Iowa Admin. Code r. 876-4.19 - Prehearing procedure
(1) Prehearing
procedure in contested cases shall be administered in accordance with these
rules and the orders issued by the workers' compensation commissioner or a
deputy workers' compensation commissioner.
(2) The parties have a duty to exercise
reasonable diligence to bring the contested case to hearing at the earliest
reasonable opportunity.
(3) The
following time limits govern prehearing procedure, completion of discovery and
case management in contested cases, except proceedings under rules
876-4.46 (17A,85,86) and 876-4.48 (17A,85,86) and except when otherwise ordered
by the workers' compensation commissioner or a deputy workers' compensation
commissioner.
a. Within 120 days following
filing of a petition, the counsel of record for all parties and all
self-represented parties shall request a hearing by using WCES. In a case for
which a request for waiver of the mandatory use of WCES has been granted,
counsel of record for all parties and all self-represented parties shall
jointly contact the hearing administrator by telephone at (515)725-3891 between
the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. central time, Monday through Friday,
excluding holidays, or by email at
dwc.hearing@iwd.state.ia.us to schedule a hearing
date, place and time. Claimant has primary responsibility for initiating the
contact. The parties shall identify the case by file number and the names of
the parties and request that the hearing be set at a specific date, place and
time that is shown to be available on the hearing scheduler published on the
division's website. Primary and backup times must be requested for hearings in
venues other than Des Moines. When the contact is made by email, a copy of the
request shall be sent to each opposing party, and the hearing administrator
will reply indicating whether or not the case is assigned at the time
requested. If a request is denied, the parties shall continue to contact the
hearing administrator by telephone or email until the case is scheduled or a
prehearing conference is ordered. A joint scheduling contact may be initiated
by any party at any other time agreeable to the parties. If more than 120 days
have elapsed since the petition was filed, any party may move to schedule the
hearing at a particular date, time and place that is available and the hearing
administrator may assign the case for hearing at any date, time and place. The
hearing date shall be within 12 months following the date the petition was
filed or as soon thereafter as reasonably practicable as determined by the
hearing administrator. If the parties fail to schedule the hearing with the
hearing administrator within nine months of the filing of the original notice
and petition, the case will be scheduled at the discretion of the hearing
administrator without prior notice to the parties.
b. A party who intends to introduce evidence
from an expert witness, including a rebuttal expert witness, shall certify to
all other parties the expert's name, subject matter of expertise,
qualifications, and a summary of the expert's opinions within the following
time period:
(1) claimant-120 days before
hearing;
(2) employer/second injury
fund of Iowa-90 days before hearing;
(3)
rebuttal-60 days before hearing. Certification is not required to
introduce evidence from an examining physician pursuant to Iowa Code section
85.39, a treating physician, or a vocational consultant if the expert witness
is known by all parties to have personally provided services to the claimant
and the witness's reports are served on opposing parties prior to the date when
certification is required. The parties may alter these times by written
agreement.
c. Discovery
responses must be supplemented as required in Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure
1.503(4) and 1.508(3). Discovery responses shall be supplemented within 20 days
after a party requests supplementation. All discovery responses, depositions,
and reports from independent medical examinations shall be completed and served
on opposing counsel and self-represented parties at least 30 days before
hearing. The parties may alter these times by written agreement.
d. At least 30 days before hearing, counsel
of record and self-represented parties shall serve a witness and an exhibit
list on all opposing counsel and self-represented parties and exchange all
intended exhibits that were not previously required to be served. The witness
list shall name all persons, except the claimant, who will be called to testify
at the hearing or who will be deposed prior to the hearing in lieu of
testifying at the hearing. The witness and exhibit lists are not filed in WCES.
If the exhibit list does not contain actual exhibits, the exhibit list must
specifically identify each exhibit in a way that permits the opposing party to
recognize the exhibit. The description for a document should include the
document's date, number of pages and author or source. Blanket references such
as "all medical records," "personnel file" or "records produced during
discovery" do not specifically identify an exhibit. A party may serve a copy of
the actual intended exhibits in lieu of an exhibit list. At least 14 days
before hearing, counsel of record and self-represented parties shall file all
proposed exhibits in WCES, or if a party has been granted a waiver of the
mandatory use of WCES, the party shall file the proposed exhibits with the
division of workers' compensation. At least seven days before the hearing,
counsel of record and self-represented parties shall file all written
objections and motions to exclude evidence with the division of workers'
compensation and serve a copy on all other parties. Objections to exhibits are
waived if they are not filed at least seven days before the hearing.
Evidentiary depositions pursuant to Iowa Code section 86.18(2) may be taken at
any time before the hearing in lieu of the witness testifying at the
hearing.
e. If evidence is offered
at hearing that was not disclosed in the time and manner required by these
rules, or as altered by order of the workers' compensation commissioner or a
deputy workers' compensation commissioner or by a written agreement by the
parties, the evidence will be excluded if the objecting party shows that
receipt of the evidence would be unfairly prejudicial. Sanctions may be imposed
pursuant to rule 876-4.36 (86) in addition to or in lieu of exclusion if
exclusion is not an effective remedy for the prejudice. If a party offers an
exhibit or document in paper form which is accepted by the workers'
compensation commissioner or a deputy workers' compensation commissioner, the
party shall have five working days to submit an electronic copy of the document
by using WCES.
f. At least 14 days
before the hearing, counsel of record and self-represented parties shall
prepare and file a joint hearing report that defines the claims, defenses, and
issues that are to be submitted to the deputy workers' compensation
commissioner who presides at the hearing. The hearing report shall be filed in
portable document format (pdf) or as an image-on-text document (searchable pdf)
as a proposed hearing report. The hearing report shall be signed by all counsel
of record and self-represented parties. The approved hearing report order shall
be signed by the deputy workers' compensation commissioner and filed in
WCES.
g. If a party is unable to
meet a nonjurisdictional filing deadline because of a technical failure in
WCES, the party must file the document using the earliest available electronic
or nonelectronic means. The filing will be accepted by the division of workers'
compensation as timely unless the workers' compensation commissioner or a
deputy workers' compensation commissioner determines otherwise.
h. Jurisdictional deadlines, including but
not limited to any applicable statute of limitations, cannot be extended. It is
each party's responsibility to ensure that a document is filed timely to comply
with jurisdictional deadlines. A technical failure, including a failure of
WCES, will not excuse a failure to comply with a jurisdictional
deadline.
i. A party is not excused
from missing a jurisdictional or nonjurisdictional filing deadline because of
problems attributable to the party.
This rule is intended to implement Iowa Code chapter 86.
Notes
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