s applications did not allege

identical facts. His application for temporary total disability benefits alleged that

he had missed five weeks of work arising from the treatment of the malignant

melanoma on his shoulder. In contrast, his application for permanent total

disability benefits alleged that he was permanently unable to continue on in his

employment after the malignant melanoma on his shoulder metastasized and

manifested itself as a brain tumor. Indeed, the medical evidence that he would



                                        -27-
No. 76324-5-1/28


need to present in order to support each application would clearly not be the

same. Thus, the factual basis for Weaver’s applications are not identical.

       Accordingly, the Department and the City did not establish that his

applications involved identical facts.

                                             III


       Lastly, and significantly, the Department and the City did not establish that

Weaver could—or should—have litigated the subject matter of his application for

permanent total disability benefits at the time that he litigated his application for

temporary total disability benefits.

       The factual basis for Weaver’s application for permanent total disability

benefits—the brain tumor—was not discovered until 2014, three years after his

application for temporary total disability benefits was submitted. Indeed, it is

undisputed that the basis underlying Weaver’s allegations of permanent disability

did not accrue until 2014—when the brain tumor impaired his capacity to perform

the duties of a firefighter. Therefore, the facts underlying Weaver’s application

for permanent total disability benefits and the relief that he sought thereunder

could not have been litigated at the time of his 2011 application.

       Nevertheless, the Department contends that Weaver should have litigated

the subject matter set forth in the application here at issue during the 2011

proceeding on his application for temporary total disability benefits. This is so,

the Department asserts, because facts regarding the potential that his cancer

might metastasize were set forth in the record during the 2011 proceeding.




                                         -   28    -
No. 76324-5-1/29


        The Department is mistaken. The referenced evidence was subject to

exclusion but came in without objection—for reasons tactical or otherwise.

Nevertheless, there is no indication that this evidence was material to Weaver’s

application during the earlier proceeding. Indeed, the possibility that Weaver’s

cancer might metastasize was irrelevant to whether Weaver was entitled to lump

sum compensation recoverable under the Act for his temporary inability to earn

wages as a firefighter while recovering from the surgery. Weaver did not fail to

litigate something that he should have litigated in the first proceeding. The

Department’s contention fails.19

                                                  C

        At the time that Weaver submitted his application for temporary total

disability benefits, the facts underlying his application for permanent total

disability benefits had not yet occurred and the permanent relief that he sought

thereunder could not plausibly have been requested. Thus, the Department and

the City have not established the first element of res judicata, that the subject

matter of Weaver’s applications were identical.




        19   The Department and the City also have not established that the equities underlying res
judicata are in their favor. As indicated, in construing the Act, we resolve doubts in favor of the
worker. See Dennis, 109 Wn.2d at 470. Initially, we are generally reluctant to apply this common
 law doctrine given that the legislature elected to preempt the worker’s common law personal
 injury action and institute its own statutory scheme while not electing to incorporate the law of
preclusion into the Act’s provisions. Caution in precluding Weaver’s application in this matter is
further warranted because it would weigh against the legislative judgment that cancer manifesting
itself during a worker’s employment as a firefighter is presumed to have been caused by the
firefighter’s employment. See RCW 51.32.185(1). Thus, the Department and the City have not
established that applying res judicata to preclude Weaver’s application would be equitable.


                                              -   29   -
No. 76324-5-1130


         Accordingly, the superior court erred by determining that res judicata

barred Weaver’s application for permanent total disability benefits.2021



            20 As indicated, we accepted, without analyzing, the Department’s contention that the Act

  sets forth a single cause of action for an allowance. We note, however, that if the Department or
 the City contend in the alternative that the Act sets forth multiple causes of action, res judicata
 would not apply. Indeed, if the Act sets forth multiple causes of action and, as analyzed, the Act
 abolished the common law action available to workers, this reinforces the view set forth herein
 that the legislature split the common law cause of action into multiple components. Assuming the
 common law action was so split, Weaver’s applications for compensation constituted separate
 causes of action and res judicata would not apply.
            21 After oral argument in this court, the City submitted a statement of additional

