Alok Ahuja, Chief Judge.
On August 21, 2013, Cynthia Knight filed a Claim for Compensation with the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations' Division of Workers' Compensation. Knight's workers' compensation claim related to an injury she suffered on January 13, 2009, during her employment with Respondent Con-Agra Foods, Inc. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission dismissed Knight's claim as untimely on two grounds. Knight appeals. Because she challenges only one of the two reasons for the Commission's adverse ruling, we affirm.
Cynthia Knight was employed at Con-Agra's plant in Marshall. She was injured at work on January 13, 2009, when she fell, hit her head, and suffered a concussion. Knight was treated at a hospital emergency room and released the same day.
Con-Agra filed a Report of Injury with the Division of Worker's Compensation the following day. Con-Agra and its workers' compensation insurer authorized Knight's emergency room visit, and paid all medical bills associated with that visit. These are the only payments made directly by Con-Agra or by its workers' compensation insurer on account of the injury Knight suffered on January 13, 2009.
Knight claims that she continued to experience medical problems related to her January 2009 injury, and she requested that Con-Agra authorize additional medical treatment. Con-Agra's in-house nurses denied those requests, concluding that Knight's later medical complaints were not work-related. Knight sought treatment on her own. Payments to the health-care providers Knight selected were made by her employer-provided health insurance, which was administered by Blue Cross/Blue Shield.
On August 21, 2013, Knight filed a Claim for Compensation with the Division of Workers' Compensation for her injuries arising out of the January 2009 incident. Con-Agra, its insurer, and the Second Injury Fund all raised a statute of limitations defense. They asserted that Knight's claim was untimely under § 287.430,
Following an evidentiary hearing, an administrative law judge ("ALJ") agreed with Con-Agra that Knight's claim was untimely. The ALJ's decision explained:
On review, the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission adopted the ALJ's decision
Knight contends, for two reasons, that the Labor and Industrial Commission erred in concluding that her workers' compensation claim was untimely. First, she argues that "payments made by [Knight]'s Employer-provided fully self-funded health insurance plan constituted payments made under chapter 287 for the purposes of tolling the statute of limitations contained in § 287.430." Second, she claims that the Commission, following Dungan, erroneously "added the requirement that `payments made under this chapter' in that section be made by an obligation of the employer when no such requirement is found in § 287.430."
In order for later payments to delay the running of the statute of limitations, those payments must satisfy at least two requirements: the payments must be "[1] made under this chapter [2] on account of the injury or death." § 287.430. The Commission in this case found that the payments on which Knight relied failed to satisfy either criteria: they were not payments "made under this chapter" because those payments were made by Knight's health insurer, not by Con-Agra or its workers' compensation insurer; and they were not payments "on account of the injury" because there was no medical evidence that Knight's November 2011 medical treatment was related to her January 2009 injury. Yet, despite the fact that the Commission relied on two separate and independent rationales to find Knight's claim to be untimely, she challenges only one of those rationales: both of Knight's Points argue that Blue Cross/Blue Shield's payments for her November 2011 medical care constituted payments "made under this chapter."
Because Knight has failed to challenge each of the grounds on which the Commission relied to find her claim untimely, we have no option but to affirm the Commission's decision.
Rainey v. SSPS, Inc., 259 S.W.3d 603, 606 (Mo. App. W.D. 2008). As a corollary to this principle, if a trial court or administrative agency relies on multiple, independently sufficient grounds in issuing an adverse ruling, the appellant must challenge each of those independent grounds of decision. This Court addressed this precise situation in City of Peculiar v. Hunt Martin Materials, LLC, 274 S.W.3d 588 (Mo. App. W.D. 2009):
City of Peculiar v. Hunt Martin Materials, LLC, 274 S.W.3d 588, 590-91 (Mo. App. W.D. 2009); see also, e.g., STRCUE, Inc. v. Potts, 386 S.W.3d 214, 219 (Mo. App. W.D. 2012); Chastain v. Kansas City Mo. City Clerk, 337 S.W.3d 149, 155 (Mo. App. W.D. 2011).
The reasoning of City of Peculiar is fully applicable here. Even if we were to agree with Knight that the payments made by Blue Cross/Blue Shield were payments "made under this chapter," this would not alter the result: those payments would still not toll the running of the statute of limitations, because of the Commission's separate — and unchallenged — determination that the payments were not made "on account of the [January 2009] injury." We will not separately address the Commission's finding that the Blue Cross/Blue Shield payments were not made "on account of the [January 2009] injury," where Knight has made no argument challenging that finding.
We affirm the Commission's Final Award Denying Compensation.
All concur.