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Electronically Filed
Supreme Court
SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
24-MAY-2021
10:59 AM
Dkt. 24 MO
SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAIʻI
KATE X. CUI,
Petitioner/Claimant-Appellant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF HAWAIʻI, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
Respondent/Employer-Appellee-Appellee, Self-Insured.
(Case No. AB 2011-206; DCD No. 2-09-40756)
KATE X. CUI,
Petitioner/Claimant-Appellant-Appellant,
vs.
STATE OF HAWAIʻI, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
Respondent/Employer-Appellee-Appellee, Self-Insured and
STATE OF HAWAIʻI, DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT,
Respondent/Adjuster-Appellee-Appellee.
(Case No. AB 2013-232; DCD No. 2-12-40661)
CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
(CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
(By: Recktenwald, C.J., Nakayama, McKenna, Wilson, and Eddins, JJ.)
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Petitioner/Claimant-Appellant-Appellant Kate X. Cui
(Cui) appeals from the Intermediate Court of Appeals’ (ICA)
January 2, 2020 Judgment on Appeal entered pursuant to its
December 3, 2019 Memorandum Opinion. The ICA affirmed the
October 26, 2016 Decision and Order of the State of Hawaiʻi Labor
and Industrial Relations Appeals Board (the LIRAB).
Cui first applied for workers’ compensation benefits
for a mental injury that she sustained as a result of harassment
by her supervisor in August 2009, while employed by
Respondent/Employer-Appellee-Appellee the State of Hawaiʻi,
Department of Health (Employer). Cui’s original diagnosis was
Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood, for
which Employer accepted liability. Employer began making
temporary disability payments, as ordered by the Director of
Labor and Industrial Relations (the Director).
In March 2010, Employer terminated Cui’s employment.
In June 2010, Cui’s doctor diagnosed her as suffering from Major
Depressive Disorder. After Cui’s diagnosis changed, the
Director determined that her Major Depressive Disorder was
caused by her termination and not her original stress injury.
As a result, the Director terminated Cui’s temporary disability
payments.
Cui filed a new workers’ compensation claim form for
the alleged injury arising out of her termination, as well as an
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amended claim form for her original claim, both listing Major
Depressive Disorder as her injury. At Cui’s request, the LIRAB
remanded both claims to the Director to determine whether her
Major Depressive Disorder was compensable under either claim.
As relevant here, the Director deferred determination of whether
Major Depressive Disorder was related to Cui’s original stress
injury because the Director could not locate a claim for Major
Depressive Disorder in the record.
Cui appealed to the LIRAB, which affirmed the
Director’s decision deferring the determination of whether Cui’s
Major Depressive Disorder was related to her August 2009 injury.
Based on the Director’s deferral of the issue, the LIRAB
concluded that it would be premature for it to decide the issue.
Cui appealed to the ICA, arguing inter alia, that her
Major Depressive Disorder was the result of a single continuous
injury which began in August 2009 and that the LIRAB abused its
discretion by deferring determination of compensability. The
ICA affirmed the LIRAB’s decision and held that the LIRAB did
not err by failing to address whether Cui’s Major Depressive
Disorder was related to her August 2009 injury because the
Director deferred determination of the issue.
A review of the record shows that Cui filed an amended
claim form for her August 2009 claim listing Major Depressive
Disorder as an injury. It appears that the Director overlooked
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Cui’s amended claim form and erroneously deferred determination
of the issue. In light of the circumstances presented here, the
LIRAB abused its discretion by declining to determine whether
Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was related to her August 2009
injury after the Director erroneously deferred determination.
Having filed an amended workers’ compensation claim form listing
Major Depressive Disorder as an injury, Cui was entitled to
receive a timely decision regarding whether her injury was
compensable.
