NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
No. 119,044
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
AMIEL C. GREEN,
Appellant,
v.
GENERAL MOTORS CORP.,
Appellee.
Appeal from Workers Compensation Board. Opinion on remand filed February 25, 2022.
Affirmed.
Dennis L. Horner, of Boyd, Kenter, Thomas & Parrish, LLC, of Olathe, for appellant.
Kristina Mulvany, of McAnany, Van Cleave & Phillips, P.A., of Kansas City, for appellee.
Before GARDNER, P.J., ATCHESON and POWELL, JJ.
ATCHESON, J.: Based on what seems to have been a substantial amendment to
K.S.A. 44-523(f)(1) in 2011, we held that Amiel C. Green was entitled to a hearing
before his workers compensation claim against General Motors Corporation was
dismissed with prejudice for an ostensible failure to prosecute. We concluded the change
in statutory language eliminated a categorical rule requiring the dismissal of workers
compensation claims after a fixed period of years, even if they were actively pursued, as
Green has done in this case. Green v. General Motors Corp., 56 Kan. App. 2d 732, 733,
437 P.3d 94 (2019) (Green I). The Workers Compensation Board branded the earlier
inflexible rule "clearly harsh" and chafed at having to apply it. See Green v. General
Motors Corp., No. 1,044,211, 2018 WL 1176256, at *2-3 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd.
February 27, 2018).
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General Motors didn't see things that way and filed a petition for review of Green
I. The Kansas Supreme Court granted the petition, summarily vacated our opinion, and
remanded in a one-paragraph order directing us, without further explanation, to
reconsider our determination in light of Glaze v. J.K. Williams, 309 Kan. 562, 439 P.3d
920 (2019), and Knoll v. Olathe School District No. 233, 309 Kan. 578, 439 P.3d 313
(2019), two opinions issued after Green I. We asked the parties to brief how those cases
affected Green's claim. They have done so.
Given the broadly phrased single syllabus point in Glaze, we are constrained by
the force of stare decisis to now deny relief to Green and affirm the dismissal of his claim
for a failure to prosecute. See K.S.A. 20-203 (syllabus of "the points of law decided in
any case" shall be included with opinions of Supreme Court); see also Northern Natural
Gas Producing Co. v. McCoy, 195 Kan. 133, 403 P.2d 128 (1965) (three-paragraph per
curiam opinion reverses district court because "syllabus and corresponding part" of
earlier decision "controls . . . the present case"); Allied Mutual Ins. Co. v. McAuley, No.
68,620, 1993 WL 13965917, at *2 (Kan. App. 1993) (unpublished opinion) ("The
syllabus is a summary of the points of law decided in the case . . . and may be cited as
law."). But Glaze addressed a different part of K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) and never
discussed the amended language we examined and construed in Green I. We remain of
the view that the better application of the statute favors the result we previously reached
and would allow Green to explain why he should be permitted to move ahead with his
claim. We, of course, cannot disregard a controlling opinion of the Kansas Supreme
Court. See Majors v. Hillebrand, 51 Kan. App. 2d 625, 629-30, 349 P.3d 1283 (2015).
ANALYSIS
The facts pertinent to the issues on appeal are both quite limited and undisputed.
We borrow them from Green I:
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"Green, an assembly line worker at General Motors, suffered repetitive-use injuries to
both his hands and filed a claim for workers compensation benefits in early 2009. Green
underwent multiple examinations and received various forms of treatment with less than
optimal results. As part of the workers compensation claims process, Green requested
more than a dozen preliminary hearings beginning in 2009 seeking treatment, temporary
benefits, or both. He had four preliminary hearings between 2013 and 2017. But the case
neither settled nor progressed to a final hearing.
"In July 2017, General Motors filed a motion to dismiss Green's claim for lack of
prosecution. Relying on K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f), the administrative law judge
granted the motion. Green appealed to the Board. In a split decision, the Board affirmed
the administrative law judge. The majority applied K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f) and held
the statutory language required dismissal. A dissenting board member would have
applied K.S.A. 2012 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) and would have rejected the automatic dismissal
of Green's claim for lack of prosecution." 56 Kan. App. 2d at 733-34.
Because the facts are undisputed and the resolution of Green's appeal rests on how K.S.A.
