The Montana Weekly Work Comp Brief (#19 – March 6, 2026)

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Montana Workers’ Compensation Court

No new enumerated decisions this period.

Montana Workers’ Compensation Stipulations Summary (through March 5, 2026)

Plan 2

Case Name DOI Body Part(s) Settlement Type Settlement Amount Petitioner Attorney Respondent Attorney
John Smith v. Technology Ins. Co. Inc. 12/15/23 Head, neck, and low back Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $45,000.00

Allocated $10,000 – indemnity; $35,000 – medical;

Dalpiaz, Leslae

Dalpiaz & Associates

Smith, Charlie

Crowley Fleck, PLLC

Plan 3

Case Name DOI Body Part(s) Settlement Type Settlement Amount Petitioner Attorney Respondent Attorney
Charlie Mohring v. Montana State Fund 8/22/24 Low back Petition for Settlement – Medicals closed $80,000.00 Braukmann, Matt

Rimrock Law, PLLC

Meyer, Mark

Montana State Fund

ESD Settlements Approved through Feb. 27, 2026

Plan 1

Claimant Name DOI Body Part Settlement Type Settlement Amount Attorney
Howard, Russell 4/21/23 Shoulder(s) Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $160,000.00 Storrar, Keif
Loggins, Tom 3/16/23 Multiple body parts Best Interests $141,000.00 McKeon, Michael Jr.
Schwartz, Deborah 12/12/25 Lower back Disputed Initial Compensability $5,000.00 None

Plan 2

Claimant Name DOI Body Part Settlement Type Settlement Amount Attorney
Briceno, Maria 12/14/24 Multiple Body Parts Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $3,000.00 None
Imlay, Kaleb 3/28/24 Finger(s) Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $35,000.00 Murphy, Matthew
Manley, Kristine 6/25/20 Multiple body parts Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $75,000.00 Murphy, Tommy
Trudell, Lisa 8/10/21 Multiple body parts Best Interests $50,000.00 Lighthall, David

Plan 3

Claimant Name DOI Body Part Settlement Type Settlement Amount Attorney
Butikofer, Christopher 7/14/25 Hand Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed $92,500.00 Tempel- St. John, Stacy
Fleege, Jason 10/27/25 Upper back Disputed Initial Compensability $1,700.00 None
Hughes, Tiffanie 1/19/26 Ankle Disputed Initial Compensability $250.00 None
Layman, Jonathan 6/21/22 Knee Best Interests $110,000.00 Tourtlotte, Matthew
McCann, Deanna 9/20/24 Knee Disputed Initial Compensability $53,000.00 Moore, Kraig
McLaughlin, Robert 11/8/18 Knee Disputed Perm Total – Medicals Reserved $63,462.34 Haynes, Michael
Neira Parco, Arianna 1/8/23 Upper back Best Interests $92,000.00 None
Neira Parco, Arianna 12/30/22 Upper back Disputed Initial Compensability $500.00 None
Nelson, Keith 1/2/26 Foot Disputed Initial Compensability $28,495.00 None
Nixon, Stephanie 6/15/22 Multiple upper extremities Disputed Initial Compensability $1,500.00 Stover, Shelby
Samuels, Christine 1/23/25 Nose Best Interests $3,000.00 None
Zurbuchen, Jeremy 12/22/25 Skull Disputed Initial Compensability $2,605.00 None

5 Key Insights for Montana Work Comp Professionals

  1. Absence of New Workers’ Compensation Court Decisions

The report specifically notes that no new enumerated decisions were issued by the Montana Workers’ Compensation Court during this reporting period. This indicates that recent dispute resolution activity is occurring primarily through stipulations and administrative settlements rather than litigated court rulings.

Implication: Practitioners should expect limited new case law guidance and continued reliance on negotiated settlements.

  1. Medical Closure Remains the Dominant Settlement Structure

Many of the settlements—particularly in Plan 2 and Plan 3 matters—closed medical benefits, often through a Petition for Settlement – Medicals Closed. Examples include:

  • $45,000 settlement for head/neck/low back injuries
  • $80,000 settlement for a low back claim

Both resolved with medicals closed as part of the lump sum agreement.

Implication: Carriers continue to push for full finality, likely driven by rising long-term medical exposure.

  1. Large Variation in Settlement Values for Disputed Compensability

Settlements involving disputed initial compensability show a very wide valuation range, including:

  • $250 (ankle claim)
  • $1,700 (upper back claim)
  • $28,495 (foot claim)
  • $53,000 (knee claim)

Implication: Settlement value appears heavily influenced by litigation risk and medical proof rather than injury type alone, with some claims resolving essentially for nuisance value.

  1. Knee and Back Injuries Continue to Drive Higher Settlement Values

Among the higher-value settlements in the dataset are knee and spinal injuries, including:

  • $110,000 knee settlement
  • $80,000 low back settlement
  • $63,462 settlement involving disputed permanent total disability

Implication: These injuries remain among the most financially significant claims in Montana’s workers’ compensation system, consistent with national claim-severity patterns.

  1. Many Lower-Value Settlements Occur Without Attorney Representation

A notable number of settlements—particularly smaller Plan 3 disputed compensability claims—show no claimant attorney involvement, including settlements for:

  • $250
  • $500
  • $1,700
  • $2,605

Implication: Unrepresented claimants appear more common in low-value settlements, suggesting these matters may resolve quickly through administrative negotiation rather than litigation.

Bottom Line for Practitioners:
Recent Montana workers’ compensation activity shows heavy reliance on settlements, strong carrier preference for closing medical benefits, wide valuation swings in compensability disputes, and continuing severity in knee and spine claims.

 

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