 authorities, citing four cases to us. One is an opinion from our court, decided six years ago.
 Three are Supreme Court cases decided more than 80 years ago. Needless to say, all were
 available to counsel when her briefing was filed.
            We have previously expressed our disaffection with this approach to appellate advocacy.
 See O’Neill v. City of Shoreline, 183 Wn. App. 15, 23, 332 P.3d 1099 (2014). By citing this
 authority to us, for the first time, after oral argument, counsel has deprived her opposing counsel
 of the opportunity to express his views on the authority. And, needless to say, counsel deprived
 us of the opportunity to explore the applicability, if any, of these cases during oral argument.
            Nevertheless, as dutiful messengers of our judicial reasoning, we elect to address the
 cases cited, as follows:
            1. Maqee v. Rite Aid, 167 Wn. App. 60, 277 P.3d 1(2012). This is an opinion explaining
 subject matter jurisdiction in general and the board’s subject matter jurisdiction in particular. It
 does not inform our analysis.
            2. Abraham v. DeD’t of Labor & Indus., 178 Wash. 160, 34 P.2d 457 (1934). This
 opinion nowhere uses the terms “collateral estoppel” or “res judicata.” It is, instead, a decision
 concerning whether the Department acted properly in vacating its own decision (akin to a court
vacating its own judgment). It does not inform our analysis.
            3. Luton v. De~’t of Labor & Indus., 183 Wash. 105, 48 P.2d 199 (1935). A case similar
to Abraham. After a compensation award became final, the Department unilaterally cancelled it.
The opinion nowhere uses the terms “collateral estoppel” or “res judicata,” instead discussing
 principles applicable to vacations of judgments. It does not inform our analysis.
           4. Ekv. Dep’tofLabor& Indus., 181 Wash. 91,41 P.2d 1097 (1935). This isacasewith
the result the City desires The opinion is brief, and self-admittedly scant in analysis. It does not
 mention “collateral estoppel” or “res judicata.” Nor does it apply the four-part res judicata
analysis. It does, however, observe that “a judgment is binding upon the party against whom it
 runs.” Ek, 181 Wash. at 94. Does this mean that the four-part res judicata test, for some reason,
does not apply when workers’ compensation is involved’? We think not.
            Indeed, Ek’s cursory analysis is hard to square with then-existing case law, if ER is
 indeed a res judicata decision.
           The four-part res judicata analysis was announced as the law of Washington in 1918. jj
 Pac. Ry. Co. v. Snohomish County, 101 Wash. 686, 688, 172 P. 878 (1918). This was 17 years
 prior to the Ek decision. Soon after the Ek decision, the Supreme Court issued a decision which
 it explicitly announced as turning on the application of res judicata. Clubb v. Sentinel Life Ins.
Co~ 197 Wash. 308, 310, 85 P.2d 258 (1938). The Clubb court explicitly applied the four-part res
judicata analysis. Years later, the Supreme Court applied the four-part analysis in a res judicata
case involving a workers’ compensation decision. Bordeaux v. Ingersoll Rand Co., 71 Wn.2d
392, 396, 429 P.2d 207 (1967).
            It may be that Ek was not a res judicata case. It may be that Ek’s analysis, as cursory as
it was, was simply aberrant. What is clear is that for 100 years the four-part res judicata analysis


                                                -   30   -
No. 76324-5-1/31


                                               V

        Weaver’s application for permanent total disability benefits is not barred by

collateral estoppel or by res judicata. In so concluding, we do not intend to

suggest that an issue in a workers’ compensation action can never be subject to

collateral estoppel. Indeed, there may be circumstances in which a worker had

an incentive to fully litigate the issue in an initial proceeding but did not.

        In addition, our decision in this matter does not indicate that res judicata

can never bar a subsequent petition for compensation in a workers’

compensation matter. Indeed, we can easily conceive of circumstances involving

the same subject matter where the worker did, could have, or should have

litigated the subject matter in an earlier proceeding.

       However, the laws of preclusion do not righifully apply to Weaver’s

application. As elucidated by Washington’s foremost scholar on civil procedure,

Professor Trautman,

        [t]here is danger that in seeking to relieve the crowded dockets and
        backlog of litigation, courts will too readily turn to the rules of res
       judicata and collateral estoppel. It is critical to remember that the
       doctrines of claim and issue preclusion are court-created concepts.
       Accordingly, they can be adjusted to accommodate whatever
       considerations are necessary to achieve the final objective—doing
       justice.

Trautman, 60 WASH. L. REV, at 842.

       By precluding Weaver from litigating the question of whether his

employment caused his cancer, even though he lacked sufficient economic



has been a component of the common law of Washington. It has been consistently applied by
our Supreme Court for at least the past 8 decades. Accordingly, we apply it herein.



                                           -   31   -
No. 76324-5-1/32


motivation to do so in the earlier proceeding, and by precluding him from litigating

his application for permanent total disability benefits, when he could not possibly

have brought that application in the earlier proceeding, the superior court did not

grant Weaver the justice to which he was entitled under the Act.

       Reversed.



                                                               /
We concur:




                                      -   32   -