DA 08-0407 December 22 2009
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2009 MT 430
CASSANDRA SCHMILL,
Petitioner and Appellee,
v.
LIBERTY NORTHWEST INSURANCE CORPORATION,
Respondent and Insurer, and MONTANA STATE FUND,
Intervenor, et al.,
Respondents and Appellants.
APPEAL FROM: Workers’ Compensation Court,
Cause No. WCC No. 2001-0300
Honorable James Jeremiah Shea, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellants:
Oliver Hayes Goe, Leo S. Ward; Browning, Kaleczyc, Berry & Hoven,
P.C.; Helena, Montana (for Montana Municipal Insurance Authority and
Montana Schools Group Workers’ Compensation Program)
Steven W. Jennings (argued); Crowley, Haughey, Hanson, Toole &
Dietrich, PLLP; Billings, Montana (for Several Insurers/Appellants)
Larry W. Jones; Liberty NW Insur. Corp.; Missoula, Montana (for Liberty
NW Ins. Corp.)
Bradley J. Luck; Garlington, Lohn & Robinson, PC; Missoula, Montana
(for State Fund)
For Appellee:
Laurie Wallace (argued); Bothe & Lauridsen, PC; Columbia Falls,
Montana
Argued: May 20, 2009
Submitted: May 20, 2009
Decided: December 22, 2009
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice W. William Leaphart delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Liberty Northwest Insurance Corporation and Intervenor Montana State Fund
(Responding Insurers), et al., appeal from the order of the Workers’ Compensation Court
(WCC). We affirm.
¶2 The following issues are restated on appeal:
¶3 I. Does the enforcement of Schmill I and Schmill II violate the due process rights
of the Responding Insurers?
¶4 II. Does Cassandra Schmill (Schmill) have standing to pursue global common
fund benefits and an attorney fees lien on the fund?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 This is the third time we have seen this litigation. In Schmill v. Liberty Northwest
Ins. Corp., 2003 MT 80, ¶ 23, 315 Mont. 51, 67 P.3d 290 (Schmill I), we held that
allowing for apportionment deductions for nonoccupational factors in the Occupational
Disease Act (ODA) but not in the Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA) constituted a
violation of the equal protection guarantee in the Montana Constitution. Schmill I, ¶ 23.
We held that the ODA’s apportionment provisions in § 39-72-706, MCA, were
unconstitutional. Schmill I, ¶ 23.
¶6 In the second appeal, Schmill v. Liberty Northwest Ins. Corp., 2005 MT 144, ¶ 28,
327 Mont. 293, 114 P.3d 204 (Schmill II), we held that the decision in Schmill I is
retroactive to all cases not yet final or settled at the time of its issuance. We further held
that Schmill’s attorneys properly requested common fund attorney fees and that the
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common fund created in Schmill I results in a global lien for the benefit of all claimants
affected by the decision. Schmill II, ¶ 28.
¶7 Six months after Schmill II was decided, the WCC issued summonses to more than
500 insurers regarding their obligation under Schmill II to identify and pay past
Schmill-type claims. Responding Insurers comprise 96 of those insurers and self-insured
employers. Responding Insurers moved to dismiss. The WCC referred these issues to
Special Master Jay Dufrechou. On July 29, 2008, the WCC entered an “Order Adopting
Order of Special Master,” in which the WCC denied the Responding Insurers’ motion
and certified the issues as final for purposes of appeal pursuant to ARM 24.5.348(2). The
Responding Insurers appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 We review the WCC’s conclusions of law to determine whether they are correct.
Lanes v. Mont. State Fund, 2008 MT 306, ¶ 16, 346 Mont. 10, 192 P.3d 1145; Van Vleet
v. Mont. Assn. of Counties Workers’ Comp. Trust, 2004 MT 367, ¶ 9, 324 Mont. 517, 103
P.3d 544. We review the WCC’s findings of fact to determine whether they are
supported by substantial credible evidence. Lanes, ¶ 16; Van Vleet, ¶ 9. Substantial
credible evidence is “evidence that a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
support a conclusion; it consists of more than a mere scintilla of evidence but may be
somewhat less than a preponderance.” Lanes, ¶ 16 (citing S.L.H. v. State Comp. Mut. Ins.
Fund, 2002 MT 362, ¶ 42, 303 Mont. 364, 15 P.3d 948). If there is conflicting evidence,
we consider whether “substantial evidence supports the Workers’ Compensation Court,
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not whether the evidence might support contrary findings.” Caekaert v. State Compen.
Mut. Ins. Fund, 268 Mont. 105, 110, 885 P.2d 495, 498 (1994).
DISCUSSION
¶9 Does the enforcement of Schmill I and Schmill II violate the due process rights
of the Responding Insurers?
¶10 The Responding Insurers argue that the WCC’s enforcement of Schmill I and
Schmill II violates due process under the Montana and United States Constitutions.
Responding Insurers argue that they were not named parties and were not given notice or
opportunity to be heard when this Court found § 39-72-706, MCA, unconstitutional and
when we determined that Schmill I created a global common fund. They aver that the
summons, which they call “after-the-fact notice,” failed to satisfy the requirements of due
process.