Accordingly, we vacate the ICA’s January 2, 2020
Judgment on Appeal which affirmed the LIRAB’s October 26, 2016
Decision and Order and remand to the LIRAB for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
Cui was an epidemiologist with multiple advanced
degrees who began working for Employer in 1998. On
September 22, 2009, Cui filed a claim for workers’ compensation
benefits for a mental personal injury sustained on
August 3, 2009, initiating Case No. AB 2011-206/DCD No. 2-09-
40756 (WC Claim 1).1
1 Cui filed her claim using Form WC-5, entitled “Employee’s Claim for
Workers’ Compensation Benefits.” The date of accident listed on the Form
WC-5 was originally noted as August 17, 2009, but was subsequently corrected
to August 3, 2009 in the Director’s April 22, 2010 decision.
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On August 15, 2009, prior to filing WC Claim 1, Cui
was examined by a psychiatrist (Dr. Ponce) after being referred
by her primary care provider. Cui told Dr. Ponce that her work
stress began in February 2009 when her new supervisor
(Supervisor) gave Cui a negative performance review. Supervisor
began meeting with Cui weekly and Cui described the weekly
meetings to Dr. Ponce as “humiliating” and “harassment.”
Dr. Ponce diagnosed Cui with Adjustment Disorder with Mixed
Anxiety and Depressed Mood, arising out of the course of her
employment. Cui began treatment with Dr. Ponce and continued to
work.
On January 7, 2010, Cui was evaluated by another
psychiatrist (Dr. Steltzer) in an independent psychiatric
evaluation. Dr. Steltzer confirmed Dr. Ponce’s diagnosis.
By letter dated January 27, 2010, Adjuster-Appellee
State of Hawaiʻi, Department of Human Resources Development
(Adjuster) accepted liability for Cui’s workers’ compensation
claim for stress in the form of Adjustment Disorder with Mixed
Anxiety and Depressed Mood.
By letter dated February 8, 2010, Employer notified
Cui that she would be terminated from her position for failure
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to improve her performance (Termination Letter). Cui’s
employment was terminated effective March 25, 2010.2
A. Administrative Proceedings
On April 22, 2010, the Director issued a decision
finding that Cui’s Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and
Depressed Mood was a work injury, based on Employer’s acceptance
of liability. The Director ordered Employer to pay Cui weekly
temporary total disability benefits (TTD) and reserved the
matter of permanent disability for a later date. Neither party
appealed this decision.
Following her termination, Cui continued to see
Dr. Ponce for treatment and Dr. Ponce’s treatment notes from
these sessions demonstrate a substantial worsening of Cui’s
condition. In a June 1, 2010 treatment plan sent to Adjuster,
Dr. Ponce changed his diagnosis to Major Depressive Disorder.3
In an assessment dated September 7, 2010, Dr. Ponce opined that
once Cui accepted the reality of her termination, she
“decompensated and is now in a Major Depressive Disorder
state[.]” In a progress report dated September 11, 2010, Dr.
Ponce noted that Cui was “[v]ery depressed” and that her
2 Although the Termination Letter specified an effective date of
February 22, 2010, Cui’s termination was ultimately effective March 25, 2010,
after she requested and attended a pre-discharge hearing.
3 Dr. Ponce neither informed Cui of the change in diagnosis nor altered
her medication regimen based on his new diagnosis.
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“Adjustment Disorder has slipped into a Major Depressive
Disorder[.]”
Dr. Steltzer reviewed Cui’s medical records at the
request of Adjuster and summarized his findings in a report
dated October 28, 2010. Dr. Steltzer agreed with Dr. Ponce’s
diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder, but disagreed with
Dr. Ponce as to the cause. Dr. Steltzer concluded that Cui’s
Major Depressive Disorder was caused by her termination, whereas
Cui’s initial Adjustment Disorder was directly related to her
August 3, 2009 stress injury. In a letter to Adjuster dated
February 11, 2011, Dr. Steltzer restated his opinion that
“[Cui’s] major depression developed in response to being
terminated.”4
Adjuster, as Employer’s representative, terminated
Cui’s TTD benefits for WC Claim 1 effective March 21, 2011,
because it determined that Cui’s current diagnosis of Major
Depressive Disorder resulted from her March 25, 2010 termination
and not her original August 3, 2009 injury.
