Gonzalez v. Performance Painting, Inc. , 150 N.M. 306 ( 2011 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 13:12:46 2011.04.27
    Certiorari Granted, March 23, 2011, No. 32,844
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 
    2011-NMCA-025
    Filing Date: January 10, 2011
    Docket No. 29,629
    JESUS GONZALEZ,
    Worker-Appellant,
    v.
    PERFORMANCE PAINTING, INC.
    and BUILDERS TRUST OF NEW
    MEXICO,
    Employer/Insurer-Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ADMINISTRATION
    Terry S. Kramer, Workers’ Compensation Judge
    James Rawley
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellant
    Miller Stratvert P.A.
    Thomas R. Mack
    Nathan A. Cobb
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellees
    OPINION
    SUTIN, Judge.
    {1}   Worker Jesus Gonzalez appeals the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Judge
    (WCJ) denying him modifier benefits from his employer Performance Painting, Inc.
    (Employer) under NMSA 1978, Section 52-1-26(C) (1990), of the New Mexico Workers’
    1
    Compensation Act (the Act), NMSA 1978, §§ 52-1-1 to -70 (1929, as amended through
    2007). The WCJ denied modifier benefits because Worker’s undocumented immigration
    status precluded rehire, thereby constituting an unreasonable refusal of Employer’s return-to-
    work offer. The WCJ also denied Worker modifier benefits under Section 52-1-26(D) after
    he returned to the workforce with a different employer and earned a wage equal to or greater
    than his pre-injury wage after maximum medical improvement (MMI). Worker contended
    that Employer should be estopped from asserting a bar to his recovery under Section 52-1-
    26(C) of modifier benefits because Employer knew or should have known that Worker was
    undocumented. The WCJ made no explicit ruling on that issue. The WCJ rejected Worker’s
    claim that Employer’s return-to-work offer was pretextual and that Worker was denied equal
    protection of the law. We hold that Worker was not entitled to modifier benefits because
    Section 52-1-26(C) and (D) are inapplicable to cases involving workers with undocumented,
    illegal immigration status, and because the Act does not provide for modifier benefits except
    under the provisions of those statutory subsections.
    BACKGROUND
    {2}     Worker is an undocumented worker who came from Mexico in 2003. He was hired
    by Employer in February 2006, after providing a false social security number on his
    employment application. Teri Jinzo, Employer’s office manager, gave persons seeking
    employment, including Worker, an application to fill out, and she received the application
    from the applicants when they returned it. Ms. Jinzo never had conversations with anyone,
    including workers, and including Employer’s owner, Joe Spiess, to whom she directly
    reported, about the need to review documents showing an applicant’s legal status to work
    in the United States. She did not take it upon herself to look into the legal status, nor did she
    attend any training or seminars, or receive any written materials in that regard. She would
    simply give the applicant an application, who would take it, fill it out, and return it to her,
    and she would then give the application to a foreman and from there the foreman “just hired”
    the applicant.
    {3}     Ms. Jinzo’s practice for new hires was to take the social security numbers they
    provided in the application and submit them to New Mexico New Hires, an agency about
    which Employer provides no explanation as to whether it has any duty or conducts any
    activity or investigation in regard to a worker’s undocumented status.1 New Mexico New
    1
    Nothing in the record indicates what the function of this agency is, including what,
    if anything, the agency does with a person’s social security number. New Mexico New
    Hires has a website, http://newhire-reporting.com/NM-Newhire/FAQ.aspx, which explains
    that employers are required pursuant to state and federal law to report newly hired and re-
    hired employees to a state directory within twenty days of their hire date. Nothing in this
    website indicates that the reporting pertains to undocumented workers. It pertains to a child
    support income withholding order process and the collection of child support.
    2
    Hires never informed her that any submitted social security numbers were illegitimate. She
    never handed out employment eligibility verification forms. As we discuss later in this
    opinion, employers are required under federal law to complete an employment eligibility
    verification form, also known as an I-9 form.
    {4}       Worker testified that a friend called “Panda,” who worked for Employer, helped him
    fill out the employment application at Employer’s office. According to Worker, Panda wrote
    in Worker’s false social security number that Worker provided, and no one requested Worker
    to produce a social security card.