¶11 The WCC held that it is not the Responding Insurers’ status as either a party or
nonparty that determines their duty to pay benefits, but rather that a vested right exists for
beneficiaries as a matter of law and imposes a corresponding duty on Responding
Insurers to retroactively pay all Schmill-type benefits. We affirm.
¶12 We addressed this type of vested right in Murer, in which we considered workers’
compensation claims in relation to a temporary cap in benefits articulated in statute.
Murer v. State Comp. Mut. Ins. Fund, 283 Mont. 210, 942 P.2d 69 (1997). We concluded
that State Fund was “obligated to increase benefit payments to a substantial number of
claimants who were neither parties to, nor directly involved in the Murer litigation.”
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Murer, 283 Mont. at 215, 942 P.2d at 72. We further held that “claimants established a
vested right on behalf of the absent claimants to directly receive immediate monetary
payment of past due benefits underpayments,” and concluded the insurer “became legally
obligated to make the increased benefits payments.” Murer, 283 Mont. at 223, 942 P.2d
at 76-77.
¶13 While Murer addresses a single insurer scenario, the decision establishes the
principle that a right to past benefits due arises automatically. Once retroactivity is
established, beneficiaries are not required to file a second claim. Qualifying individuals
have already filed claims and are entitled to benefits under the statute, regardless of
which insurer they happen to be insured under. The beneficiaries’ right to increased
benefits arises automatically and the same is true of all insurers’ responsibility to pay
each beneficiary.
¶14 This understanding of the relationship between insurers’ statutory obligations and
beneficiaries’ automatically-vested rights is buttressed by our decisions following the
Murer trilogy. We specifically considered retroactivity in Ruhd v. Liberty NW Ins. Corp.,
2004 MT 236, 322 Mont. 478, 97 P.3d 561. In the WCC case prompting Ruhd, a
permanently and totally disabled claimant filed a petition for hearing before the WCC
seeking payment of an impairment award from the insurer, Liberty Northwest. The WCC
had previously concluded that permanently totally disabled claimants whose employers
were insured by the State Fund were not entitled to impairment awards. Rausch v. Mont.
State Fund, 2001 MTWCC 15. Both Ruhd and Rausch were appealed to this Court. We
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reversed the WCC’s decision in Ruhd, holding: “As soon as we decided Rausch,
however, liability for immediate payment of impairment awards was established against
all insurers.” Ruhd, ¶ 22 (emphasis added).
¶15 The Murer and Ruhd holdings confirm that claimants have a vested right to
payment of past due benefits, regardless of which insurer is responsible. Due process is
not violated when a court construes the meaning of a statute applicable to all workers’
compensation insurers bound by uniform laws. Once all potential beneficiaries are
granted a vested right, which was manifested in Schmill II, a corresponding duty to pay
on the part of all insurers arises automatically as a matter of law.
¶16 The Responding Insurers also argue that the parameters of “paid in full” are
unclear. We decline to rule on this issue at the present time.
¶17 II. Did Schmill have standing to pursue a claim for common fund benefits and
enforce a common fund attorney fees lien on the fund?
¶18 Responding Insurers argue Schmill lacks standing because she does not allege a
personal injury traceable to the Responding Insurers’ conduct. The Insurers argue that all
of Schmill’s specific claims were resolved in Schmill I and she failed to appeal the
WCC’s decision regarding the award of attorney fees. While Schmill seeks to enforce
common fund entitlements and the petitioner’s attorney fees lien, Responding Insurers
argue that she has no interest in the outcome of the former and no actual property interest
in the latter. That interest, they aver, belongs to her counsel, Laurie Wallace.
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¶19 Responding Insurers have misidentified the legal nature of a common fund
attorney fees lien. Our Schmill decisions resulted not only in an entitlement to benefits,
but an entitlement to payment of benefits owed. The common fund consists of Schmill
claimants’ benefits. By filing an attorney fees lien against this fund, Wallace initiated an
in rem action. This is an action that simply adjudicates the status of a particular subject
matter; here, the common fund from which the fees will be satisfied.
¶20 Schmill’s standing to bring an in rem action to enforce the common fund attorney
fees lien is reinforced by our Murer decision, in which we held: “[w]hen a party, through
active litigation, creates a common fund which directly benefits an ascertainable class of
non-participating beneficiaries, those non-participating beneficiaries can be required to
bear a portion of the litigation costs, including reasonable attorney fees.” Murer, 283
Mont. at 223, 942 P.2d at 76. The common fund includes benefits payable from all
insurers who had previously apportioned occupational disease benefits. In essence, the
lien does not simply attach to Schmill’s benefits alone. It attaches to the entire common
fund.
¶21 For the above reasons, we affirm.
/S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ PATRICIA O. COTTER
/S/ JOHN WARNER
/S/ JIM RICE
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/S/ BRIAN MORRIS
/S/ JAMES C. NELSON
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