Following a hearing, the Director issued a
supplemental decision on July 1, 2011 concluding that Employer
4 A third doctor, Dr. Joseph P. Rogers, performed an independent mental
examination of Cui and agreed with Dr. Steltzer that “Cui’s Major Depressive
Disorder is no longer related to [WC Claim 1] with the understanding that her
termination from employment [March 2010] caused a new injury and her prior
Adjustment Disorder related to [WC Claim 1] was aggravated into the level of
a Major Depressive Disorder by her termination[.]” (Emphases added.)
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was justified in terminating Cui’s TTD benefits for WC Claim 1
based on the finding that Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was no
longer the result of the WC Claim 1 injury. Cui timely appealed
the Director’s supplemental decision to the LIRAB.
On August 10, 2012, Cui moved to temporarily remand
the case to the Director to rule on whether Cui’s Major
Depressive Disorder was a compensable injury. In an affidavit
attached to Cui’s motion to remand, Cui’s counsel attested that
he would file (1) an amended Form WC-5 for WC Claim 1 listing
Major Depressive Disorder as an additional injury suffered by
Cui as a result of the August 3, 2009 accident; and (2) a new
Form WC-5 alleging that Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder resulted
from her March 25, 2010 termination to ensure that “the Director
will have jurisdiction to decide all possible outcomes[.]” The
LIRAB granted Cui’s motion and remanded to the Director “to
address compensability of a claim to be filed by [Cui] for Major
Depressive Disorder and for determination of any other issue the
Director deems appropriate.”
On remand, Cui filed a Form WC-5 dated August 28, 2012
alleging that her Major Depressive Disorder resulted from her
termination on March 25, 2010, initiating LIRAB Case No.
AB 2013-232/DCD No. 2-12-40661 (WC Claim 2).
On May 1, 2013, Cui filed an “Amended” Form WC-5
(Amended Form WC-5) “[t]o add major depression as a diagnosis
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and facilitate adjudication of [her] claims.” Cui’s Amended
Form WC-5 listed the “Date of Accident” as March 25, 2010 (the
date she was terminated) and the “Date Disability Began” as
August 3, 2009.5
On May 2, 2013, the Director heard the issues on
remand. Cui argued that her Major Depressive Disorder was
compensable under WC Claim 1 because it was the result of a
continuous injury which began on August 3, 2009, and in the
alternative, that it was compensable as a new injury under
WC Claim 2. Employer argued that (1) the Director lacked
jurisdiction to consider whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder
was compensable under WC Claim 1 because the record contained no
written claim for Major Depressive Disorder related to the
August 3, 2009 injury;6 and (2) Cui’s WC Claim 2 was time-barred
because it was filed more than two years after her injury
manifested.
On June 6, 2013, the Director issued two separate
decisions as to whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was a
5 The record contains two Amended Forms WC-5, one that is typed and one
that is partially typed with handwritten strikethroughs and insertions. Both
forms are dated May 1, 2013.
6 According to Cui, after Employer argued that WC Claim 1 was never
amended to include a claim for Major Depressive Disorder, she filed a “Second
Amended WC-5” on May 3, 2013. However, both Amended Form WC-5s in the record
are date-stamped May 1, 2013.
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compensable injury. As to WC Claim 1, the Director’s decision
states in relevant part:
FINDINGS OF FACT
The Director’s Decision dated 4/22/2010 determined
that [Cui]’s injury of 8/3/2009 consisted of Adjustment
Disorder with Mixed Anxiety.7
The record affirms that a Major Depressive Disorder
is a psychological condition separate and distinct from an
Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety, although it is
possible for one to lead to the other.
The record is absent of a written claim from [Cui]
for a Major Depressive Disorder.
. . . .
PRINCIPLES OF LAW
. . . .
Section 386-86, HRS,8 and Hawaiʻi Supreme Court 89 H.
411,9 provides that where no written claim was filed with
7 The Director’s June 6, 2013 Decision misstated Cui’s full diagnosis,
which was Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood.
(Emphasis added.)