44-523(f) should be applied, we addressed a question of law in Green I and do so now.
Although the case comes to us through the Kansas Judicial Review Act, K.S.A. 77-601 et
seq., we owe no particular deference to the Board in deciding questions of law generally
and construing the Workers Compensation Act particularly. See K.S.A. 77-621(c)(4)
(reviewing court may reverse administrative agency decision that "has erroneously
interpreted or applied the law"); see also Fernandez v. McDonald's, 296 Kan. 472, 475,
292 P.3d 311 (2013) (appellate courts owe no deference to Board's statutory
interpretation of Workers Compensation Act).
This appeal presented a threshold issue for us in Green I as to whether the May
2011 amendments of K.S.A. 44-523(f) apply to the claim. Under the earlier version of the
statute, Green's claim automatically had to be dismissed for a failure to prosecute. As we
construed the amended version, Green was entitled to a hearing before an administrative
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law judge on the issue. We held that because Green's claim remained pending when the
statute was amended in 2011, he received the benefit of the apparent changes. Green I, 56
Kan. App. 2d 732, Syl. ¶ 3. We viewed the language governing the method for
dismissing a claim for lack of prosecution to be procedural, and General Motors agreed in
its briefing to us. 56 Kan. App. 2d at 735.
On this point, we see Knoll as consistent (or at least not in conflict) with our
assessment. 309 Kan. at 583. In Glaze, the amended version of K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-
523(f)(1) indisputably applied because the workplace injury happened after the change
went into effect—so the court did not discuss the point. See 309 Kan. at 574 (Rosen, J.,
dissenting) (2011 amendment in effect before Glaze was injured); see also Glaze v. J.K.
Williams, No. 1,063,419, 2016 WL 2619518, at *1 (Kan. Work. Comp. App. Bd. April
11, 2016) (Glaze injured on August 26, 2011).
The remaining (and pivotal) issue, then, is how the 2011 amendments to K.S.A.
44-523(f) impacted Green's claim. To elaborate on our resolution of the claim on remand,
we set out what we decided in Green I and then what the Kansas Supreme Court later
decided in Glaze. We again borrow directly from Green I:
"To explain why K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) requires reversal of the Board's
decision, we begin by looking at K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f) and then contrasting its
provisions with those of K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1). As a practical matter, we
simply explain our disagreement with General Motors' suggestion that the two versions
of the statute have the same impact on Green's claim.
"We start with K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f), the version the Board applied:
"'Any claim that has not proceeded to final hearing, a settlement
hearing, or an agreed award under the workers compensation act within
five years from the date of filing an application for hearing pursuant to
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K.S.A. 44-534, and amendments thereto, shall be dismissed by the
administrative law judge for lack of prosecution. The administrative law
judge may grant an extension for good cause shown, which shall be
conclusively presumed in the event that the claimant has not reached
maximum medical improvement, provided such motion to extend is filed
prior to the five year limitation provided for herein. This section shall not
affect any future benefits which have been left open upon proper
application by an award or settlement.' K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f).
The first sentence is particularly relevant here. It imposes a categorical rule of dismissal.
An administrative law judge must dismiss a claim for lack of prosecution if there has
been no regular hearing, settlement hearing, or agreed upon resolution within five years
of claimant's initial filing for a hearing. Under K.S.A. 44-534, any party may file for a
hearing if a claim for benefits cannot be resolved by agreement; the filing initiates the
agency adjudicatory process with an assignment of the claim to an administrative law
judge for further proceedings.
"We see no basis for assuming the Legislature intended the statutory 'shall' in
K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f)—commanding the administrative law judge to dismiss a
claim—to be read other than in its customary way as compelling a mandatory act. See
Gannon v. State, 298 Kan. 1107, 1141, 319 P.3d 1196 (2014). So K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-
523(f) functionally defined 'lack of prosecution' requiring dismissal as the failure of a
claim to reach a regular or settlement hearing or to be resolved with an agreed award
within five years of filing. Green's claim indisputably remained open; there never was a
regular hearing, a settlement hearing, or an agreed award. The preliminary hearings
Green sought and received are different and do not satisfy the statute. See K.S.A. 2017
Supp. 44-534a (scope of preliminary hearings).