    {5}      Mr. Spiess testified that immigration was never discussed. Mr. Spiess stated that
    “[i]f [the application] looked good, then they would go ahead and hire.” Mr. Spiess was not
    involved in the hiring of Worker. Mr. Spiess stated that he had no reason to believe that
    Worker was undocumented during the time Worker worked for Employer. Employer’s files
    did not contain a copy of Worker’s social security card.
    {6}    In August 2006, Worker was injured while working for Employer, rendering Worker
    temporarily totally disabled. Worker was placed at MMI on August 30, 2007, was assigned
    a 3% whole-person impairment based upon his injury, and was released back to work with
    permanent lifting restrictions, as well as “no climbing of ladders and no extended bending.”
    Worker did not return to work with Employer until January 2008, when Employer offered
    him employment in a modified capacity. A few weeks later, in late January or early
    February 2008, Worker stopped working for Employer. The WCJ found that this was due
    to a combination of Worker’s inability to perform the tasks required of him, which often
    exceeded his medical restrictions, and a slow down in work available. On February 18,
    2008, Worker filed a complaint for workers’ compensation.
    {7}    Sometime between February and April 2008, Worker found part-time employment
    that would accommodate his medical restrictions cleaning a baseball stadium and earned
    approximately $250 per week. Because the work would be over once the baseball season
    ended around September, Worker began looking for another job in the summer of 2008.
    {8}     During 2007, Employer had a slow down of business and laid off half of its twenty-
    eight workers. By October 21, 2008, Employer only had four workers left. Employer
    offered Worker a return to work by letter from its attorneys on two separate occasions, first
    on April 30, 2008, and a second time on June 16, 2008. Worker testified that after receiving
    one of the letters, he went by Employer’s office and one of Employer’s workers
    communicated to Worker that they had absolutely no work for Worker whatsoever. Then,
    Worker’s attorney asked Worker to go by Employer’s office once more to pick up an
    employment application. On or about June 20, 2008, Worker went to Employer’s office to
    pick up the application, but instead of an application, Worker was given an immigration
    status verification form. Without knowing what it was, Worker took the form to a person
    that could assist him in filling out documents in English and that person informed Worker
    that the document was not an employment application. Worker took the form back to
    3
    Employer without filling it out and requested an employment application and, at that time,
    Mr. Spiess asked to see Worker’s social security card and driver’s license. Worker did not
    provide any documents and left.
    {9}    Mr. Spiess testified that he did not find out that Worker was undocumented until the
    date Mr. Spiess was deposed in October 2008. Mr. Spiess further testified that even when
    Employer’s workforce had been reduced to six or seven, or even, perhaps, four employees
    when it made the offer, Worker was a good employee and “well requested,” and Employer
    would have been able to make room for Worker had Worker been able to provide proper
    documentation.
    {10} Worker found employment at the Hi-Lo Market in August 2008, which continued at
    least through trial on April 16, 2009. Worker was earning a weekly average salary of
    $359.38 at the time he was injured while working for Employer. The first time that Worker
    earned in excess of $359.38 after MMI was the week ending on August 16, 2008, when he
    earned $587.75 at his new employment with Hi-Lo Market.
    {11} Employer filed a motion for partial summary judgment arguing that because Worker
    was undocumented and could not accept Employer’s return to work offer, Worker’s partial
    permanent disability benefits should be limited to Worker’s physical impairment. The WCJ
    denied the motion, and the case proceeded to a trial on the merits. The WCJ addressed
    whether Worker’s illegal immigration status prevented him from receiving modifier benefits,
    whether Worker was entitled to permanent partial disability benefits based on return to work,
    and the rate at which Worker should be paid if Worker were entitled to benefits.