8 Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (HRS) § 386-86 (Supp. 2005) provides in
relevant part:
(a) If a claim for compensation is made, the
director shall make such further investigation as deemed
necessary and render a decision within sixty days after the
conclusion of the hearing awarding or denying compensation,
stating the findings of fact and conclusions of law. The
director may extend the due date for decisions for good
cause provided all parties agree. The decision shall be
filed with the record of the proceedings and a copy of the
decision shall be sent immediately to each party.
(b) The hearing shall be informal and shall afford
the parties a full and fair opportunity to present the
facts and evidence to be considered. Hearings under this
section shall not be subject to chapter 91. No
stenographic or tape recording shall be allowed.
(Emphases added.)
9 In Potter v. Hawaii Newspaper Agency, 89 Hawaiʻi 411, 423, 974 P.2d 51,
63 (1999), this court stated: “The plain language of [HRS § 386-86]
(continued . . .)
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the Director, the Director lacks the statutory authority to
award or deny benefits to an injured employee.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
The Director finds, based upon the above Findings of
Fact and Principles of Law, the Director is unable to make
a determination on the compensability of [Cui’s] Major
Depressive Disorder. The Director credits an absence for
said condition in the record.
(Emphases added.) Accordingly, the Director deferred
determination of whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was a
compensable injury under WC Claim 1.10
In the second written decision regarding WC Claim 2,
the Director concluded that Cui suffered a compensable injury of
Major Depressive Disorder as the result of her termination on
March 25, 2010. The Director waived the two-year statute of
limitations set forth in HRS § 386-82 (1993),11 “in light of the
confusing nature of [Cui’s] psychological situation having one
(. . . continued)
establishes that ‘a claim for compensation’ is a precondition of an order
awarding or denying workers’ compensation benefits. In the absence of a
lawful claim, the Director lacked the statutory authority either to award or
to deny benefits to [the worker].” (Emphasis added.)
10 The Director awarded Cui 8% permanent partial disability for WC Claim 1
based on her original diagnosis.
11 HRS § 386-82 (1993) provides in relevant part:
The right to compensation under this chapter shall be
barred unless a written claim therefor is made to the
director of labor and industrial relations (1) within two
years after the date at which the effects of the injury
for which the employee is entitled to compensation have
become manifest[.]
(Emphases added.)
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condition superimposed upon another with a delay in a
corresponding psychological explanation for claimant.”
Cui appealed the Director’s June 6, 2013 Decision in
WC Claim 1 and Employer and Adjuster (collectively Employer-
Adjuster) appealed the Director’s June 6, 2013 Decision in WC
Claim 2. On October 21, 2013, the parties stipulated to
consolidate the cases for WC Claim 1 and WC Claim 2.
The LIRAB heard the consolidated cases on
August 24, 2014, and both Cui and Dr. Ponce testified. As
relevant here, Dr. Ponce testified that (1) he saw Cui as a
patient between August 15, 2009 and May 24, 2014, approximately
thirty times total; (2) he initially diagnosed Cui with
Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood;
(3) from March to June 2010, after Cui was formally notified
that her position was terminated, she began to decompensate and
was in a “noticeable downward spiral,” so the diagnosis
“evolved” to Major Depressive Disorder; (4) Cui’s “depression
was present right from the start” and “gradual[ly] slip[ped]
into . . . [M]ajor [D]epressive [D]isorder.”
Both parties submitted post-hearing briefs to the
LIRAB, wherein each noted that the record contained an Amended
Form WC-5 listing Major Depressive Disorder as an additional
injury Cui suffered as a result of WC Claim 1.
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The LIRAB issued its October 26, 2016 Decision and
Order (LIRAB Decision and Order) on the consolidated appeals.
The LIRAB (1) affirmed the Director’s decision in WC Claim 1
because it concluded that it would be premature for the LIRAB to
determine whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was
compensable under WC Claim 1 since the Director had deferred
determination of whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder related
to her August 3, 2009 work injury; and (2) reversed the
Director’s decision in WC Claim 2 because it concluded that
Cui’s injury manifested by June 1, 2010 and was barred by the
two-year statute of limitations set forth in HRS § 386-82.