"The statutory ground requiring dismissal of a claim for lack of prosecution is
clear and unyielding, save for a timely request for an extension that may or may not be
granted. The procedure for seeking an extension is set out in the second sentence of
K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f). That limited exception to dismissal allows an
administrative law judge to retain a claim for 'good cause' if the injured worker makes a
request within the five-year period. Green did not make a qualifying request.
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"In short, if K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f) were to govern Green's claim, the
administrative law judge and the Board correctly dismissed his claim. The Board
majority bridled at the result it reached in this case and explained it 'would rather treat
actively prosecuted claims as an exception to the dismissal required by K.S.A. 2008
Supp. 44-523(f).'
"As we have said, the Board should have applied K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1)
because the statute is procedural and that version had been in effect for several years
when General Motors sought to dismiss Green's claim. The Legislature substantially
revamped the Workers Compensation Act in 2011, including amendments to K.S.A. 44-
523. The amended version, K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1), provides:
"'In any claim that has not proceeded to a regular hearing, a
settlement hearing, or an agreed award under the workers compensation
act within three years from the date of filing an application for hearing
pursuant to K.S.A. 44-534, and amendments thereto, the employer shall
be permitted to file with the division an application for dismissal based
on lack of prosecution. The matter shall be set for hearing with notice to
the claimant's attorney, if the claimant is represented, or to the claimant's
last known address. The administrative law judge may grant an extension
for good cause shown, which shall be conclusively presumed in the event
that the claimant has not reached maximum medical improvement,
provided such motion to extend is filed prior to the three year limitation
provided for herein. If the claimant cannot establish good cause, the
claim shall be dismissed with prejudice by the administrative law judge
for lack of prosecution. Such dismissal shall be considered a final
disposition at a full hearing on the claim for purposes of employer
reimbursement from the fund pursuant to subsection (b) of K.S.A. 44-
534a, and amendments thereto.'"
Again, the first sentence of the amended statute is paramount and effectively controls the
immediate fate of Green's claim. The opening sentence provides that if a claim does not
proceed to a regular hearing, a settlement hearing, or an agreed award within three years
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after the filing of a hearing application, the employer may request dismissal for lack of
prosecution. After receiving the employer's request, the administrative law judge must
notify the claimant and set the matter for a hearing on whether the claim has been
prosecuted.
"Under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1), the delay in bringing a claim to one of
the designated hearings or an agreed resolution simply affords the employer the option to
ask for dismissal—triggering a hearing on whether there has been a lack of prosecution.
That's markedly different from K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f). As we have explained,
under the earlier version of the statute, the delay mandated dismissal of the claim.
Conversely, under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1), the lapse of time without a hearing or
agreed award no longer codifies or defines what constitutes 'lack of prosecution.' It
merely marks the threshold for an employer to present an argument for dismissal based
on a lack of prosecution.
"The change eliminates the patent unfairness the Board perceived in dismissing a
claim, such as Green's, where a final disposition appears to have been put off because of
the nature of the injury rather than because of inattention on the claimant's part. We may
presume the Legislature meant to reform the operation of K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f)
through the 2011 amendment by replacing mandatory dismissal with a hearing designed
to assess the circumstances of a particular claim and its handling. See Brennan v. Kansas
Insurance Guaranty Ass'n, 293 Kan. 446, 458, 264 P.3d 102 (2011) (courts typically
presume Legislature intended statutory amendment to alter operation or effect of statute).
On the whole, adjudicatory processes ought to prefer merits based resolutions to
indiscriminate, if ruthlessly efficient, dispositions grounded in procedural rules—an
objective advanced in K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1). See Fisher v. DeCarvalho, 298
Kan. 482, 500, 314 P.3d 214 (2013) ('litigants should not be unnecessarily penalized for
the simple neglect of their attorney[s]'); Bazine State Bank v. Pawnee Prod. Serv., Inc.,
245 Kan. 490, 495, 781 P.2d 1077 (1989) (Although default may be necessary when a
party's 'inaction . . . frustrates the orderly administration of justice,' the courts should
'resolve any doubt in favor of' a decision on the merits.); In re Estate of Moore, 53 Kan.