    {12} The WCJ concluded that Worker was entitled to partial disability benefits
    commencing August 30, 2007, Worker’s MMI date, at the rate of 51% (3% impairment plus
    48% modifier points) until June 20, 2008. After June 20, 2008, the WCJ concluded, Worker
    was entitled to receive benefits at the rate of 3% impairment until conclusion of the benefit
    period. The WCJ reasoned that Worker was not entitled to modifier points after June 20,
    2008, because Worker could not accept a bonafide return-to-work offer by Employer due to
    Worker’s undocumented status, which was equivalent to an unreasonable refusal to a return-
    to-work offer. The WCJ further found that Worker was also not entitled to modifiers after
    August 10, 2008, because, although he was employed by a different employer, Worker began
    earning in excess of his pre-injury wage after this date. Employer did not in the district court
    and does not on appeal contest Worker’s entitlement to permanent partial disability benefits
    under the Act.
    {13} Worker appeals arguing that (1) Employer should be estopped from raising the issue
    of Worker’s immigration status because Employer illegally hired Worker; (2) Worker is not
    barred from receiving modifier benefits because he is working for a different employer
    earning more than he was when employed by Employer; (3) Employer’s offer to return to
    work was pretextual; and (4) the decision of the WCJ violates Worker’s equal protection
    rights.
    4
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    {14} “We review workers’ compensation orders using the whole record standard of
    review.” Leonard v. Payday Prof’l, 
    2007-NMCA-128
    , ¶ 10, 
    142 N.M. 605
    , 
    168 P.3d 177
    .
    “In applying whole record review, this Court reviews both favorable and unfavorable
    evidence to determine whether there is evidence that a reasonable mind could accept as
    adequate to support the conclusions reached by the fact finder.” Levario v. Ysidro Villareal
    Labor Agency, 
    120 N.M. 734
    , 737, 
    906 P.2d 266
    , 269 (Ct. App. 1995). “Where the
    testimony is conflicting, the issue on appeal is not whether there is evidence to support a
    contrary result, but rather whether the evidence supports the findings of the trier of fact.”
    Tom Growney Equip. Co. v. Jouett, 
    2005-NMSC-015
    , ¶ 13, 
    137 N.M. 497
    , 
    113 P.3d 320
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). We review the interpretation of a statute de
    novo. Kahrs v. Sanchez, 
    1998-NMCA-037
    , ¶ 11, 
    125 N.M. 1
    , 
    956 P.2d 132
    .
    The Workers’ Compensation Act
    {15} The Act defines “worker” in Section 52-1-16(A) as “any person who has entered into
    the employment of or works under contract of service or apprenticeship with an employer,
    except a person whose employment is purely casual and not for the purpose of the
    employer’s trade or business.” The Act nowhere expressly prohibits or excludes
    undocumented workers from receiving benefits provided by the Act. A reference to denying
    benefits to a worker’s non-resident alien dependents in Section 52-1-52, as the section
    existed before it was amended in 1984, was deleted by the 1984 amendment passed by the
    Legislature. N.M. Laws 1984, ch. 95, § 1; see Pedrazza v. Sid Fleming Contractor, Inc., 
    94 N.M. 59
    , 61-62, 
    607 P.2d 597
    , 599-600 (1980) (disqualifying the deceased worker’s children
    from receiving workers’ compensation benefits by the 1929 version of Section 52-1-52 that
    stated, “No claim or judgment for compensation, under this act . . ., shall accrue to or be
    recovered by relatives or dependents not residents of the United States at the time of the
    injury of such workman” (alteration omitted)). In its place, the Legislature enacted a law
    that protects all dependents regardless of their residency. Section 52-1-52. In the present
    case, Employer does not dispute that Worker was entitled to permanent partial disability
    benefits under the Act based on his physical impairment. Nothing presented by Employer
    indicates that undocumented workers are precluded from receiving benefits under the Act
    even if federal law prohibits the workers’ employment. In fact, the contrary appears to be
    the case. See Boyd v. Permian Servicing Co., 
    113 N.M. 321
    , 323, 
    825 P.2d 611
    , 613 (1992)
    (indicating that a worker hired in violation of the FLSA was still covered by the Workers’
    Compensation Act and subject to its provisions).