B. ICA Proceedings
Cui appealed to the ICA. On appeal, Cui argued that
her Major Depressive Disorder was compensable under WC Claim 2
and that her claim was timely filed because Cui did not know of
the probable compensable character of her injury before
Dr. Steltzer’s February 11, 2011 opinion. In the alternative,
Cui argued that her Major Depressive Disorder was compensable
under WC Claim 1 because it was the result of a single
continuous injury which began on August 3, 2009 and that the
LIRAB abused its discretion by deferring determination of
compensability.
In its answering brief, Employer-Adjuster repeated its
arguments that Cui’s WC Claim 2 was time-barred because Cui
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filed the claim more than two years after she “should have
recognized the nature and probable compensable character of her
major depressive disorder[.]” Regarding the LIRAB’s decision to
defer determination of whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder
was compensable under WC Claim 1, Employer-Adjuster argued that
because the Director had not yet made a determination, it was
within the LIRAB’s discretion to decline to make a
determination. Employer-Adjuster cited § 12-47-20 of the Labor
and Industrial Relations Appeal Board Rules of Practice and
Procedure (LAB Rules) which states: “The board may decline to
hear and determine any issue which the director in the decision
on appeal did not decide or left for future determination.”
The ICA affirmed the LIRAB Decision and Order. First,
the ICA concluded that the LIRAB did not err in concluding that
Cui’s WC Claim 2 was time-barred. Next, the ICA considered
whether the LIRAB abused its discretion by deferring
determination of whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was
compensable under WC Claim 1. The ICA noted that (1) the
Director conducted a hearing on the issue of compensability of
Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder on May 2, 2013; (2) the parties
agreed that Cui filed an Amended Form WC-5 on May 3, 2013;12 and
12 Although the ICA noted that there were two Amended Forms WC-5 in the
record date-stamped May 1, 2013, the ICA inferred that both of these were
filed under LIRAB Case No. AB 2013-232/DCD No. 2-12-40661 (WC Claim 2).
(continued . . .)
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(3) the Director’s June 6, 2013 Decision in WC Claim 1 deferred
determination of the issue of compensability based on the
alleged absence of an Amended Form WC-5 for Major Depressive
Disorder. Citing Hawaiʻi Administrative Rules (HAR) § 12-47-2013
and LAB Rules § 12-47-20, the ICA concluded that the LIRAB did
not abuse its discretion by failing to address whether Cui’s
Major Depressive Disorder was compensable under WC Claim 1
because the Director had not yet made a determination. In light
of the fact that both the Director and the LIRAB deferred
determination, the ICA further concluded that it was unable to
review Cui’s claim that her Major Depressive Disorder was the
result of a single continuous injury dating back to
August 3, 2009.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
A. Appeals from Agency Determinations Relating to Workers’
Compensation
Appellate review of the LIRAB’s decision is governed
by HRS § 91–14(g) (1993), which provides that:
Upon review of the record the court may affirm the
decision of the agency or remand the case with
instructions for further proceedings; or it may
(. . . continued)
Despite the fact that the ICA was unable to locate an Amended Form WC-5 dated
May 3, 2013 in the record, it credited as true the parties’ assertions in
briefing that an Amended Form WC-5 for WC Claim 1 was filed on May 3, 2013.
13 The language of HAR § 12-47-20 is identical to LAB Rules § 12-47-20.
Both rules state: “The board may decline to hear and determine any issue
which the director in the decision on appeal did not decide or left for
future determination.”
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reverse or modify the decision and order if the
substantial rights of the petitioners may have been
prejudiced because the administrative findings,
conclusions, decisions, or orders are:
(1) In violation of constitutional or statutory
provisions; or
(2) In excess of the statutory authority or
jurisdiction of the agency; or
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure; or
(4) Affected by other error of law; or
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable,
probative, and substantial evidence on the whole
record; or
(6) Arbitrary, or capricious, or characterized by
abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise
of discretion.