App. 2d 667, 693, 390 P.3d 551 (Atcheson, J., concurring) ('Absolute rules do have a
certain sheen emanating from their very absoluteness: . . . the result requires no debate
and brooks no deviation[;] . . . [b]ut eventually some unanticipated set of facts will rear
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up to demonstrate the rule to be less than entirely fair in its unforgiving rigidity.'), rev.
granted 307 Kan. 987 (2017).
"The Workers Compensation Act does not formally define failure to prosecute or
lack of prosecution. And K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) removed the functional
definition imposed through the mandatory rule for dismissal in K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-
523(f). Courts and the administrative agency, therefore, should now look to the
customary or usual meaning of the term for guidance. Sandifer v. United States Steel
Corp., 571 U.S. 220, 227, 134 S. Ct. 870, 187 L. Ed. 2d 729 (2014); Garetson Brothers v.
American Warrior, Inc., 51 Kan. App. 2d 370, 383, 347 P.3d 687 (2015). As a legal term,
lack of prosecution entails a party's failure to pursue an action with due diligence and at
least suggests indifference approaching abandonment of the cause. See Coutts v. Crider,
219 Kan. 692, 700, 549 P.2d 1019 (1976) (district court properly dismissed action by
lawyer to collect unpaid fee from former client where parties exchanged interrogatories
and nothing further happened in case for six years); Namelo v. Broyles, 33 Kan. App. 2d
349, 356-57, 103 P.3d 486 (2004) (district court properly dismissed case pending for six
years for lack of prosecution when plaintiff had only responded to interrogatories after an
order to compel and had failed to agree to deposition schedule). A leading commentator
has described the term this way: 'Dismissal for failure to prosecute ordinarily depends on
whether, under the facts and circumstances of the particular case, the plaintiff is
chargeable with want of due diligence in failing to proceed with reasonable promptness.'
24 Am. Jur. 2d, Dismissal, Discontinuance, and Nonsuit § 65 (2018 ed.).
"A dismissal for lack of prosecution under K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) is
with prejudice and, thus, operates as a bar to any recovery on the injured worker's claim.
By way of comparison, under the Kansas Code of Civil Procedure, a district court may
dismiss a civil action for failure to prosecute without a request so long as the plaintiff is
given notice and an opportunity to be heard. The dismissal is, however, without prejudice
to the action being refiled. K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 60-241(b)(2). If a defendant moves for
dismissal, the district court may grant the motion with or without prejudice in its
discretion. K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 60-241(b)(1). Dismissal with prejudice for lack of
prosecution is typically considered a harsh result to be sparingly imposed. See McGinnis
v. Steeleman, 199 So. 3d 69, 72-73 (Ala. Civ. App. 2015); Hunter v. Gang, 377 P.3d 448,
455-56 (Nev. App. 2016); Cotter v. Dias, 130 A.3d 164, 169 (R.I. 2016); 24 Am. Jur. 2d,
8
Dismissal § 63. Factors bearing on the determination typically include the length of the
delay in moving the case forward; reasons for the delay; what efforts had been made to
prosecute the claim; the party's personal responsibility, if any, for the delay; and
prejudice to the adverse party beyond the mere delay itself. Landise v. Mauro, 141 A.3d
1067, 1077 (D.C. App. 2016); Strong v. Intermountain Anesthesia, P.A., 160 Idaho 27,
31, 368 P.3d 647 (2016); 24 Am. Jur. 2d, Dismissal §§ 64 and 65; cf. Namelo, 33 Kan.
App. 2d at 357 (court broadly considers 'the circumstances presented in this case' in
affirming dismissal for failure to prosecute)." 56 Kan. App. 2d at 736-41.
In Green I, we focused on the first sentence of K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-523(f)(1)
and the substantial legislative changes to that language in 2011. See L. 2011, ch. 55, § 17.
As we pointed out, a significant modification presumptively signals legislative intent to
alter the statute's operation. Brennan, 293 Kan. at 458; see also State v. Letterman, 60
Kan. App. 2d 222, 228, 492 P.3d 1196 (2021); Scalia & Garner, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts 256 (2012) ("If the legislature amends or reenacts a
provision other than by way of a consolidating statute or restyling project, a significant
change in the language is presumed to entail a change in meaning."). A legislative change
also fits with ameliorating the statute's unfairness and the backdrop of criticism leveled at
the earlier version of K.S.A. 44-523(f) for requiring the dismissal with prejudice of
claims being actively pursued merely because of the passage of time. In Green I, we also
endeavored to explain how the amendment of the first sentence affected the balance of
the subsection.