    {16} This Court has interpreted Section 52-1-26(C) and (D) to deny modifier benefits to
    a worker who unreasonably refuses a return-to-work offer. Connick v. Cnty. of Bernalillo,
    
    1998-NMCA-060
    , ¶¶ 9-10, 17, 
    125 N.M. 119
    , 
    957 P.2d 1153
     (holding that the worker was
    entitled only to benefits based on his impairment rating and not to disability benefits based
    5
    on the statutory modification of his impairment rating because the worker’s incarceration
    effectively removed him from the labor market and it would have been futile for the
    employer to offer the worker a job); Jeffrey v. Hays Plumbing & Heating, 
    118 N.M. 60
    , 63-
    65, 
    878 P.2d 1009
    , 1012-14 (Ct. App. 1994) (holding that the worker’s refusal to accept an
    offer of employment based on his desire to start his own business was not reasonable under
    Section 52-1-26(D) of the Act, thus affirming the WCJ’s decision not to allow application
    of benefit modifiers under Section 52-1-26(C)).
    The Immigration Reform and Control Act
    {17} The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) and Hoffman Plastic
    Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB, 
    535 U.S. 137
     (2002), are central to Worker’s claims. See
    generally Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 C.F.R. § 274A (1988, as amended through
    2009); 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
     (1952, as amended through 2009). The objective of the IRCA is to
    discourage illegal immigration by prohibiting the employment of unauthorized aliens. See
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1324
    (a)(1)(A) (1952, as amended through 2005). “IRCA forcefully made
    combating the employment of illegal aliens central to the policy of immigration law.”
    Hoffman Plastic Compounds, 
    535 U.S. at 147
     (alteration omitted) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    {18} The IRCA requires employers to verify before hiring “that the person is not an
    unauthorized alien by examining specified documents that establish the person’s identity and
    eligibility for employment in the United States and completing Form I-9, which evidences
    that examination.” Coque v. Wildflower Estates Developers, Inc., 
    867 N.Y.S.2d 158
    , 163
    (App. Div. 2008); see also Reyes v. Van Elk, Ltd., 
    56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 68
    , 72 n.4 (Ct. App.
    2007) (“The IRCA requires employers to verify that each new hire is authorized to work in
    the United States. The employee must present documents establishing his or her identity and
    employment authorization.”).
    {19} In the present case, Employer provided no evidence that it used the required I-9
    forms, much less used any in connection with Worker’s hire. “Form I-9, Employment
    Eligibility Verification Form, is a document in which an employer hiring an individual for
    employment in the United States attests under penalty of perjury that he has verified, by
    examining certain documents, that the employee is not an unauthorized alien.” United States
    v. Ye, 
    588 F.3d 411
    , 412-13 n.1 (7th Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing 
    8 U.S.C. § 1324
    (a)(b)(1); 8 C.F.R. § 274a.2). Employers are required to retain the I-9 form
    for a specified period of time. Id. (citing 
    8 U.S.C. § 1324
    (a)(b)(3)).
    {20} Under the IRCA, if the applicant does not have the documents to prove legal status,
    the applicant cannot be hired. Hoffman Plastic Compounds, 
    535 U.S. at 148
    . Employers
    who fail to verify an applicant’s eligibility can be subject to civil and criminal penalties. 
    8 U.S.C. § 1324
    (a)(1)(B)(i), (e). “Similarly, if an employer unknowingly hires an
    unauthorized alien, or if the alien becomes unauthorized while employed, the employer is
    compelled to discharge the worker upon discovery of the worker’s undocumented status.”
    6
    Hoffman Plastic Compounds, 
    535 U.S. at 148
    . “Regrettably, many employers turn a blind
    eye to immigration status during the hiring process; their aim is to assemble a workforce that
    is both cheap to employ and that minimizes their risk of being reported for violations of
    statutory rights. Therefore, employers have a perverse incentive to ignore immigration laws
    at the time of hiring but insist upon their enforcement when their employees complain.”
    Rivera v. NIBCO, Inc., 
    364 F.3d 1057
    , 1072 (9th Cir. 2004).