Tauese v. State, Dep’t of Labor & Indus. Relations, 113
Hawaiʻi 1, 25, 147 P.3d 785, 809 (2006) (quotation marks and
citations omitted).
The LIRAB’s conclusions of law are reviewed de novo,
under the right/wrong standard. Id. Its findings of fact
“are reviewable under the clearly erroneous standard to
determine if the agency decision was clearly erroneous in
view of reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on
the whole record.” Id. (quoting Poe v. Hawaiʻi Labor
Relations Bd., 87 Hawaiʻi 191, 195, 953 P.2d 569, 573
(1998)) (quotation marks omitted).
Van Ness v. State, Dep’t of Educ., 131 Hawaiʻi 545, 557–58, 319
P.3d 464, 476–77 (2014), as corrected (Feb. 4, 2014) (internal
citations corrected).
B. Interpretation of Agency Rules
General principles of statutory construction apply in
interpreting administrative rules. As in statutory
construction, courts look first at an administrative rule’s
language. If an administrative rule’s language is
unambiguous, and its literal application is neither
inconsistent with the policies of the statute the rule
implements nor produces an absurd or unjust result, courts
enforce the rule’s plain meaning. While an agency’s
interpretation of its own rules is generally entitled to
deference, this court does not defer to agency
interpretations that are plainly erroneous or inconsistent
with the underlying legislative purpose.
Liberty Dialysis-Hawaii, LLC v. Rainbow Dialysis, LLC, 130
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Hawaiʻi 95, 103, 306 P.3d 140, 148 (2013) (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted).
III. DISCUSSION
On certiorari, we consider whether the ICA erred in
affirming the LIRAB’s Decision and Order. Because we conclude
that the LIRAB abused its discretion by deferring determination
of whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was compensable under
WC Claim 1, we need not reach the issue of whether WC Claim 2
was untimely.
Cui filed a claim for Major Depressive Disorder under
WC Claim 114 and the Director was statutorily obligated to
determine whether her injury was compensable under that claim
within sixty days after the hearing.15 Yet, in the Director’s
June 6, 2013 Decision, the Director misstated Cui’s original
14 On August 16, 2012, the Board remanded to the Director “to address
compensability of a claim to be filed by [Cui] for Major Depressive Disorder
and for determination of any other issue the Director deems appropriate.” On
August 28, 2012, Cui filed a new claim form alleging that her Major
Depressive Disorder resulted from her termination on March 25, 2010,
initiating WC Claim 2. On May 1, 2013, Cui filed Amended Form WC-5 for her
WC Claim 1 adding Major Depressive Disorder.
15 HRS § 386-86 provides in relevant part:
(a) If a claim for compensation is made, the
director shall make such further investigation as deemed
necessary and render a decision within sixty days after the
conclusion of the hearing awarding or denying compensation,
stating the findings of fact and conclusions of law. . . .
(b) The hearing shall be informal and shall afford
the parties a full and fair opportunity to present the
facts and evidence to be considered.
(Emphases added.)
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diagnosis as “Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety,” rather
than “Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed
Mood[,]” and found that “[t]he record is absent of a written
claim from claimant for a Major Depressive Disorder.” (Emphasis
added.) The Director cited HRS § 386-32(a) and Potter, 89
Hawaiʻi 411, 974 P.2d 51, for the proposition that “where no
written claim was filed with the Director, the Director lacks
the statutory authority to award or deny benefits to an injured
employee.”16 Based on the purported “absence of a written claim
for said condition in the record[]” of WC Claim 1, the Director
concluded as a matter of law that “the Director is unable to
make a determination on the compensability of [Cui’s] Major
Depressive Disorder.”17
16 The Director’s reliance on Potter to defer determination of
compensability was misplaced. In Potter, this court considered whether a
claim form filed by an employer on behalf of an injured employee, without the
employee’s authorization, could be construed as a valid claim under HRS
chapter 386. 89 Hawaiʻi at 422-23, 974 P.2d at 62-63. We concluded that an
employer’s report of an industrial injury is not a lawful claim for workers’
compensation and that “[i]n the absence of a lawful claim, the Director
lacked the statutory authority either to award or to deny benefits to [the
employee].” Id. at 423, 974 P.2d at 63.
