“This court has determined that the appointment of pro bono counsel to represent appellant would assist this court in reviewing this appeal,” said the court. Maximiliano Couvillier — then with Lionel Sawyer & Collins, now with Black & LoBello — accepted the appointment to represent Reeves, who had been filing her appeals pro per, as a non-lawyer representing herself.

Immediately, in his supplementary opening brief, Couvillier attacked the CCMSI “log.”

Multiple problems with it, he wrote, reveal it to be “patently false” and “a fraud upon the process.” Those problems include:

  1. Its mere 20 words don’t even pretend to communicate what CCMSI’s representatives said to Dr. Petroff in those behind-closed-doors communications — completely ignoring the informational requirements of NRS 616D.330.
  2. The note falsely represents that claimant Reeves and her husband were present at the meeting, when, in fact, CCMSI had expressly prohibited them from attending — as Dr. Petroff recorded, the same day, in his “To Whom It May Concern” memo.
  3. The entry for June 2004 was almost certainly entered at least two years after the meeting, since it had been preceded by an entry dated September 2006.

Couvillier then draws attention to the refusal of the Nevada Department of Administration hearing and appeals officers, the Clark County District Court and the Nevada Division of Industrial Relations — all — to confront the violation by CCMSI of NRS 616D.330, a violation during which, wrote the attorney:

… the insurance company somehow influenced Appellant Reeves’ doctor into completely reversing his prognosis and suddenly opining that she could return to work — after he had time and again concluded that Appellant Reeves could not return to work…

Somehow, writes Couvillier, “CCMSI turned Dr. Petroff completely around [so that] he suddenly concluded that ‘it would be reasonable to recommend the patient undergo a trial back to work, sedentary, under appropriate adaptive conditions, including no lifting, carrying or pulling more than five pounds’” — a “suspiciously changed conclusion” that CCMSI then relied upon to deny Reeves’ request for TTD benefits.

Couvillier argues that Nevada’s entire, subsequent workers’ comp process “was unfair and tainted by CCMSI’s clandestine misconduct and false and fraudulent misrepresentation.”

As the record shows [writes the attorney], the DIR’s determination of Appellant Reeves’ substantive rights was infected by an unfair, unjust, suspicious and fraudulent process. Appellant Reeves did not even get a semblance of a fair process as the DIR also failed to make any findings regarding whether the false “Claim File Log of Oral Communication” even complied with NRS 616D.330. (Emphasis added.)

Claimant Reeves and her attorney argue that “The procedural wrongs which tainted the substantive resolution of Appellant Reeves’ worker’s compensation rights sufficiently prejudiced Appellant Reeves’ rights and interests that the Court should vacate the administrative decisions below.” They have also asked the Supreme Court to determine “whether she is entitled to a benefit penalty under NRS 616D.120 until it determines whether her workers’ compensation claim was properly closed…”

The court has not yet reached a decision in the case, although briefing has concluded.

Reeves and AB187

The relevance of the Reeves case for AB187 — the legislation currently before the 2015 Legislature — is that it appears to show a hidden significance of the Nevada Legislature’s 1993 decision to deprive injured workers’ of their common-law right to select their own physicians. The case also appears to lend weight to long-running allegations by many injured workers — and even some employers — that the State of Nevada, throughout its workers’ comp regulatory apparatus, regularly stares at the ceiling while misconduct by large self-insurers and third-party administrators goes on.

What has been the response of the State of Nevada to Couvillier’s assertions? The attorney, after all, argues that the Division of Industrial Insurance, the Department of Administration and the Clark County District Court all “abused their discretion by failing and refusing to consider that CCMSI’s ‘log’ was a fraud upon the administrative process — a phony made up years after-the-fact.”

First, DIR signed on to an argument made by CCMSI, which — proclaiming itself the real party in interest — had been permitted to join the case before the Supreme Court. CCMSI contended that all matters regarding the “log” are now beside the point, because they supposedly had been addressed at lower levels in the appear process, and

The only issue before the Court under this appeal is whether the Appeals Officer had substantial evidence in regards to her Order affirming Respondent, Nevada Division of Industrial Relations’ (hereinafter referred to as DIR) findings that there were no violations of NRS 616D.120 benefit penalty provision as it relates to TTD.

DIR itself, however, then went further, stating that when Reeves asked the agency “to assist her in obtaining oral communications/written records of [the] meeting she alleged to have taken place,” DIR then “conducted a review of the file and found no violation occurred. DIR determined that Reeves was provided with a complete copy of the claims file.”

In other words, the “claim file log of oral communications” presented above — notwithstanding all its problems suggesting fraud — was entirely acceptable to DIR.

It seems difficult to deny that the agency, however, was ignoring the clear intent of the Nevada Legislature when it first passed NRS 616D.330. If all an insurer or TPA had to record was, “Talked to claimant’s doctor,” and not record the important points of what was talked about, why would lawmakers have bothered to require “logs of oral communications” at all?

DIR also argues that when Reeves asked it for assistance obtaining records of CCMSI’s clandestine meeting with her doctors, she did not at that time ask it for a benefit penalty, Had she done so, the agency suggests, it would have triggered a formal DIR investigation, the decision of which, once DIR ruled against Reeves, could have been appealed to a Department of Administration appeals officer.

“[T]he record shows,” wrote Couvillier, “the DIR did not protect Appellant Reeves’ rights to a fair and just process,” but instead “ignored (or simply turned a blind eye to)” a “fraud upon the administrative process” committed by CCMSI with “a patently false log” of a meeting with Reeves’ doctor.