    {21} In regard to the incentive to ignore immigration laws, cases dealing with remedies
    available to undocumented workers under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) are
    illustrative. In Patel v. Quality Inn South, 
    846 F.2d 700
    , 704 (11th Cir. 1988), the Court held
    that the IRCA did not purport to limit an undocumented worker’s remedies for unpaid wages
    available under the FLSA since, if these workers were not covered under the FLSA,
    employers would have an incentive to hire them. Similarly, in Reyes, 56 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 78,
    the California Court of Appeals held that “[b]y reducing the incentive to hire
    [undocumented] workers[,] the FLSA’s coverage of undocumented aliens helps discourage
    illegal immigration and is thus fully consistent with the objectives of the IRCA.” (Internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted.) See Singh v. Jutla & C.D. & R’s Oil, Inc., 
    214 F. Supp. 2d 1056
    , 1058 (N.D. Cal. 2002) (reaching the same conclusion).
    {22} The IRCA does not preempt workers’ compensation laws or otherwise preclude
    states from providing compensation benefits to undocumented workers. See Dowling v.
    Slotnik, 
    712 A.2d 396
    , 404 (Conn. 1998); Econ. Packing Co. v. Ill. Workers’ Comp.
    Comm’n, 
    901 N.E.2d 915
    , 923 (Ill. App. Ct. 2008); Design Kitchen & Baths v. Lagos, 
    882 A.2d 817
    , 827-28 (Md. 2005); Correa v. Waymouth Farms, Inc., 
    664 N.W.2d 324
    , 329
    (Minn. 2003); Rosa v. Partners in Progress, Inc., 
    868 A.2d 994
    , 1000, 1002 (N.H. 2005);
    Coque, 
    867 N.Y.S.2d at 162
    ; Balbuena v. IDR Realty LLC, 
    845 N.E.2d 1246
    , 1257 (N.Y.
    2006).
    Worker’s Estoppel-Based Argument
    {23} In summary judgment proceedings before trial, Worker argued that Employer’s
    unlawful hiring practices should estop Employer from asserting Worker’s immigration status
    to avoid paying modifiers. Worker attempted to support this point through evidence, which
    the WCJ declined to admit, that Employer either knew or should have known of the illegal
    immigrant status of Worker because other workers were from Mexico, did not speak any
    English, and admitted to each other their illegal status. In his requested findings of fact,
    Worker asserted that “Employer did not follow the law against hiring illegal workers such
    that Employer and its insurer are estopped from asserting the doctrine of voluntary
    [underemployment] due to illegal status.” In his closing argument at trial, Worker argued
    that Employer was careless when hiring workers.
    {24} On appeal, in his brief in chief, Worker cites Reinforced Earth Co. v. Workers’
    Compensation Appeal Board, 
    810 A.2d 99
     (Pa. 2002). Referring to the lower court’s
    opinion in that case, the court in Reinforced Earth stated:
    7
    The court reasoned that all that would do is reward an employer who failed
    to properly ascertain an employee’s immigration status at the time of hire,
    and potentially subvert any public policy against illegal immigration because
    employers may actively seek out illegal aliens rather than citizens or legal
    residents because they will not be forced to insure against or absorb the costs
    of work-related injuries.
    
    Id. at 103
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The court in Reinforced Earth
    affirmed the lower court, but on different grounds. 
    Id. at 104, 109
    . Based in part on
    Reinforced Earth, Worker states on appeal that it was “[inequitable] for Employer to assert
    [its] defense of unauthorized alien status due to its negligent hiring practice, estoppel,
    waiver, unclean hands, [and] laches.”
    {25} In its answer brief, Employer did not address Worker’s assertions of estoppel,
    Worker’s contention that Employer’s hiring practice was careless, or Worker’s indication
    through his discussion of Reinforced Earth that, in ignoring Worker’s immigration status,
    Employer subverted public policy. Employer addressed only Worker’s assertion of waiver
    based on “the fact that Employer hired Worker when Worker was undocumented.”
    Employer contends that “[i]t would be unjust to punish Employer simply because Worker
    used fake documents that were able to escape Employer’s detection through reasonable
    methods.” Employer relies on Cenvill Development Corp. v. Candelo, 
    478 So. 2d 1168
    ,
    1169-70 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1985), pointing out that in Cenvill Development “an
    undocumented worker argued that the employer should be estopped from asserting [the]
    worker’s undocumented status as a defense to [the] worker’s claims because [the] employer
    originally hired [the] worker even though he was undocumented.” Employer further states
    that the court in Cenvill Development “rejected that argument stating that employers should
    be estopped from raising a defense based on [a] worker’s immigration status only if the
    employer knew or should have known . . . of [the] worker’s undocumented status.” In reply,
    after discussing Cenvill Development, Worker states that “Employer should have known this
    Spanish[-]speaking laborer without a [s]ocial [s]ecurity [card] to copy was likely not
    documented in the New Mexico labor market.”