Here, the record contains both Cui’s original Form WC-5 listing
Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood and her Amended
Form WC-5, adding Major Depressive Disorder as an injury. (Emphasis added.)
Thus, even if the Director overlooked Cui’s Amended Form WC-5, this was not
like Potter in which “no lawful claim for workers’ compensation benefits was
filed with the Director[.]” See id.
17 Nor did the purported lack of a written claim for Major Depressive
Disorder for WC Claim 1 preclude the Director from making a declaratory
determination that Cui would be entitled to workers’ compensation benefits
for WC Claim 1 if she filed an amended claim form. In Potter, we reiterated
the general principle that the Director can make declaratory rulings:
“Unquestionably, the Director may issue declaratory rulings concerning
(continued . . .)
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“The plain language of [HRS § 386-86] establishes that
‘a claim for compensation’ is a precondition of an order
awarding or denying workers’ compensation benefits. In the
absence of a lawful claim, the Director lack[s] the statutory
authority either to award or to deny benefits to [an
applicant].” Potter, 89 Hawaiʻi at 423, 974 P.2d at 63. Here,
the record on appeal contains an Amended Form WC-5 dated
May 1, 2013 listing Major Depressive Disorder as an injury.
Thus, the precondition for “a claim for compensation” was met,
see id., and the Director’s finding that the Director lacked
statutory authority to determine the compensability of Cui’s
Major Depressive Disorder under WC Claim 1 was clearly
erroneous.
Based on the Director’s decision to defer
determination, the LIRAB concluded that it would be “premature”
for it to determine whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was
compensable under WC Claim 1. The LIRAB cited no authority for
its own deferral of the issue and failed to acknowledge that Cui
actually filed an Amended Form WC-5, despite the fact that both
parties referred to the Amended Form WC-5 in their briefs.
(. . . continued)
whether, in a specific set of circumstances, a claimant would be entitled to
workers’ compensation benefits upon the bringing of a lawful claim.”
89 Hawaiʻi at 423, 974 P.2d at 63.
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Here, the LIRAB exercised its discretion when it
declined to address the issue of whether Cui’s Major Depressive
Disorder was related to WC Claim 1. Accordingly, this court
reviews the LIRAB’s decision to defer determination of the issue
reserved by the Director for abuse of discretion. See Van Ness,
131 Hawaiʻi at 558, 319 P.3d at 477.
The standard of review for administrative agencies
therefore consists of two parts: first, an analysis of
whether the legislature empowered the agency with
discretion to make a particular determination; and second,
if the agency’s determination was within its realm of
discretion, whether the agency abused that discretion (or
whether the agency’s action was otherwise “arbitrary, or
capricious, or characterized by ... [a] clearly unwarranted
exercise of discretion[.]” HRS § 91–14(g)(6)). If an
agency determination is not within its realm of discretion
(as defined by the legislature), then the agency’s
determination is not entitled to the deferential “abuse of
discretion” standard of review. If, however, the agency
acts within its realm of discretion, then its determination
will not be overturned unless the agency has abused its
discretion.
Paul’s Elec. Serv., Inc. v. Befitel, 104 Hawaiʻi 412, 417, 91
P.3d 494, 499 (2004), as corrected (July 14, 2004) (internal
citation omitted) (emphasis added). Both HAR § 12-47-20 and LAB
Rules § 12-47-20 provide that “[t]he board may decline to hear
and determine any issue which the director in the decision on
appeal did not decide or left for future determination.” The
authorizing statute for both rules is HRS § 371-4 (2015), which
states in relevant part that “[t]he board shall have power to
decide appeals from decisions and orders of the director of
labor and industrial relations issued under the workers’
compensation law[.]” Thus, the LIRAB was empowered by the
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Legislature to decline to determine whether Cui’s Major
Depressive Disorder was compensable under WC Claim 1 because the
Director had yet to render a decision on compensability.