In Glaze, the parties and a deeply divided court debated the import of the third
sentence in the 2011 version of K.S.A. 44-523(f)(1) and the implication of the
Legislature's decision to cut the time for a claimant to request an extension for good
cause from five years to three years. Glaze requested an extension more than three years
after filing his claim. Four members of the court, including an assigned district court
judge, held Glaze had failed to make a timely request for an extension. 309 Kan. at 569.
Justice Rosen, joined by Justices Johnson and Biles, dissented, arguing the extension
9
could be sought at any time but a claimant could take advantage of the conclusive
presumption of good cause only if he or she made the request before the three-year mark.
309 Kan. at 569 (Rosen, J., dissenting).
The judicial debate in Glaze fell into an exceptionally detailed give-and-take over
the precise wording and punctuation of the third sentence and a hypothetical about when
a baseball fan with a ticket for a rained-out game might be entitled to see another game as
a substitute. The two sides never discuss how the third sentence fits into the subsection or
interplays with the amended first sentence, ostensibly eliminating the categorical
dismissal of claims after a fixed number of years. So the amendment that was the focus in
Green I essentially goes unaddressed in the Glaze majority opinion.
Nonetheless, the Glaze opinion yielded a single syllabus point that reads: "Under
K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1), a workers compensation claimant must move for an
extension within three years of filing an application for hearing if the claim is to survive a
proper motion to dismiss." 309 Kan. 562, Syl. We take the syllabus to mean that a
claimant has to seek an extension within the three-year period as a necessary condition to
overcome an employer's motion to dismiss for a failure to prosecute. In other words, the
employer's motion must be granted as a matter of law if the claimant does not request an
extension. That's the upshot of the "if" clause at the end of the syllabus. But the Glaze
majority never explains where that conclusion comes from in the statutory language. The
closest approximation is an otherwise unadorned reference to the Court of Appeals
opinion. 309 Kan. at 569.
A panel of our court dismissed Glaze's argument about the first sentence of K.S.A.
2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) in a single paragraph that treated the fourth sentence of the
subsection—requiring dismissal "'if the claimant cannot establish good cause'"—as
governing both an employer's motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution brought under the
first sentence and a claimant's motion for an extension under the third sentence. Glaze v.
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J.K. Williams, 53 Kan. App. 2d 712, 716, 390 P.3d 116 (2017), aff'd 309 Kan. 562, 439
P.3d 920 (2019). But the fourth sentence more logically applies only to the third sentence
and a claimant's motion to establish good cause. Those two sentences are linked through
their reference to "good cause," the standard governing a claimant's requested extension.
The fifth and final sentence of the subsection directs that "[s]uch dismissal shall be
considered a final disposition at a full hearing . . . ." K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1). The
phrase "such dismissal" in that sentence describes the legal effect of both a "dismissal
based on lack of prosecution" upon the employer's motion (under the first sentence) and
the denial of the claimant's motion for an extension (under the fourth sentence). Under
the statutory language, granting an employer's motion raising a failure to prosecute and
denying a claimant's request for an extension both result in a dismissal of the claim,
although they are distinct procedural vehicles.
The Glaze panel came to its conclusion without examining the significant
amendment of the statutory language in 2011 or contemplating what the Legislature
intended to accomplish. 53 Kan. App. 2d at 716. Although the panel acknowledged the
unfairness in dismissing diligently pursued workers compensation claims because of the
passage of time—Glaze's claim, like Green's, fell in that category—it never considered
whether the legislative overhaul of the statute meant to fix that inequity. The panel didn't
so much as mention the substance of the amendment or the strong presumption that such
an amendment signals a legislative intent to alter a statute's operation. In short, the panel
opinion doesn't provide a clear analytical foundation for the syllabus point and
conclusion in the Supreme Court's affirmance.