    An Undocumented Worker Is Not Entitled to Modifier Benefits
    {26} In our view, for the reason we discuss later in this opinion, Section 52-1-26, the
    rationales of Connick and Jeffrey, the bar of estoppel, and Worker’s employment with
    another employer, are simply not applicable to the circumstance involving whether an
    injured, undocumented worker is entitled to modifier benefits.
    {27} Nothing in the Act precludes an injured, undocumented worker from receiving
    temporary or permanent disability benefits and medical expenses. Modification of a
    permanent partial disability rating, however, is specifically addressed in Section 52-1-26’s
    provisions. Section 52-1-26(C) states that “[p]ermanent partial disability shall be determined
    by calculating the worker’s impairment as modified by his age, education and physical
    8
    capacity, pursuant to Sections 52-1-26.1 through 52-1-26.4[.]” But the impairment will not
    be subject to the modifications calculated pursuant to those sections where the employer
    offers to rehire and the worker “returns to work at a wage equal to or greater than the
    worker’s pre-injury wage[.]” Section 52-1-26(D). Thus, under the return-to-work
    circumstance, a worker’s permanent partial disability rating can be limited to a rating equal
    to his impairment only, without the modifiers. 
    Id.
    {28} The Act “provides statutory incentives to both employers and employees to
    encourage return to work with minimal dependence on compensation rewards.” Lackey v.
    Darrell Julian Constr., 
    1998-NMCA-121
    , ¶ 20, 
    125 N.M. 592
    , 
    964 P.2d 153
    . Section 52-1-
    26 benefits both employers and workers. An employer is encouraged to make a rehire offer
    because it relieves the employer of the obligation to pay modifier benefits. An injured
    worker is encouraged to get off workers’ compensation by returning to work with a wage
    that is at or above his pre-injury wage. As we stated in Connick:
    The statutory incentive to return to work is unmistakable. The [L]egislature
    has explicitly stated that the policy and purpose behind this legislation is to
    provide every person who suffers a compensable injury with resulting
    permanent partial disability . . . the opportunity to return to gainful
    employment as soon as possible with minimal dependence on compensation
    awards.
    Connick, 
    1998-NMCA-060
    , ¶ 6 (omission in original) (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). A worker does not have to search for other employment. Read as a whole, Section
    52-1-26 does not unconditionally grant modifier benefits. When the pre-injury employer
    offers to rehire at or above pre-injury wage, the worker will lose modifier benefits if he
    unreasonably refuses to accept the offer. Connick, 
    1998-NMCA-060
    , ¶¶ 9-10, 17; Jeffrey,
    118 N.M. at 63-65, 898 P.2d at 1012-14; see also Reinforced Earth, 810 A.2d at 108
    (holding that where the worker, as an unauthorized alien, could not apply for or accept
    employment, the worker’s loss of earning power was caused by his immigration status and
    not his work-related injury and therefore the employer was not required to show job
    availability as a condition precedent to suspending the worker’s benefits).
    {29} Where, as here, an employer is legally forbidden to rehire a worker because the
    worker is undocumented, we doubt that the Legislature intended Section 52-1-26 to
    nevertheless apply to allow the worker to receive modifier benefits. Where the pre-injury
    employer knew or should have known of the injured worker’s undocumented status, the
    employer cannot make a bona fide rehire offer. An offer as contemplated in Section 52-1-26
    by a pre-injury employer to rehire an injured, undocumented worker would in that instance
    be illusory, if not a ruse. Under the IRCA, it would be unlawful for the employer to rehire
    the worker.