However, as previously stated, the Director’s decision
to defer determination of the issue based on the purported
absence of an Amended Form WC-5 was clearly erroneous. The
record on appeal to the LIRAB contained Cui’s Amended
Form WC-5.18 Moreover, because the LIRAB conducted a hearing on
the consolidated cases and heard testimony from Cui and
Dr. Ponce, the LIRAB had the benefit of additional evidence that
was not before the Director. By enacting HRS § 386-86, the
Legislature mandated that workers’ compensation claimants would
receive a timely decision on the merits of their claims. See
HRS § 386-86(a) (“If a claim for compensation is made, the
director shall . . . render a decision within sixty days after
the conclusion of the hearing awarding or denying compensation,
stating the findings of fact and conclusions of law.”). Yet
here, after holding a hearing on Cui’s consolidated claims to
determine the issue of compensability, the LIRAB either
18 We also note that the Form WC-5 is only two-pages long and was
unlikely to provide the Director with additional information to make a
determination regarding compensability, considering that the record already
contained voluminous medical and psychiatric records which documented Cui’s
condition and treatment.
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overlooked or ignored Cui’s Amended Form WC-5 and deferred
determination of the issue.
In light of the circumstances of this case and the
statutory mandate that claimants receive a decision within sixty
days of a hearing, see HRS § 386-86(a), we conclude that the
LIRAB abused its discretion by deferring determination of
whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was compensable under WC
Claim 1.
On appeal, the ICA held that the LIRAB did not err by
deferring determination because HAR § 12-47-20 and LAB Rules
§ 12-47-20 permit the LIRAB to “decline to hear and determine
any issue which the director in the decision on appeal did not
decide or left for future determination.” However, here, the
literal application of this rule “produces an absurd [and]
unjust result,” see Liberty Dialysis-Hawaii, 130 Hawaiʻi at 103,
306 P.3d at 148, because it would permit the LIRAB to defer
determination of the issue based on the Director’s erroneous
finding that Cui failed to file an Amended Form WC-5. Moreover,
the ICA found Cui’s Amended Form WC-5 in the record, yet still
concluded that the LIRAB did not err in deferring determination
of the issue. As a result, the ICA erred by affirming the LIRAB
Decision and Order because the LIRAB abused its discretion by
declining to make a determination on whether Cui’s Major
Depressive Disorder was compensable under WC Claim 1.
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Accordingly, we remand to the LIRAB for further
proceedings to determine whether Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder
was compensable under WC Claim 1 because it is related to her
original injury.19
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the ICA’s
January 2, 2020 Judgment on Appeal which affirmed the LIRAB’s
October 26, 2016 Decision and Order and remand to the LIRAB for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DATED: Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, May 24, 2021.
Lowell K.Y. Chun-Hoon /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
and Rosalyn G. Payen
for petitioner /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
/s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
Shawn L.M. Benton for
respondent employer-appellee- /s/ Michael D. Wilson
appellee, self-insured State
of Hawaiʻi, Department of /s/ Todd W. Eddins
Health and respondent adjuster-
appellee-appellee State of
Hawaiʻi, Department of Human
Resources Development
19 As the ICA correctly noted, there is no decision “to review Cui’s
contention that this entire matter arose from the August 3, 2009 injury and
should be treated as a single injury.” However, the record does seem to
support Cui’s argument that her mental impairment should be treated as a
single industrial injury dating back to WC Claim 1. Dr. Ponce, Cui’s
treating psychiatrist who saw her more than thirty times, has consistently
opined that Cui’s Major Depressive Disorder was related to her original
stress injury and not caused by her March 25, 2010 termination.
Additionally, the most severe manifestation of Cui’s psychiatric disorder
occurred in April 2009 when Cui engaged in self-harm — which was the original
stress injury that Cui sought treatment for. Thus, the record supports Cui’s
argument that her mental impairment should be treated as a single industrial
injury dating back to WC Claim 1.
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