As a matter of completeness, we do not see Knoll as adding anything to how
K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) should be read. In that case, Knoll asserted the five-year
deadline for seeking an extension in effect when she was injured governed her claim
rather than the three-year deadline in the 2011 version that became effective before she
sought an extension. An administrative law judge denied the extension as untimely, so
11
did the Board. In presenting the appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court, "[t]he parties
agree[d] that, if the 2011 version applies to this case, then Knoll's claim should have been
dismissed when she did not file a motion for extension within three years from filing her
application for hearing, but if the 2009 version applies, then Knoll's claim was not subject
to dismissal because she had five years to file the motion and she met that deadline."
Knoll, 309 Kan. at 581. As we have said, the court held that the 2011 version governed
and, in turn, affirmed the dismissal of Knoll's claim without further analyzing K.S.A.
2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1). Nothing in the opinion suggests the court looked beyond or
behind the parties' agreement in fashioning the holding. So the outcome in Knoll may be
no more than a product of the parties' agreement. In any event, Knoll offers nothing that
supplements or expands on the Kansas Supreme Court's reasoning for the holding in
Glaze.
In all fairness, the amended version of K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) is
something like a four-lane highway that has been heavily patched rather than fully
resurfaced: No matter what lane a motorist chooses some rough spots remain. In other
words, as K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 44-523(f)(1) now stands, its five sentences form something
less than a seamlessly integrated statutory process. Our resolution of the process in Green
I and the Kansas Supreme Court's resolution in Glaze have rough spots, although they
differ in character and effect.
As we acknowledged in Green I, our analysis leaves little incentive for a claimant
to file a motion for an extension and largely shifts the burden in seeking dismissal to the
employer to file a motion for lack of prosecution. 56 Kan. App. 2d at 741. But we impute
clear legislative purpose and utility to the 2011 amendment in eliminating the harsh
predecessor rule that categorically required dismissal of claims with prejudice after five
years. Our analysis conforms to settled precepts for reading legislative amendments and
takes account of the focused circumstances in play with this provision of the Workers
Compensation Act.
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By contrast, Glaze effectively renders the amendment of the first sentence of the
subsection vestigial and perpetuates the inequity in time-barring claims unless the
claimant seeks an extension. And the decision functionally shortens the bar from five
years to three years. Ultimately, as Glaze would have it, the hearing on an employer's
motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution, which is to be filed after the claim has been
pending for at least three years, serves no useful purpose.
Given the rule in Glaze, if a claimant files a timely motion for an extension under
K.S.A. 2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1), the administrative law judge may (obviously) either
grant or deny the request. If the extension is granted to the claimant, then the employer
has no basis to file a motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution. If the extension is denied,
meaning the claimant failed to show good cause, the claim is dismissed with prejudice for
that reason. The employer then has no need to file a motion to dismiss for lack of
prosecution. If the claimant fails to request an extension, the employer can file a motion
to dismiss for lack of prosecution. Based on the holding in Glaze, the administrative law
judge must grant the motion precisely because no extension had been requested. And the
administrative law judge must do so even if the claimant has diligently pursued the case,
so the dismissal is not because of a true failure to prosecute but because no extension had
been sought. The result is exactly the same as it would have been under the pre-2011
version of K.S.A. 44-523(f), except that the dismissal happens after three years instead of
five years. The fundamental inequity not only has been perpetuated but accelerated. On
balance, that outcome seems difficult to reconcile with the 2011 amendment to K.S.A.
44-523(f)(1).
We prefer how Green I mapped the Legislature's 2011 patchwork repair of K.S.A.
2011 Supp. 44-523(f)(1)—the resulting statutory rough spots seem considerably less
jarring than those in Glaze. But the choice is not ours to make. We, therefore, affirm the
Board's dismissal of Green's claim for compensation. The Board reached the correct
13
result for the wrong reason. See In re Tax Exemption Application of Westboro Baptist
Church, 40 Kan. App. 2d 27, 49, 189 P.3d 535 (2008) (court may uphold administrative
agency action if correct result reached, albeit for erroneous reason). Here, the Board
incorrectly relied on K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 44-523(f) rather than K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 44-
523(f) to dismiss Green's claim. But given the holding in Glaze, the result would be the
same under the amended version of the statute.
Affirmed.
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