Summary
In State ex rel Borisoff v. Workers' Comp. Board, 104 Or. App. 603, 802 P.2d 98 (1990), in which several claimants sought to compel the Board to exercise its own motion jurisdiction to increase their permanent disability awards, we noted in dictum that the claimants could not have sought direct review of the Board's orders, because the orders did not reduce or terminate the existing awards, but merely held that the Board did not have authority to award permanent disability benefits on its own motion.
Summary of this case from Saif v. WheelerOpinion
88C-11352; CA A60630 (Control), 88C-11350; CA A60631, 88C-11323; CA A60632 (Cases Consolidated)
Submitted on record and briefs September 24, 1990.
Affirmed December 12, 1990
Appeal from Circuit Court, Marion County, Duane R. Ertsgaard, Judge.
Donald D. Dartt, Portland, and Pozzi, Wilson, Atchison, O'Leary Conboy, Portland, filed the briefs for appellants.
Dave Frohnmayer, Attorney General, Virginia L. Linder, Solicitor General, and Jas Adams, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, filed the brief for respondents.
Before Buttler, Presiding Judge, and Rossman and De Muniz, Judges.
ROSSMAN, J.
Affirmed.
In these separate mandamus proceedings, relators, who are injured workers, sought to compel the Workers' Compensation Board to exercise its own motion jurisdiction to increase their permanent disability awards. In each case, the trial court issued an alternative writ of mandamus but dismissed the writ after considering its merits. We consolidate the appeals for opinion and affirm the trial court.
No one suggests that this case is not a proper subject for mandamus. We note that none of the relators could have sought direct review of the Board's order, because the order neither diminished nor terminated a former award. ORS 656.278 (3).
Each relator suffered a compensable injury. After the expiration of his aggravation rights under ORS 656.273, each petitioned the Board to exercise its own motion jurisdiction and award him additional permanent disability benefits due to the worsening of his condition. In each case, the Board refused to consider the request and held that ORS 656.278 does not permit the Board to award permanent disability benefits on its own motion. The Board was correct.
As amended by the 1987 Legislature, ORS 656.278 (1)(a) provides:
"(1) Except as provided in subsection (5) of this section, the power and jurisdiction of the board shall be continuing, and it may, upon its own motion, from time to time modify, change or terminate former findings, orders or awards if in its opinion such action is justified in those cases in which:
"(a) There is a worsening of a compensable injury that requires either inpatient or outpatient surgery or other treatment requiring hospitalization. In such cases, the board may authorize the payment of temporary disability compensation from the time the worker is actually hospitalized or undergoes outpatient surgery until the worker's condition becomes medically stationary, as determined by the board[.]"
We held in Independent Paper Stock v. Wincer, 100 Or. App. 625, 788 P.2d 466, rev den 310 Or. 195 (1990), that, under the statute as amended, after January 1, 1988, the Board no longer has authority to award permanent partial disability benefits on its own motion. We adhere to that holding. We write only to address whether the statute as amended is unconstitutional.
Relators contend that, because it no longer permits own motion review of permanent disability, ORS 656.278 violates Article I, section 10, of the Oregon Constitution. Their argument is premised on the theory that own motion jurisdiction is, in part, a right provided to replace a common law remedy that existed before the Workers' Compensation Act and that to eliminate that right would deprive them of a remedy by due course of law. We note, however, that, when it had jurisdiction to entertain requests for an increase of an award of permanent disability, the Board did so in its own discretion. The worker was not entitled to be heard as a matter of right.
Article I, section 10, provides, in part:
"[E]very man shall have remedy by due course of law for injury done him in his person, property, or reputation."
We have held in other contexts that the imposition of limitations on the bringing of a workers' compensation claim does not infringe a claimant's constitutional rights. In Stone v. SAIF, 57 Or. App. 808, 811, 646 P.2d 668, rev dismissed, 294 Or. 442 (1982), we held that the five-year limit on the filing of a claim for an asbestos-related occupational disease under former ORS 656.807 (1) did not violate Article I, section 10. We stated, citing Josephs v. Burns Bear, 260 Or. 493, 503, 491 P.2d 203 (1971), that it is a permissible legislative function "to balance the possibility of outlawing legitimate claims against the public need that at some definite time there be an end to potential litigation." 57 Or App at 811. Similarly, the legislature could legitimately decide that claims for permanent disability should not be subject to adjustment for more than five years after the last arrangement of compensation. The legislature has not violated relators' rights under Article I, section 10, by eliminating the Board's discretionary jurisdiction to modify permanent disability awards on its own motion.
Relators also contend that ORS 656.278 violates Article I, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by giving the privilege to be heard by the Board to those whose requests for own motion relief were acted upon before January 1, 1988, and denying that privilege to those whose requests were not acted upon by that date.
Article I, section 20, provides:
"No law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens privileges, or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens."
Section 20 prohibits the granting of privileges to any "class" of citizens. A class is a group that exists by virtue of antecedent personal or social characteristics. Hale v. Port of Portland, 308 Or. 508, 525, 783 P.2d 506 (1989). A class defined only by the law in question is simply a natural result of lawmaking, for "every law itself can be said to `classify' what it covers from what it excludes." State v. Clark, 291 Or. 231, 240, 630 P.2d 810, cert den sub nom Clark v. Oregon, 454 U.S. 1084 (1981); Atlantic Richfield Company v. Greene, 100 Or. App. 16, 20, 784 P.2d 442 (1989), rev den 309 Or. 698 (1990). In this case, there is no identifiable class cognizable under section 20, because the "favored" class exists only by reference to the challenged law, i.e., those workers whose request for own motion relief were considered by the Board before January 1, 1988, the effective date of the amendment to ORS 656.278. The statute treats all injured workers the same. It is not unconstitutional.
No separate argument is made under the Equal Protection Clause.
Affirmed.