    {30} Because the parties in their initial briefs on appeal approached the Section 52-1-26
    issues with arguments relating to Connick, Jeffrey, and estoppel, this Court initially analyzed
    9
    the issues as argued by the parties. In doing so, we determined that we were unable
    rationally and without tortured analysis to decide the issues within the constraints of those
    arguments. It became clear to the Court that the arguments and constraints were unworkable
    under Section 52-1-26 given that an employer is legally forbidden from offering to rehire
    and, therefore, unless the employer made an illegal, illusory, or bogus offer, an
    undocumented worker would automatically be entitled to modifier benefits. In the Court’s
    view, the Legislature had not contemplated this circumstance and the Court should leave the
    issue for legislative consideration.
    {31} In addressing these views, Worker argues in supplemental briefing that to hold
    Section 52-1-26 inapplicable would violate “the application of the policy of equal
    protection,” the fact that there exists “no statutory denial of benefits,” and the fact that
    “federal immigration law [does] not favor[] employers benefitting from violation of law.”
    Worker contends that to hold Section 52-1-26 inapplicable is “perverse” because it
    encourages employers to rehire injured workers but then allows employers to benefit by
    paying less to injured workers they illegally employed, and is “morally inequitably wrong”
    because it “devise[s] a system of compensation where most of the measured disability is
    denied a worker,” and thus fundamental fairness and equal protection of the law are
    undermined unless Section 52-1-26 is employed and estoppel is applied to prevent an unjust
    result. To support his denial of equal protection position, Worker cites Breen v. Carlsbad
    Municipal Schools, 
    2005-NMSC-028
    , ¶¶ 9-10, 28, 
    138 N.M. 331
    , 
    120 P.3d 413
    , which held
    that the Workers’ Compensation Act resulted in dissimilar treatment of similarly situated
    workers, namely, treatment of persons with mental disabilities or physical impairments, and
    therefore violated the New Mexico’s Equal Protection Clause, requiring intermediate
    scrutiny because persons with mental disability constitute a sensitive class.
    {32} We are not persuaded by Worker’s fairness and policy arguments, nor are we
    persuaded by his reliance on Breen. We fail to see how our interpretation of the Act and of
    Section 52-1-26 in particular rises to a constitutional level in any respect. It is clear to us
    that Worker’s undocumented status does not fall into a similarly situated category necessary
    for an equal protection application. Even were he to fit into such a category, he is not a
    suspect class and the scrutiny required would be rational scrutiny. See Plyer v. Doe, 
    457 U.S. 202
    , 219 n.19 (1982) (stating that undocumented workers are a distinct group by virtue
    of their voluntary act of entering this country illegally, and they are not a suspect class).
    Worker presents no argument relating to rational scrutiny.
    {33} In sum, we cannot ignore the inapplicability of Section 52-1-26 and simply proceed
    to analyze the issues as framed by the parties in their briefs and determine whether Connick
    and Jeffrey preclude Worker from recovery of modifier benefits under Section 52-1-26,
    whether Employer is estopped from raising Connick and Jeffrey, and whether Worker would
    be entitled to modifier benefits even though he earned more than his pre-injury wage when
    he went to work for another employer. We therefore hold that Worker was not entitled to
    modifier benefits. The WCJ’s denial of modifier benefits was right, albeit for a reason that
    is different than what we express in this opinion. See, e.g., Ideal v. Burlington Res. Oil &
    10
    Gas Co., 
    2010-NMSC-022
    , ¶ 19, 
    148 N.M. 228
    , 
    233 P.3d 362
     (stating that “a district court’s
    decision will be upheld as long as the right result was reached, even if the court reached the
    decision for the wrong reason”).
    CONCLUSION
    {34}    We affirm the WCJ’s denial of Section 52-1-26 modifier benefits.
    {35}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ______________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ______________________________________
    JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    ______________________________________
    MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    Topic Index for Gonzalez v. Performance Painting, Inc., Docket No. 29,629
    CT                     CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
    CT-EP                  Equal Protection
    FL                     FEDERAL LAW
    FL-IM                  Immigration
    FL-PE                  Pre-emption
    ST                     STATUTES
    ST-IP                  Interpretation
    ST-LI                  Legislative Intent
    WC                     WORKERS' COMPENSATION
    WC-AL                  Aliens
    WC-MO                  Modification or Termination of Benefits
    WC-WG                  Workers’ Compensation, General
    11